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Mario Batali: Cabbage Bruschetta

By Mario Batali, Tribune Content Agency on

For many Italian kids nowadays, bruschetta is the new pizza, and it can be thought of in the same way in terms of toppings, no matter how simple or complex. The word bruschetta comes from the Roman dialectical verb root bruscare, meaning "to cook or roast over hot coals." In contrast to the literal translation, at OTTO Enoteca Pizzeria in New York City and Las Vegas, we use an industrial toaster. At home you can use a simple toaster oven, panino press or even a regular oven broiler for results that are equally delicious.

When preparing bruschetta, cook the bread a little bit longer than you might be comfortable doing to form a deep golden brown crust. Be patient and you'll notice a more complex flavor and crunch in your bruschetta. The addition of smoked bacon and flaky sea salt only amplifies that experience in my Cabbage Bruschetta.

Available from late fall through winter, cabbage is a wallet-friendly and delicious cold-weather meal. While there are more than four hundred cabbage varieties out there, the three most familiar in America are Savoy, red and green. In this recipe, red is perfect with its white veins running throughout smooth textured leaves. Every now and then I'll switch to white cabbage, depending on which varieties the local farmers market has to offer.

When buying cabbage, avoid the pre-cut packages because even when only halved, the cabbage loses a lot of the valuable Vitamin C content. Keep the firm heads in an airtight plastic bag within the crisper drawer of your refrigerator to stretch the freshness to up to two weeks. When ready to cook with cabbage, avoid steel knives, as the phytonutrients in this cruciferous vegetable often react with the metal, causing the leaves to turn black. Use a stainless steel knife to cut the cabbage into ribbons after removing the thick outer leave and washing well under running water.

Turn a couple of these cabbage bruschette into a nice, light meal by serving them with a few well-explored cheeses. Together, cheese and bruschetta have become their own delicious category at simple and fancy enotecas alike in all of my favorite cities.

Cabbage Bruschetta

 

Recipe excerpted from "Molto Gusto" by Mario Batali (ecco, 2010)

For the bruschetta:

Six 3/4-inch thick slices filone or other country bread

2 garlic cloves, peeled

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