Artichoke Salad & A Blogging Book Tour : A Family Farm In Tuscany

   

Pinit

You may remember a little while back when I was on my jaunt through Europe, I stayed at an amazing place in Italy called Fattoria Poggio Alloro. It is a working farm with guest accommodations, also termed now as Agritourism! This place was absolutely magical, and although my hubby and I only spent one night, it was one of our favorite places on our 4 week vacation!

Photo by Oriano Stefan

The best thing about Fattoria Poggio Alloro to me, aside from the heavenly setting along the Tuscan hills, and the spectacular views, was the food, and the fact that this place is completely self sustainable. Everything from the wine, to the olive oil, to the vegetables, to the pasta, to the saffron is produced at Poggio Alloro. The farm is also 100% organic! 🙂

Photo by Oriano Stefan

During our stay, I was able to meet the wonderful Sarah Fioroni. She is a member of the family who owns and runs Poggio Alloro. When I stepped foot into the guest check-in, the first thing I noticed was the cookbook – “A Family Farm In Tuscany” (link to purchase at the bottom of the post!) sitting on the shelves, I knew I had to have it!

Sarah, wrote this beautiful book that takes readers through a journey of a year in the life at Fattorio Poggio Alloro. It is full of history of the farm, the family, the surroundings, and wonderful traditional recipes that have been passed on for generations, and even some dishes that we were lucky enough to taste at the communal guest dinner!

Through our conversation, Sarah and I discussed the book, and she invited me to participate in this Blogging Book Tour. I was asked to choose a recipe from the cookbook, prepare it, and post on it!

I chose the Insalatina di Carciofi (Artichoke Salad)! This recipe stuck out to me because:

a) I LOVE artichokes, and

b)I loved the simplicity of the dish.

Delicious, simple, healthy ingredients, that combine perfectly to make a spectacular dish.

The recipe called for whole artichokes, but I do not have much experience working with whole artichokes so I had a change of plans. I bought some whole artichokes and tried to clean and prepare them (following a you tube video instruction because I had no idea how), and they just weren’t turning out how they were supposed to. I think they were either too ripe, not ripe enough, or I just really butchered them! Lol!

So, I ended up going back to the store and getting canned (in water) artichoke hearts for the salad. If you know how to deal with whole artichokes I encourage you to make the recipe the original way, but the canned ones worked great too! (in the picture, above are the whole ones… maybe unripe? and below are the canned)

Once I got the whole artichoke dilemma solved, the salad came together in a snap!

It was light, yet bursting with flavor, a little salty from the parmesan, and citrusy from the lemon. I used some olive oil I brought back from Italy and it added a sweet soft flavor to the mix.

Artichokes are a great source of fiber, 3g per two artichoke hearts, so this salad is great for digestive health! The lemon adds in some antioxidants, and the olive oil lends essential fatty acids. This salad is really a nutritionists dream 🙂

Pinit

I made about a 1/3 of the recipe as the original recipe serves 6. I also cut down on the olive oil in my version as I prefer my salads to always be very lightly dressed!

Here is the delicious, original recipe from the book.

5.0 from 1 reviews
Insalatina di Carciofi (Artichoke Salad)
 
Recipe from "A Family Farm In Tuscany" - by Sarah Fioroni
Author:
Cuisine: Italian
Serves: 6
Ingredients
  • 1 lb whole artichokes (or you can used canned artichoke hearts like I did!)
  • ½ lemon
  • 3 tablespoons extra virgin olive oil
  • ½ teaspoon sea salt
  • 1 pinch freshly ground pepper
  • 1 tablespoon lemon juice
  • 1½ ounces thinly sliced Parmesan cheese
Instructions
  1. Clean the artichokes, removing the hard outer leaves. Cut off the tips. Leave at least 1½ inches of the stems, but peel off the stringy outer layer. Place the cleaned artichokes in a bowl of cold water.
  2. Squeeze the juice from the lemon into the water and drop the lemon into the artichokes with the water. Set aside for at least 30 minutes. (If using canned, skip this first step and instead just drain and rinse the canned artichoke hearts)
  3. Drain and thinly slice the artichokes lengthwise to make about 4½ cups.
  4. Transfer the artichokes to a bowl and dress with the olive oil, salt, pepper, and lemon juice. Toss to combine.
  5. Then arrange the artichokes on a serving platter and top with the Parmesan cheese.


 If you would like to purchase this beautifully written and photographed cookbook please click the following link:

A Family Farm in Tuscany: Recipes and Stories from Fattoria Poggio Alloro

 

Enjoy!

 

Christal

Nutritionist in the Kitch

Author: Christal Sczebel

Christal is the creator of Nutrition in the Kitch. She's a Certified Nutritional Consultant, twice published author, gluten and dairy free recipe developer, food photographer, speaker, wife, and mama. Christal loves good food, all things wellness, and loves to travel. Her wellness philosophy is centred around balance and sustainable health, life's way too short for boring diets and restriction!

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  • I have not tried this recipe yet but I bought the cook book. I have made the carrot and mushroom pork roast. I added quartered red potatoes for a very yummy one pot dinner. It was so good, I already made the recipe again for company. The raisins are really good with the pork. Can’t wait to try more recipes. Thanks for the recommendation!!

  • Thank you Christal! I’m so happy you made a post about one of my recipe! I love your blog so much!the sald looks delicious!

    • Thank you for inviting me to be a part of it! We had a wonderful experience at Poggio Alloro! Hopefully we will be able to visit again one day!

  • I am SO envious that you have actually been there! I zeroed in on this one as one I’ll be trying soon when I was trying to figure out what to make. You did a beautiful job!

  • This is such a fabulous recipe. I haven’t tried this one yet but it’s earmarked. Nice to meet a fellow Canuck. I drove through the Prairies in September on the way home from bringing my son out to Alberta. Actually I was hospitalized in the Prairies due to diverticulitis. Your hospitals out there are wonderful, lol. Much quicker and nicer than the ones in Ontario.

  • How does one go about staying at the farm? There isn’t much info on their website. It looks beautiful as does your blog!

  • Wow, that looks amazing! I am drooling on my computer. 🙂 And actually I like how you were able to modify and use canned artichokes since the whole one wasn’t working for you. Shows that a recipe is still doable even if you run into some snags! Thanks for the great post Christal!

  • Looks lovely, Christal! Thank you for contacting me and for participating in the tour. (And I am laughing sympathetically at your description of working with artichokes. Those things baffle me, too!)

    • Thanks Ginny! I absolutely love the cookbook and loved our stay Fattoria Poggio Alloro, so I definitely enjoyed sharing my experience!