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Receta Crostini di fegatini (Tuscan Chicken Liver Crostini)
by Frank Fariello

Crostini di fegatini—bread slices topped with a savory chicken liver paste—are the iconic Tuscan antipasto. In this version from Giuliano Bugialli’s classic work, The Fine Art of Italian Cooking, the liver paste is flavored unusually with juniper berries, a touch that Bugialli says evokes the autumn hunting season. Whether or not you’re a hunter, the taste is absolutely exquisite.

Ingredients

Serves 4-6

500g (1 lb) chicken livers

1-2 cloves of garlic, peeled and slight crushed

A few fresh sage leaves

Olive oil, plus a knob of butter

7 juniper berries, slightly crushed

Broth, preferably homemade

4 anchovy fillets, rinsed and roughly chopped

1 Tb capers, rinsed and roughly chopped

For serving:

Day old, crusty bread, thinly sliced (see Notes)

Directions

Sauté the garlic and sage leaves gently in the oil and butter until the garlic is just beginning to brown. Add the chicken livers and sauté for 10 minutes or so. Then add a pinch of salt and pepper, along with the juniper berries, slightly crushed with the back of a knife or in a mortar and pestle. Turn and add a ladleful of broth. Let things simmer for 15-20 minutes.

Off heat, drain the chicken livers in a colander, saving the liquid and removing the garlic and sage leaves. In a food processor, chop the livers until you have a roughish paste—don’t overdo it—and then scrape the liver paste back into the skillet, along with the reserved liquid. Thin out the paste with another ladleful of the broth, and simmer gently until almost all the liquid has evaporated. Just before it’s done, mix the chopped anchovies and capers and simmer for a minute or two more, until the anchovy has melted completely into the paste. Taste for seasoning and remove from the heat. Let the liver paste cool for a few minutes.

Serve the liver paste on slices of bread, toasted or not as you prefer. You can serve Chicken Liver Crostini warm or at room temperature. The liver paste can be made ahead and, if you like, gently reheated with a bit of broth or butter; in fact, many say it’s tastier that way.

Notes on Crostini

The traditional bread for crostini is, of course, Tuscan bread. If your local bakery or market doesn’t carry Tuscan bread, then a good homemade bread will do very well—if you want it to emulate the Tuscan variety, leave out the salt. You can also opt for any bread with a good crust and firm crumb. Personally, although not traditional, I like to use a good quality baguette, which makes for a smaller crostini that are easy to handle and perfect for a cocktail party. The bread can be toasted or not, as you prefer, although for much of the bread you can buy these days, toasting is a good idea, as it firms up the crumb. I also like the extra layer of flavor it adds. For a really rich version, Bugialli says that frying the bread slices in olive oil “works very well”.

Most recipes for Chicken Liver Crostini follow essentially the same pattern, although the addition of juniper berries in this version is rather unusual. Onions, either by themselves or mixed with a bit of carrot and celery, can take the place of garlic for the initial soffritto. Some recipes call for a drizzle of wine or vin santo, and the livers can be complemented with a few chicken hearts and/or a bit of crumble sausage. Capers and anchovies sotto sale—packed in salt—work better than those in packed brine or oil, if you can find them; the anchovies are optional but do give a nice, not at all fishy, flavor. Many modern recipes for Chicken Liver Crostini call for much shorter cooking times than Bugialli’s recipe, just long enough for the livers to lose their rawness, adding just enough broth to moisten them a bit.

Crostini are often confused with bruschetta, another bread-based antipasto. The difference is that bruschetta is, by definition, made with toasted bread slices, rubbed with garlic and drizzled with oil. If you like, your bruschetta can be topped with tomato, but that’s optional. Crostini may or may not be toasted but always carry a topping, which—besides the classic Tuscan chicken liver paste—can be just about anything you could imagine. To make things a bit more complicated, the Tuscans have another name for bruschetta: fettunta, or ‘anointed slice’. And just so you’re totally confused, there are also crostoni, made with large slices of bread; even though originally crostini were made with slices of Tuscan bread, which are rather large to begin with, these days, crostini made with baguette has become so popular that another word has become necessary to distinguish between the two versions.

Crostini di fegatini (Tuscan Chicken Liver Crostini)

Ingredients

For serving:

Day old, crusty bread, thinly sliced (see Notes)

Directions

Sauté the garlic and sage leaves gently in the oil and butter until the garlic is just beginning to brown. Add the chicken livers and sauté for 10 minutes or so. Then add a pinch of salt and pepper, along with the juniper berries, slightly crushed with the back of a knife or in a mortar and pestle. Turn and add a ladleful of broth. Let things simmer for 15-20 minutes.

Off heat, drain the chicken livers in a colander, saving the liquid and removing the garlic and sage leaves. In a food processor, chop the livers until you have a roughish paste—don't overdo it—and then scrape the liver paste back into the skillet, along with the reserved liquid. Thin out the paste with another ladleful of the broth, and simmer gently until almost all the liquid has evaporated. Just before it's done, mix the chopped anchovies and capers and simmer for a minute or two more, until the anchovy has melted completely into the paste. Taste for seasoning and remove from the heat. Let the liver paste cool for a few minutes.

Serve the liver paste on slices of bread, toasted or not as you prefer. You can serve Chicken Liver Crostini warm or at room temperature. The liver paste can be made ahead and, if you like, gently reheated with a bit of broth or butter; in fact, many say it's tastier that way.

The traditional bread for crostini is, of course, Tuscan bread. If your local bakery or market doesn't carry Tuscan bread, then a good homemade bread will do very well—if you want it to emulate the Tuscan variety, leave out the salt. You can also opt for any bread with a good crust and firm crumb. Personally, although not traditional, I like to use a good quality baguette, which makes for a smaller crostini that are easy to handle and perfect for a cocktail party. The bread can be toasted or not, as you prefer, although for much of the bread you can buy these days, toasting is a good idea, as it firms up the crumb. I also like the extra layer of flavor it adds. For a really rich version, Bugialli says that frying the bread slices in olive oil "works very well".

2.6

http://memoriediangelina.com/2014/11/21/crostini-di-fegatini-tuscan-canapes/

(c) Frank A. Fariello, Jr.

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