foodgeeks.com: Home
 
Search:  
Title Ingredients      
 

Category:  

Recipes  |  Ethnic / International  |  Italian  |  Seafood

Print This Recipe Email This Recipe Add Your Review for This Recipe Add This Recipe to My Cookbook

Cozze e Limone -- Mussels and Lemon

Login

 
Photos for this Recipe:


Recipe Tools:


Scale & Convert Recipe:
Scale to recipe
U.S. / Imperial
Metric
Decimal
Fraction


Epicurean Resources:

Foodgeek:

djplam

Rating:

     

Servings:

1 recipe

Prep. Time:

Total Time:

Ingredients:

4 to 5 lb. mussels, live, in shell
2 cloves garlic, sliced
1/4 cup white wine
3 tbsp. water
2 lg. lemons
1-1/2 tbsp. chopped parsley
Black pepper, freshly ground
1 md. lemon, sliced

Directions:

Preparation of mussels:
Remove the beard that usually is attached to the mussel, if the fishmonger has not already done so. Scrub the mussels with a stiff brush and rinse well under cold water. Place all the scrubbed mussels in a large bowl and cover with fresh cold water. Let mussels stand about an hour in the cold water.

Drain the mussels, discarding any mussels that have open shells. Put the mussels in a large saucepan with the garlic, wine and water. Cook, covered, on high for about 5-6 minutes, or until the shells open. Discard any that have not opened. Drain, reserving the liquid.

Peel the lemons, and divide into sections. Discard any pits or pith. In a clean pan, put the mussels, lemon sections, reserved liquid, parsley and a liberal amount of freshly ground pepper. Cover and simmer for about 5 minutes more. Serve with the liquid for dipping, and the lemon slices as decoration.

Comments from djplam :

Just thinking of the recipe has memories of my childhood flooding back. I recall many a summer month spent in the driveway of a neighbor Mr. Campagnino, and his family. Between the two households, and any other people who may drop by, at least 25-35 people would sit around a long table eating mussels, snails, clams, oyster, crab . . . etc!

That was my introduction to simply prepared shellfish, by Sicilians, “fresh off the boat”. Snails cooked live with bubbling tomato sauce, linguine with crab sauce, clams on the half shell. And the Vino!! Mr Campagnino pressed his own grapes each fall. By summer the wine was bottled and decanted. Great stuff that “Dago Red”, not available too much now. He also grew some of his own red wine grapes that us kids would eat by the pound, squeezing out the sugary pulp and discarding the tough skins.

From my cookbook: The "Old Country" Italian Cookbook, by Donald J.P. La Marca

 
 
 

User Reviews:

0 user reviews. Add your review of this recipe.

 
Home  |  Recipes  |  Food Encyclopedia  |  Diets  |  Resources  |  Discussion  |  Geeks  |  About  |  RSS
©1998-2008 GeekSpeak, LLC. All rights reserved.   Privacy Policy