Chocolate Pistachio Biscotti

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Chocolate Pistachio Biscotti with: Felicia Mohan

With Felicia Mohan

A biscotti is a cookie, said to have originated in the Italian city of Prato. The word is said to have derived from the Latin word for “twice baked.” They are derived from a centuries old recipe but today there are numerous creative variations that incorporate all sorts of ingredients and flavors. These chocolate and pistachio biscotti are a good example of that trend.

Biscotti are very dry and have therefore are typically served with an after dinner drink and used for dunking. In Italy they are most often served with a heavy wine, and in the U.S. usually with a coffee, such as cappuccinos and lattes. (The dunking into a hot beverage makes the hard cookies much softer to the delight of some.) The original recipes used almonds because the flavor went well with dipping into red wine.

These biscotti have become a favorite in Felicia Ciaramitaro Mohan’s house and are a must for any type of gathering, especially family occasions and holidays. The only thing to be careful about is that when you serve them once they will be requested over and over again.

Ingredients

6 tablespoons unsalted butter, softened
2 cups flour
½ cup cocoa powder, unsweetened
1 teaspoon baking soda
¼ teaspoon kosher salt
1 cup sugar
2 large eggs, slightly beaten
1 cup green pistachio nuts, shelled
½ cup chocolate chips
16 ounces white chocolate (for drizzling)

Instructions

Preheat oven 350 degrees F.

1. Sift flour, coco, baking soda, and salt and set aside.
2. In a large bowl of a stand mixer, cream the butter and sugar until light and fluffy. Add eggs and continue to mix on medium speed until well combined.
3. Carefully add dry mixture and continue to mix, forming stiff dough. Add nuts and chocolate chips to dough and mix well.
4. Transfer dough to counter and cut dough in half. On the counter, shape each half of dough into a log shape, 12 inches long ½ inch thick and 3 inches wide, and then carefully transfer to a parchment lined cookie sheet (The dough can be shaped smaller or larger, which ever you prefer). Chill in the refrigerator 15 minutes before baking.
5. Bake 25 minutes. Remove cookie sheet from oven, and lower oven temperature to 300 degrees F. Let cookies cool on counter for 5 minutes.
6. Using a very sharp knife slice cookies 1 inch wide, and lay them on their side. Place cookies onto cookie sheet and put back into oven and cook an additional 8 minutes. Remove from oven and completely cool cookies.
7. Melt 1 bag (16 ounces) of good white chocolate in a double boiler.
8. Carefully transfer hot melted white chocolate into a pastry bag fitted with a small round tip. Place cooled cookies right side up and drizzle with chocolate.

Enjoy!

Recipe courtesy of Felicia (Ciaramitaro) Mohan, 2012.

From "Food For Thought" Column by Heather Atwood: Felicia Mohan lives in a sparkling new house in Gloucester, and has twin 11-year-olds: Amanda, playing 12-year-old tennis and ranked No. 32 in New England, and B.J., a catcher for AAU Baseball who will play in the Gloucester All-Star 11-year-old team. Felicia looks like a beautiful, modern mother, struggling to get her kids where they need to go while keeping up with life at home, but Felicia is also adamant about preserving her family's Sicilian heritage, particularly the dishes her grandmother, another Felicia, prepared. Felicia Mohan's grandfathers were named Joseph Salvatore Ciaramitaro — both of them, spelled the exact same way. One Joseph fished first from his boat The Benjamin and Josephine, which was sunk by a German U-boat off the coast of Maine, and then he fished from his Benjamin C, named after his father-in-law, Benjamin Cucuru. Later he founded Capt'n Joe's Lobster Co. on the wharf in Gloucester, now run by Felicia's brother, Joey, and cousin Frankie. Felicia's other grandfather owned Pat's Center Grocery, that not only sold groceries but provided all the fishing boats with food for their long trips, delivering the "speza," as the supplies were called, to each boat before it left port.
Grandpa with the wharf was married to Felicia's namesake. Holidays at this Felicia's house began a full week ahead as all the women in the family gathered at her home, which had two full kitchens, to cook together. When school let out at 3, the children went straight to Grandma's house that week because that's where their mothers were cooking. Not only were these women making all the traditional Italian holiday foods, from appetizers such as octopus salad, a standard which the men insisted upon at every holiday, to a wealth of Italian cookies, homemade bread, and New World foods such as pies, but the women were also making ordinary dinners those weeknights for all their husbands and children. Felicia and Joseph have passed away. Now, holiday meals are at young Felicia's, where 35 to 40 people come to celebrate. Felicia, like her grandmother, still sets a formal table with china and linen; her custom-built table seats 25, with two more tables in the great room for overflow, replacing her grandmother's enormous table that started in the kitchen, extended through the dining room, the hallway and ended at the living room. In her large, creamy, new kitchen, Felicia still makes dishes like braciole, spiedini, and olive gonzathe. She makes videos for this newspaper showing how to prepare her grandmother's special bread crumbs, "mudiga," with chicken and steak. This past December, Felicia gathered all the cousins together to make their great-grandmother's Santa Lucia dessert, "cuccia," a vanilla pudding made with wheatberries which the playful great-grandmother had always encouraged the children to eat in a race. Contact Heather at heatheraa@aol.com. Her blog is at gloucestertimes.com/foodforthought

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