Why Italy

Italian Food Question...?

When I lived in West Hartford with an Italian family, they would go to the Italian bakery and buy these things "they" called orangina. Not the soda drink, orangina. It was ground beef, I think, in the center. Then it was covered in rice. Kind of resembled a large egg, with the meat being the yolk. Then it was coated in a fine orange bread crumb of some sort. It was delicious, but have no idea what the real name of this food is, or where I can get a recipe.

Public Comments

  1. http://allrecipes.com/Recipe/Arangini-Italian-Rice-Balls/Detail.aspx ENJOY!
  2. escargo
  3. I think the name of it is "Arancini" and you can try looking that recipe up online.
  4. I love arancini, they are delish! Orangina is a beverage. Arancini are a typical speciality of Sicilian cuisine. They are fried or, less commonly, baked rice balls, having a diameter of 8-10 cm, filled usually with ragù (meat sauce), but also with tomato sauce, mozzarella, peas, and other things. On the outside they are simply breadcrumbs. The name derives from their typical colour, which reminds the one of an orange (the Italian word for orange is arancia, and in Sicilian, arancini means "little oranges"). Arancini is plural; the singular is arancino. In some parts of Sicily, especially in Palermo, the word is spelt arancine (singular: arancina), closer to its origin from arancia. There are a number of local variants, different in both fillings and shapes. In Northern Italian cuisine, supplì are similar, but typically are larger, have fewer vegetables, use gravy, and the rice used is generally leftover risotto rather than specially made. Recipe with step by step instructions: http://fxcuisine.com/default.asp?Display=9
  5. do you know what the worst thing is about Italian food, you empty you plate then 2 or 3 days later your hungry again
  6. They are called arancini. here is a recepie. To serve 4 you'll need: 1 1/2 cups rice 1 teaspoon saffron 1 cup grated Parmigiano (freshly grated, not from a can) 4 eggs 2/3 pound (300 g) ground beef 2 tablespoons tomato paste 1 clove garlic 1/2 a small onion A packed quarter cup dried porcini 1/3 cup olive oil 1/2 cup dry red wine 1/4 pound mozzarella or fresh, soft provolone (if you're in Sicily you will want to use canestrato fresco) 1 cup fresh peas, boiled Flour Bread crumbs Salt and Pepper Oil for frying Organically grown orange leaves (optional, as garnish) Begin by preparing the filling: Finely slice the onion and mince the garlic, and sauté the mixture in the olive oil until it wilts. Stir in the ground meat, continue cooking until it is well browned, and then stir in the wine. While it's evaporating, dilute the tomato paste in a ladle of warm water and stir it in. Season the mixture to taste, and simmer it over a very low flame for a couple of hours, adding more warm water or broth as necessary to keep it from drying out. Towards the end of the cooking time, steep the dried mushrooms in boiling water for a few minutes and coarsely chop them. Stir them into the sauce too; cook it for 15 minutes more and it's done. While the meat's cooking, simmer the peas until they're tender. Then remove them from the fire, drain them, and let them cool. Dice the mozzarella into half-inch cubes and combine it with the cool peas. The other thing to do while the meat is cooking is prepare the rice: boil it in abundant, lightly salted water, and while it's cooking lightly beat two of the eggs. When the rice is done drain it. Transfer it into a bowl, let it cool slightly, and stir in the beaten eggs, grated cheese, and saffron. Let it finish cooling. When everything else is ready, lightly beat the remaining eggs and season them with salt and pepper. Then, preheat your oven to 350 F (180 C). Next, make the first arancino by taking two small handfuls of rice and shaping them into hollow hemispheres Fill the hollows with some of the meat, and some of the peas, and mold the two halves together to obtain a smooth-sided rice ball about the size of a small orange (1.5 - 2 inches in diameter). Roll the arancino in flour, dredge it in the beaten egg, roll it well in the breadcrumbs, and fry it in abundant hot oil. While it's cooking begin with the next, and when the one that's frying has become a golden brown drain it on absorbent paper. When you have finished frying all your arancini, heat them through in the oven for five minutes, decorate them with the orange leaves if you choose to, and serve them piping hot. From http://italianfood.about.com/od/fritterssnacks/a/blr0030.htm
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