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Eat This Word: Bagna Cauda

JBF Editors

JBF Editors

Mon, May 16, 2016

WHAT? A hot soak for your veggies. Bagna cauda, …

WHAT? A hot soak for your veggies. Bagna cauda, Italian for hot bath, is a very old dish with a Piedmont pedigree. Once considered a poor man's meal, bagna cauda has become one of the region's most popular foods. The "bath" is a tangy sauce made from garlic, olive oil, and anchovy; butter is often added in as well. To keep the sauce hot, it's typically served over a flame. Raw, or sometimes lightly cooked vegetables, cut into bite-size pieces, are dipped into it using a long-pronged fork. In Piedmont, fennel, cauliflower, cabbage, and red peppers are the veggies of choice, but any vegetable that's good to eat raw works well with bagna cauda, too.

WHERE? Berkshires' First Taste of Spring

WHEN? March 9, 2015

HOW? Whipped Maplebrook Farm Burrata with Bagna Cauda