• Uovo in Raviolo

    From Jill McQuown@21:1/5 to All on Sun May 18 10:41:31 2025
    This was buried in a reply to yet another useless troll but I think it
    deserves a mention:

    A friend across the hall at the office brought something for lunch I'd
    never heard of before. (His wife is an excellent cook.) Ravioli filled
    with ricotta cheese and an egg yolk that stays runny even after the
    ravioli is cooked in boiling water and then plated with a sauce. This
    recipe I found online calls for pancetta in the sauce but she makes a
    brown butter sauce. He reheated it gently on medium setting in the
    microwave so that the egg yolk was still runny when he cut into the Uovo
    in Raviolo.


    https://www.seriouseats.com/uovo-in-raviolo-runny-egg-yolk-ravioli-ricotta-recipe

    He says it's very labor intensive dish so she doesn't prepare it very often.

    Jill

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Cindy Hamilton@21:1/5 to Jill McQuown on Sun May 18 15:37:13 2025
    On 2025-05-18, Jill McQuown <j_mcquown@comcast.net> wrote:
    This was buried in a reply to yet another useless troll but I think it deserves a mention:

    A friend across the hall at the office brought something for lunch I'd
    never heard of before. (His wife is an excellent cook.) Ravioli filled
    with ricotta cheese and an egg yolk that stays runny even after the
    ravioli is cooked in boiling water and then plated with a sauce. This
    recipe I found online calls for pancetta in the sauce but she makes a
    brown butter sauce. He reheated it gently on medium setting in the
    microwave so that the egg yolk was still runny when he cut into the Uovo
    in Raviolo.


    https://www.seriouseats.com/uovo-in-raviolo-runny-egg-yolk-ravioli-ricotta-recipe

    He says it's very labor intensive dish so she doesn't prepare it very often.

    I've seen that prepared on more than one cooking competition show.
    It's a ballsy move in a timed competition.

    --
    Cindy Hamilton

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Jill McQuown@21:1/5 to Cindy Hamilton on Sun May 18 12:14:23 2025
    On 5/18/2025 11:37 AM, Cindy Hamilton wrote:
    On 2025-05-18, Jill McQuown <j_mcquown@comcast.net> wrote:
    This was buried in a reply to yet another useless troll but I think it
    deserves a mention:

    A friend across the hall at the office brought something for lunch I'd
    never heard of before. (His wife is an excellent cook.) Ravioli filled
    with ricotta cheese and an egg yolk that stays runny even after the
    ravioli is cooked in boiling water and then plated with a sauce. This
    recipe I found online calls for pancetta in the sauce but she makes a
    brown butter sauce. He reheated it gently on medium setting in the
    microwave so that the egg yolk was still runny when he cut into the Uovo
    in Raviolo.


    https://www.seriouseats.com/uovo-in-raviolo-runny-egg-yolk-ravioli-ricotta-recipe

    He says it's very labor intensive dish so she doesn't prepare it very often.

    I've seen that prepared on more than one cooking competition show.
    It's a ballsy move in a timed competition.

    Thank goodness his wife wasn't on a timed competition cooking show. ;)

    It looked amazing. You have to be very careful to keep the egg yolk
    runny. I have a problem with that when simply cooking soft boiled eggs.
    She's an excellent cook. One day last year he brought leftover lamb.
    He had bought her a sous vide circulator. She used it to cook a a rack
    of lamb. The lamb chop was still rare & juicy when he reheated it for
    lunch. This guy brings the most interesting leftovers! His wife is an accountant at a legal firm. But she also loves cooking and baking. :)

    Jill

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Carol@21:1/5 to Jill McQuown on Sun May 18 20:58:01 2025
    Jill McQuown wrote:

    This was buried in a reply to yet another useless troll but I think
    it deserves a mention:

    A friend across the hall at the office brought something for lunch
    I'd never heard of before. (His wife is an excellent cook.) Ravioli
    filled with ricotta cheese and an egg yolk that stays runny even
    after the ravioli is cooked in boiling water and then plated with a
    sauce. This recipe I found online calls for pancetta in the sauce
    but she makes a brown butter sauce. He reheated it gently on medium
    setting in the microwave so that the egg yolk was still runny when he
    cut into the Uovo in Raviolo.



    https://www.seriouseats.com/uovo-in-raviolo-runny-egg-yolk-ravioli-ricotta-recipe

    He says it's very labor intensive dish so she doesn't prepare it very
    often.

    Jill

    Interesting!

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Carol@21:1/5 to Jill McQuown on Sun May 18 21:08:16 2025
    Jill McQuown wrote:

    On 5/18/2025 11:37 AM, Cindy Hamilton wrote:
    On 2025-05-18, Jill McQuown <j_mcquown@comcast.net> wrote:
    This was buried in a reply to yet another useless troll but I
    think it deserves a mention:

    A friend across the hall at the office brought something for
    lunch I'd never heard of before. (His wife is an excellent
    cook.) Ravioli filled with ricotta cheese and an egg yolk that
    stays runny even after the ravioli is cooked in boiling water and
    then plated with a sauce. This recipe I found online calls for
    pancetta in the sauce but she makes a brown butter sauce. He
    reheated it gently on medium setting in the microwave so that the
    egg yolk was still runny when he cut into the Uovo in Raviolo.



    https://www.seriouseats.com/uovo-in-raviolo-runny-egg-yolk-ravioli-ricotta-recipe

    He says it's very labor intensive dish so she doesn't prepare it
    very often.

    I've seen that prepared on more than one cooking competition show.
    It's a ballsy move in a timed competition.

    Thank goodness his wife wasn't on a timed competition cooking show. ;)

    It looked amazing. You have to be very careful to keep the egg yolk
    runny. I have a problem with that when simply cooking soft boiled
    eggs. She's an excellent cook. One day last year he brought
    leftover lamb. He had bought her a sous vide circulator. She used it
    to cook a a rack of lamb. The lamb chop was still rare & juicy when
    he reheated it for lunch. This guy brings the most interesting
    leftovers! His wife is an accountant at a legal firm. But she also
    loves cooking and baking. :)

    Jill

    One of the things I miss since retirement was chatting with others in
    the break room and seeing all the leftovers variety. Maria was often
    the most interesting. She's part Mexican and part Puerto Rican and
    made all sorts of fusion meals blending the culinary traits of both.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Jill McQuown@21:1/5 to Carol on Mon May 19 17:39:33 2025
    On 5/18/2025 5:08 PM, Carol wrote:
    Jill McQuown wrote:

    On 5/18/2025 11:37 AM, Cindy Hamilton wrote:
    On 2025-05-18, Jill McQuown <j_mcquown@comcast.net> wrote:
    This was buried in a reply to yet another useless troll but I
    think it deserves a mention:

    A friend across the hall at the office brought something for
    lunch I'd never heard of before. (His wife is an excellent
    cook.) Ravioli filled with ricotta cheese and an egg yolk that
    stays runny even after the ravioli is cooked in boiling water and
    then plated with a sauce. This recipe I found online calls for
    pancetta in the sauce but she makes a brown butter sauce. He
    reheated it gently on medium setting in the microwave so that the
    egg yolk was still runny when he cut into the Uovo in Raviolo.



    https://www.seriouseats.com/uovo-in-raviolo-runny-egg-yolk-ravioli-ricotta-recipe

    He says it's very labor intensive dish so she doesn't prepare it
    very often.

    I've seen that prepared on more than one cooking competition show.
    It's a ballsy move in a timed competition.

    Thank goodness his wife wasn't on a timed competition cooking show. ;)

    It looked amazing. You have to be very careful to keep the egg yolk
    runny. I have a problem with that when simply cooking soft boiled
    eggs. She's an excellent cook. One day last year he brought
    leftover lamb. He had bought her a sous vide circulator. She used it
    to cook a a rack of lamb. The lamb chop was still rare & juicy when
    he reheated it for lunch. This guy brings the most interesting
    leftovers! His wife is an accountant at a legal firm. But she also
    loves cooking and baking. :)

    Jill

    One of the things I miss since retirement was chatting with others in
    the break room and seeing all the leftovers variety. Maria was often
    the most interesting. She's part Mexican and part Puerto Rican and
    made all sorts of fusion meals blending the culinary traits of both.

    Yours was a different scenario. We don't sit around in a break room
    having lunch together. But yes, it's interesting to talk with the other
    people in the building who enjoy talking about food and cooking. We
    sometimes exchange recipes. This particular raviolo recipe is not going
    to be one I attempt.

    Jill

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)