Readers, forgive me. I first told you about the wonderful torta di carciofi my uncle made over New Year's in January, promising you the recipe soon, and, well - uh - it's Tax Day. Okay, so consider this my Tax Day present to you! Or a belated Easter gift! I finally converted his recipe from metric to Imperial (and from scribbled down on a piece of paper while watching his every move to an actual, usable recipe) and I'm so happy to present it to you.
Eagle-eyed readers will notice that my torta doesn't quite look like his torta. I think this may have something to do with the difference in store-bought puff pastry - his Belgian pastry came already rolled out into a large, thin circle, while mine was in thickish rectangles and had to be patchworked together. His tart tin was bigger than mine, too, so his torta is flatter. And, lastly, my uncle - as I think I've mentioned before - is an artichoke whisperer. He closes himself into the kitchen with a sharp paring knife and a bowl of acidulated water and, and meditates or something, goes into a fugue state, cleaning big mountains of thorny little artichokes, transforming them into silky, delicious dishes that make me want to park myself with a fork at his table and never, ever leave.
Me, I'm not so gifted. Also, there are no baby artichokes available here right now. So I made do with frozen. (Stop screaming! They're not so bad, in a pinch. Yes, this torta will taste even better with fresh artichokes, it's true. But it's darn tasty with frozen, too.)
What you do is cook the frozen artichoke quarters in olive oil, plain, no garlic, no nothing, until they get browned in places and the kitchen smells delicious. If you're my uncle, you cut the cleaned artichokes into little slivers before cooking them in olive oil. Let them get nice and brown, even browner than in this photo. That means high-ish heat, and monitoring. If things start to stick to the bottom of your pan, you can always deglaze with a little water and keep going. Brown bits stuck to the pan are a good thing! They mean flavor.
When you're almost done with the artichokes, you season them and sprinkle with parsley, then let them cool chopping them up. You add them, fragrant as can be, to creamy, nutmeg-scented ricotta, season this a bit more and then pile the filling into a puff-pastry lined cake tin.
If you're cooking in America, store-bought puff pastry comes in rectangles, so you've got to do a little craft work. It's okay if your resulting lined tin doesn't look very pretty - this is rustic and rustic is good. I used a combination of pinching, a water-dipped finger, fork-work, and plain old-fashioned cursing to get the puff pastry bits to stick to each other in the tin. If you happen to live elsewhere, your store-bought puff pastry might come already rolled out into a lovely circle. Lucky you! You should make two of these, just for kicks.
Right, so pour in the filling, fold down the pastry over the filling, brush with an egg wash which will make the torta look so pretty and burnished and bake it in a hot oven until the pastry browns and rises and the filling is set and your house smells amazing and the people coming for lunch trip over themselves to peek into the oven and hang about your kitchen, getting in the way like the adorably hungry people they are. I mean, do you blame them? You shouldn't.
This torta is simply delicious. The pastry is light and crackly, the artichokes are nice and savory, but with that haunting, sweet top note, and there's something very pure and clean about the taste of it, not mucked up with strange herbs or too much garlic or whatever else makes vegetable pies a sometimes dubious presence on a lunch buffet.
Pietro says you can use different vegetables in the filling, it doesn't always have to be artichokes. He recommends trying broccoli with sundried tomatoes (use only the broccoli florets, not the stalks, and boil them before sautéing in olive oil - and chop the tomatoes up nicely), or, of course, zucchini. I haven't tried those yet, but you probably all know by now that if Pietro recommends something, it's going to be good.
Now forget about the fact that it took me four months to get this to you and go shopping! Start working on your artichoke-cleaning skills! Or be a lazy bum like me and buy frozen! Whatever you do, don't wait as long as I did to make this. Buon appetito!
Torta di Carciofi (Artichoke Torta)
Serves 10 to 12
2 tablespoons olive oil
2 9-ounce box frozen artichoke hearts OR 10 to 13 fresh baby artichokes (cleaned and cut into slivers)
3/4 teaspoon salt, divided
1/2 cup parsley leaves, minced
2 large eggs
1 pound ricotta (about 500 grams)
20 strokes freshly grated nutmeg
1/2 cup grated Parmigiano
Freshly ground black pepper
1 package prepared puff pastry
1. Heat the olive oil in a 12-inch skillet until hot but not smoking. Add the artichokes and cook over medium-high heat for about 20 to 25 minutes, stirring occasionally and constantly monitoring the heat. You want the artichokes to brown but not burn, to sauté but not steam. You can periodically deglaze the pan with a spoonful or two of water, scraping up the browned bits at the bottom of the pan. When the artichokes have taken on color and are fully cooked, add 1/2 teaspoon salt and the minced parsley and mix well. Remove from heat and let cool until you're able to transfer the artichokes to a cutting board, scraping the pan well. Using a large knife, roughly cut the cooked artichokes into small pieces.
2. Preheat the oven to 375 degrees. Line a 10- or 12-inch cake tin (or springform pan or pizza pan) with parchment paper and then with puff pastry, making sure that the pastry lines the sides of the pan with plenty of hang-over.
3. In a mixing bowl, combine 1 egg, the ricotta, the nutmeg, Parmigiano, the remaining salt, and pepper to taste. Add the chopped artichokes and mix well. (If you're secure about your egg quality, taste the filling at this point and adjust if it needs more salt.) Pour the filling into the prepared pastry. Fold the pastry that hangs over the sides of the pan over the filling and press down gently where the dough overlaps. Beat the remaining egg in a small bowl and brush the beaten egg over the pastry (not the filling).
4. Put the torta into the oven and bake for 50 to 60 minutes. The pastry will brown and the filling will set. Remove from the oven and cool on a rack before using the parchment paper to remove the torta from the tin. Set it on a serving plate, cut into slices, and serve. Tastes best cooled but not cold.


:D - you could do that. You'd end up with something more like a pizza rustica (without tomatoes).
Posted by: Luisa | April 20, 2009 at 02:01 PM
artichokes take me back to my sicilian roots- this is a great recipe idea. can't wait to try it :-)
yvonne
editor, my halal kitchen
http://www.myhalalkitchen.com
Posted by: yvonne | April 20, 2009 at 11:30 PM
Looks and sounds so delicious..thanks so much for sharing
Posted by: uk chefs forum | April 21, 2009 at 09:56 AM
I'm a little late to the party, but man does this look good. I'm having some Italian friends for dinner on Friday night; this is going on the menu. THANKS!
Posted by: Mary | April 21, 2009 at 12:01 PM
Oh man that looks fine! And frozen 'chokes are such a fine sub. I'm thinking a Riesling alongside. Sheesh. I've got to go find something to eat!
Posted by: Mark Scarbrough | April 21, 2009 at 05:08 PM
I cannot wait to try this. I am a lover of all things Italian, this is the first time I've come across a recipe like this. I'm so excited for our next potluck. Love reading your writing.
Posted by: Whineaux | April 21, 2009 at 10:49 PM
This sounds delicious... Can I ask a dumb question? I've never cooked with artichokes,--other then to steam them and gobble them up--but, if your using frozen 'chokes, do you defrost them first and then cut them into slivers, or are you able to just cut them into slivers when they are still frozen? Thanks, so much!
Posted by: Kelly McClellan | April 22, 2009 at 10:18 AM
Kelly - I didn't defrost them, I just added them directly to the hot, oiled pan. I cut them into rough slivers once they'd cooked and cooled (as I said in the recipe). If you're starting with fresh artichokes, then you should sliver them up before cooking them in the hot oil.
Posted by: Luisa | April 22, 2009 at 10:54 AM
wow I want to have a piece of this asap.
Posted by: ciaochowlinda | April 22, 2009 at 12:18 PM
So glad canned/jarred artichokes will work -- this looks great!
Posted by: Kris | April 22, 2009 at 03:02 PM
Oh wow, this looks amazing. I want that flaky crust now. Yummmmm
Posted by: Lauren | April 23, 2009 at 03:05 PM
yummmm!
Posted by: reb | April 26, 2009 at 05:29 PM
God, this looks incredible! I just had the noodles yesterday, they were great--I will make it a point not to take so long to try this one!!
Posted by: Rebecca | April 29, 2009 at 05:04 PM
I never seem able to do anything with artichokes other than plain old steamed, not that I don't eat them almost every day when they are in season.
There are plenty of baby artichokes are on the 7/24 markets on 33rd and 30th in Astoria
It looks delicious!
Posted by: Parisbreakfasts | April 30, 2009 at 03:54 PM
Delish! Ended up making a brocolli/sun dried tomato version when Whole Foods was out of frozen artichokes and it was divine. Thanks for sharing this recipe!!!
Posted by: Lauren Locke | May 6, 2009 at 09:28 AM
Hi, I loved it! I blogged about it in Mandarin in my blog. Thank you so much for sharing this wonderful recipe. (well, technically, thanks to your uncle too!)
Posted by: yufei | May 6, 2009 at 06:48 PM
I don't see the pastry in the ingredients list. How much does one use? One standard sheet, or just as much as it takes to fit the pan?
Posted by: bella | May 7, 2009 at 02:24 PM
Bella - woops! Thanks so much for catching that. I've added "one package" of prepared puff pastry to the list, because each country (and each brand) has its own quantity and shape in a package of puff pastry. I've only had this torta made with US puff pastry and Belgian, but in both cases, one package was sufficient for the 10-inch pan. Cut and paste it to fit the pan, as directed in the recipe.
Posted by: Luisa | May 8, 2009 at 10:41 AM
this looks amazing...i can't wait to try it!
Posted by: cramped kitchen | May 9, 2009 at 05:26 PM
Oh wow!!! I have made artichoke dip too many times so a spin like this on my favorite food sounds amazing!! Can't wait to try!
Posted by: Ashlea | May 13, 2009 at 11:54 PM
This looks so beautiful and would have the best texture.
It reminds me of a pie Janni Kyritsis of the old MG Garage. I was flicking through his book and remember seeing a very similar recipe that blew me away.
I will have to make both soon I think!
Posted by: Trish | May 25, 2009 at 09:56 AM
I finally got around to making this last weekend and it was wonderful! And you were right - the artichokes have such a heavenly scent when they're being cooked. Thank you so much for sharing.
Posted by: Sarah D. (a.k.a. Motown Maiden) | June 5, 2009 at 09:55 AM
I wound up here by googling "torta di carciofi" (wanted to make one like I'd eaten in La Spezia, and didn't like the looks of the Saveur recipe), and just had to say thanks. I made the filling exactly as posted, with fresh artichokes, as the new crop from California has just made its way up north to Ottawa. It was amazing--every bit as good as what I've had in Liguria. Better yet, though, I took a chance and followed one of the traditional recipes for the crust, as puff pastry didn't seem to fit with what I remembered. I've never made the crust before--the recipe I used was flour, oil, water, and egg, though the even more traditional Ligurian kind leaves out the egg--and I'd been afraid it would be a pain, as you have to roll it out super thin, practically transparent. I could just imagine it sticking to my counter and falling apart. But who knew--the stuff is made in minutes, and rolls out like a dream.
I write this having just eaten my second torta, made with the dough left over from the first. Into this one went blanched rapini, a bit of sauteed onion, 2/3 of a log of goat cheese, a boiled chopped potato, parsley, lots of parmigiano, some leftover braised leeks, and an egg. Improvised roughly along the lines of the chard and potato torta in Saveur. Possibly because eaten when extremely hungry, it was even better than the artichoke one.
So, thank you for getting me started. There will be more torte in my future! (And I finally have something awesome to feed vegetarians.)
Posted by: Jennifer | February 15, 2010 at 03:44 PM
I finally made this! only about a year late. Couldn't get puff pastry so i used Trader Joe's frozen pie crust, which puffed up a surprising amount. much more flaky than i had dared hope for. The flavors and texture of this recipe are insane. Cooked it for my mom's 50th birthday, and all either one of us could say was mmm. MMMM. Mmmmmmm.
Posted by: Meredith | April 1, 2010 at 09:41 AM
Artichokes are such magnificent vegetables..even after cooking they manage to retain their individual personalities. And ditto puff pastry, when it comes to having a mind of its own! I can't wait to try the two together in this recipe--they should make some beautiful music!
Posted by: Barbara | April 27, 2010 at 03:24 PM