Friday, April 20, 2012

Product Spotlight: Sfogliatelle


Walking into the shop this morning, I saw that the fellas were making our Sfogliatelle again and I couldn’t resist sharing some history on these Napolean treats.
Getting hand-shaped around the Ricotta mixture

For those of you who are yet to try these tasty little gems (pronounced “s-voy-a-dell”), you’re missing out.  The pastries are created around a base of organic Ricotta cheese, in-house zested orange peel, sweetened wheat and cream, using a dough similar to a puff pastry.  The process of making Sfogliatelle is incredibly time consuming; first, a dough that the French call pâte feuilletée (feuilletée, like Sfogliatelle, means “many leaves” or “many layers”) is created by hand.  The dough is then rolled out on a large table, brushed with butter, and rolled up into a log which individual disc portions are cut from.  These discs are then shaped by hand around the special Ricotta cheese mixture and baked.

Because our Sfogliatelle are so popular, Robert has to make them daily to keep up with demand.  Apparently people have been craving them this week, though, because this is the second assembly-line style production of them we’ve had in a week!

On the racks waiting for the oven
There are a few different interpretations of the origins of Sfogliatelle, but we happen to believe what Mr. Joe did, so we’ll tell you that story here.  Back in the 17th century, a nun at the Carmelite convent of Santa Croce di Lucca in Naples had leftover semolina that she had cooked in milk.  As it was a sin to throw away food, she started adding things to her leftovers—cinnamon, Ricotta cheese and orange blossom water helped to thicken and enrich the mixture, which she then wrapped in a dough that she made using leftover bread dough and lard.  The original shape was supposed to resemble a nun’s wimple, though today people frequently refer to the pastry as a “lobster tail,” “clam shell” or “eggplant.”   The resulting creation was hailed by the Abbess of the convent as one of the most delicious things she had tasted, so she determined that the treats should be shared with the outside world.

That being said, the nuns were forbidden to have contact with the outside world; part of their covenant with God was to stay cloistered at the Convent.  It is said that the only nuns who were allowed to have contact at the convent of Santa Croce di Lucca were those who were family members of a rich prince who donated large sums to the convent.  The recipe for making Sfogliatelle is supposed to have left the convent walls after one of these visits and travelled up and down the coast of Italy, growing in popularity and fame.

A completed tray of Sfogliatelle



Many variations of the Sfogliatelle now exist—some are smooth rather than having the many crunchy layers of the original recipe, some are filled with a sweet custard instead of the Ricotta we favor, and most recently, Italian chefs have begun using the Sfogliatelle shape and dough as a vehicle for many other savory applications—but we like to stick to Giuseppe’s original recipe from Naples and hold close to our traditional roots.  Next time you’re in the mood for a pastry to enjoy over your morning coffee, stop by and try one of our most popular treats!  (Or, if you’re out of town, you can click here to order some for shipping!)

Ready for shipping!
We hope your week has been fulfilling and that your weekend plans are filled with whatever it is you need to restore yourself.  Thank you for being a part of our lives.   We’re thinking of you!

Termini Brothers Bakery

Thursday, April 12, 2012

Thank You!

We just wanted to tell you again how much fun we had with everyone this Easter Season.  It may very well have been the best one yet!  We've spent this week catching up and getting back into the groove, but we thought it would be fun to share some of our pictures from Easter with you.  Thank you so much for sharing your time with us, for making us a part of your traditions, and for all the smiles!  We are forever indebted to all of you.

Kitchen Tour with Mom

"Dad, can we get one of those??"
How cute!


Many generations joining us for Easter


Lookin' great in those Termini Hats!


"This is AWESOME!"
I think they're smiling at the lamb cake, not the camera...
Counter filled with tastiness!


Smiles...

More smiles....


"If you think you're getting a bite of this, you're crazy!"

Even more smiles...
Family Time!
I think we get her endorsement!

I think there is some Ricotta CHEESE in those Cannoli!
Keep em coming!  We love those SMILES!
Happy Easter!

Keeping our man in Green prepped for battle!

Battle Cannoli-Filling is ON!!!
Cool confidence...I've got this!






Getting pumped for some Easter treats!!

Great picture, y'all!
"We've got the best Dad EVER!"

That's where the magic happens...


What a group!

Thursday, April 5, 2012

Buona Pasqua!


Easter 1938, decorating Egg Cakes

With Easter approaching this weekend, we thought we would share what the Termini Family does to celebrate the Resurrection.  From an interview with Mrs. Termini:

“Well, to us, Easter is a joyous religious celebration.  First and foremost on Easter morning, we get dressed in our best and all attend Mass together.  After the Mass, we visit with some of our neighbors at the Church before going home to our (Mr. and Mrs. Termini’s) house.  Have you ever heard the expression “Natale con I tuoi, Pasqua con chi vuoi!”?  It means that for Christmas, you celebrate with your family, but with Easter you can celebrate with whomever you please. 

Bunny Bread--the Grandchildren love playing with these!
When we get home, the grandchildren do an Easter Egg hunt in our back yard and get to open their Easter baskets that are filled with traditional Italian Easter treats—chocolate eggs with prizes in them, our Hamintash Cookie Baskets and the Easter Bread Bunnies, which they just love.  They play with them like little dolls!  But, the eggs are a very important part of our day—from the hunt to the treats, we try to include them everywhere—because they are symbolic of rebirth and the Resurrection.

Eggs getting ready for the Hamentashen Cookie Baskets
After all of the fun and festivities, we’re all very hungry!  We sit down and enjoy the Feast Day together at one big, long table.  First, we have the Ham Pie as an appetizer, then move on to the traditional lamb main course (lamb represents the sacrificed Christ, “the lamb of God”) with lots of side dishes, and then we have the Ricotta Pie, a traditional Sicilian Easter dessert.  Since Mr. Joe was from Enna, Sicily, we take the Ricotta Pie over the Pastiera, which is from Naples.
More Easter Basket booty!

Bunny Cakes
After dinner, we all sit together in the living room and enjoy each other’s company while the kids play with their treats.  It’s one of our favorite days of the year, and we like to savor every minute that our busy family gets to share and all be in one room.”

So, from our Family to yours, whatever your traditions may be, Buona Pasqua!

Termini Brothers Bakery


Egg Cakes--Pound Cake covered in Ganache. Yum!!! 

Monday, April 2, 2012

Pesce d'Aprile


It’s been a crazy week and a half here at Termini’s as we are preparing for Easter.  Breads, cakes, pies, cookies and all of our regularly featured products have got us busting a move all over the kitchen from before sunup to well after sunrise.  Since we’ve been telling you all about our Easter product line for as long as we’ve been making it, we figured we’d tell you a little story instead:

Yesterday, in places all over the world, people celebrated April Fool’s Day.  In Italy, the day is referred to Pesce d’Aprile, meaning April Fish, because a long-standing tradition involved adhering a dead fish to a person’s back as a prank.  Whether the person found out he’d been duped by someone engaging him in the following conversation— “L’hai visto? (Have you seen him?)”, “Chi? (Who),” “Il pesce d’aprile! (The April fish/fool!)”—or later smelling the dead beast against his back, the prank was played all the same.   Nowadays, children still honor the tradition, but are far kinder about it; on April 1st in many areas of Italy you’ll see people wandering around with paper fish stuck to their backs.

The tradition of April Fool’s Day is thought to have origins in the 16th century when the Gregorian calendar was adopted over the Julian calendar.  Before the Gregorian calendar went into effect, New Year’s was celebrated over the week of March 25th through April 1st.  The stubborn folk who were unwilling to make the shift to the new calendar—which was put into effect to help track Catholic holidays more easily—were made into pesce by their neighbors.  Empty gift parcels were delivered to help friends “celebrate” the “New Year,” and, over time, more pranks began to emerge.

The holiday is so widely celebrated that even the Italian Media gets into the mix and spreads false stories, which they then rank the following day based on how many people fall for it.  Our favorite that we’ve heard: In 1957 a popular show said that due to climatic changes and food shortages, Swiss farmers engineered and grew a bumper crop of “Spaghetti Trees.”   The show received mail for weeks asking where to get the special seed to make the popular pasta grow on plants!
Pictures of the Spaghetti Tree hoax...here a woman is "harvesting"!! 

So, while it all sounds like it could be a lot of fun, we just did not have any time to participate in the Pesce d’Aprile festivities as we’ve been baking away in the kitchen, without any preservatives or pesce to be found!  Here are a few snapshots of what we were up to this weekend that we hope will make you smile.  Come visit us soon and share your pictures and stories on Facebook!  We can’t wait to see and hear from you.

All our best,
Termini Brothers Bakery
Bunny Cakes in the Mold!
Nick decorating our Easter Egg Cakes

We hand-peel all of our own citrus!


Our Easter Bread before it's braided...


Our Ricotta Pie is egg-washed twice!