Classic Italian Beef Recipes - Marx Foods Blog (2024)

Classic Italian Beef Recipes - Marx Foods Blog (1)

Sarah MickeyAll Recipes, Beef Recipes, Fennel Pollen Recipes, Guest Posts, Steak Recipes, Tenderloin Recipes 12 Comments

Deanaof Lost Past Rememberedbrings usthis facinating pair of recipes drawn forward into the modern era from a sixteenth century Italian cookbook classic.These recipes minglebeef with flavors like dried cherries, saffron, and fennel pollen…just reading themmakes our mouths water (even beforelooking at her photos). Not only that, but in her usual style, you even get a history lesson on one of the great (underappreciated today) Italian chefs!

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Classic Italian Beef Recipes - Marx Foods Blog (2)
Bartolomeo Scappi (1500-1577)

Lastmonth The Guardian (a British newspaper ranked 2nd only to the NY Times for online English-speaking readership) listed the 50 greatest cookbooks of all time. On this list were many contemporary classics. But right next to David Chang’s uber-trendy “The Momof*cku Cookbook” wasOpera dell’arte del cucinare published in 1570!!! With 1000 recipes, it isTHEbook of Italian Renaissance cooking written by Bartolomeo Scappi and set the standard for cookbooks thereafter. History is hot!

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Title page ofOpera

What we know of Scappi began with his work in the service of Cardinal Lorenzo Campeggio where he created spectacular banquets that made him famous. From there he moved to service with Pope Pius IV and then Pius V. He wrote his cookbook while working for Pius V, who ironicallywasan ascetic who demurred the opulent table of his predecessor! Perhaps a less demanding schedule gave him the time he needed to do his cookbook. For that we are most grateful.

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Table for preparing banquets fromOpera

Terence Scully has translated the work “The Opera of Bartolomeo Scappi” into English and it is available to sample on Google Books. After the sample, you may just want to break down and buy the book on Amazon… it is that good. Ken Albala, a noted food historian says, “Quite simply Scappi’sOperais the first modern cookbook. It is not a shorthand list of recipes to jog the professional chef’s mind, it actually teaches how to cook, and is in that respect on par with the best works of Julia Child. It includes shopping advice, tips on equipment, menu organization, and even multiple variable techniques when confronted with every imaginable ingredient – including bears and hedgehogs. It is also the first fully and lavishly illustrated cookbook. Most importantly, the recipes really work and are the result of years of practical experience in the kitchen. It remains the single greatest monument of Italian cuisine, overshadowing even the great Artusi. Arguably it is among the greatest of cookbooks ever written and the recent translation of Scully finally makes it available to English speaking audiences.”

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Room Near Kitchen fromOpera

Or, if your Italian is good, you can see the original online and work from that, the facsimile is a real joy to behold (Scappi’s batterie de cuisine would turn any chef green with envy). Any way you do it, it is a rich and beautiful book that will send your cooking path into an empyrean realm with recipes that are, for the most part, accessible and re-creatable and fit for a Renaissance pope.

All of the items in these recipes are available today. The vin cotto is available at specialty food stores (or can be made by reducing red wine to a syrup) and is a great little secret ingredient to enrich stocks and sauces (Mario Batali loves it).Rose Essence is available from Aftelier. My beef is grass-fed (better tasting and better for you!!) and it and the amazing fennel pollen (that brings a gentle spiced sweetness to the spice mix) can be purchased at MarxFoods.com. You can see the tiny golden flecks on the meat!

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Scappi’s Braised Beef
serves 4
1 ½ lbs tenderloin of beef or use individual filets (or use a 2 lb. chunk of beef sirloin and cook it a little longer)
¼ c wine
¼ c white wine vinegar
1 t each pepper, salt and fennel pollen
½ t each cinnamon, ginger
¼ t cloves
1 cup Madeira (Rare Wine Company Boston Bual)
½ c vin cotto
½ c white wine vinegar
2 drops Aftelier rose essence or 1 T rosewater
2-4 strips bacon
¼ lb prosciutto
1 c prunes(softened in 1 cup water and 2 T madeira for 1 minute in the microwave)
1 c frozen sour cherries or ½ c dried cherries

Rinse the beef with the wine and vinegar. Put the spices and salt on a plate, blend and roll the meat in them. Place the meat in a non-reactive dish with the Madeira, vin cotto and vinegar with rose essence or rose water for four hours, turning once if it is not completely covered.

Brown meat quickly after wrapping it with bacon and prosciutto then braise with the marinade, prunes and cherries for 20 minutes to 1/2 hour covered at a low heat (depending upon how rare you want it and how thick your tenderloin is) for the whole tenderloin and 10 minutes (or less) covered for the individual filets for rare. Remove the meat and tent and reduce the sauce if desired.

*** the amounts are all approximate as they are not mentioned in the original… make changes as it suits your taste.

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Classic Italian Beef Recipes - Marx Foods Blog (8)

Classic Italian Beef Recipes - Marx Foods Blog (9)

Scappi’s Fingers of Beef in the Roman Style
serves 4 as a main course and 8 as an appetizer

4 beef filets (4 oz each)
1 t salt
1 t pepper
1 t fennel pollen
½ t each ginger, cinnamon
pinch of saffron and cloves
¼ c vin cotto
2 T white wine vinegar
1-2 drops rose essence or 1 T rosewater
3-5 slices bacon
4 bay leaves (fresh are best) or large sage leaves

Take the filets and roll them in the blended spices and salt. Put the filets and the bacon in a non-reactive container with the vin cotta, vinegar and rose and marinate for a few hours. Take them out and put bacon and the bay or sage leaves between the filets and skewer them together… not too tightly (if you have a spit attachment, this is best)… like shish kabob. Grill them on the cool side of the grill till the desired degree of doneness with a drip pan, turning them a few times OR if you have not grill, sauté the bacon and then fry the filets till they reach the desired degree of doneness. Add the marinade to the drip pan/pan to warm. I sliced my filet into fingers to serve them along with the crisp bacon and the sauce drizzled over them.

*** the amounts are all approximate as they are not mentioned in the original… make changes as it suits your taste.

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Classic Italian Beef Recipes - Marx Foods Blog (2024)

FAQs

What's the best cheese to put on Italian beef? ›

Rolls are a must, as bread will become soggy and won't hold up to the juicy meat and toppings. Cheese: Provolone cheese is the ultimate cheese for an Italian Beef Sandwich. It's creamy and melty with just enough sharpness to hold its own. Just one slice might not be enough!

What is the best cut of beef for Italian beef? ›

The cut of beef used for Italian beef is typically chuck roast. However, top sirloin, top round, or bottom round would also work well. Giardiniera. A delicious blend of pickled vegetables that adds that wonderful, classic flavor to Italian beef.

What is Italian beef made of? ›

The main ingredient of an Italian beef is roasted, thinly-sliced sirloin tip or top round beef seasoned with Italian herbs like oregano and basil, plus spices including red and black pepper, and occasionally nutmeg and cloves.

What is Portillo's Italian beef made of? ›

Portillo's uses thinly-sliced bottom round roast beef, which is the tougher of the two (top and bottom) back-end round cuts.

What is the best bread for Italian beef sandwiches? ›

Italian beef is typically served on Italian bread, renowned for its soft yet sturdy texture that can hold up to the juicy meat and flavorful toppings. One popular choice for Italian bread is the renowned Turano Bread Company in Berwyn, Illinois, known for its high-quality bread that perfectly complements the beef.

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