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Ricotta Crostoni

I put this on the Mozzarella Bar menu following a visit to Chez Panisse Café, after which I became obsessed with ricotta toast. At the café, they served a garlic crostini with mounds of fresh, fluffy ricotta piled on top, and I just loved it at first sight. I was so excited about that toast that I had to find a way to work it into my repertoire at the Mozzarella Bar. I had been wanting to find a way to work peperonata—stewed peppers—onto the menu, since mozzarella and roasted peppers are a classic combination, but I just hadn’t known how I wanted to serve it. The ricotta toast, or crostoni, offered the perfect solution. While I drifted a bit from tradition, I feel I did that pairing justice. We serve the crostoni with the peperonata on the side, so guests can assemble the combination one bite at a time, with the toast in one hand and a forkful of peperonata in the other. I like being a two-fisted eater, and I just assume other people do too. Because the peperonata makes such a large amount, this is a great antipasto for a crowd. We gave you directions for serving this dish family style, but you could also spoon the peperonata onto individual serving dishes and give one to each guest.

Recipe information

  • Yield

    serves 12

Ingredients

Peperonata (page 87)
3 cups fresh ricotta (preferably sheep’s milk)
12 Crostoni Bagnati (page 48)
Finishing-quality extra-virgin olive oil
1/4 cup thinly sliced fresh Italian parsley leaves
Maldon sea salt or another flaky sea salt, such as fleur de sel
Fresh coarsely ground black pepper

Preparation

  1. Step 1

    Spoon the peperonata into a medium serving dish or individual serving dishes.

    Step 2

    Put the ricotta in a medium bowl and stir vigorously with a spoon to fluff it up. Pile 1/4 cup of ricotta in mounds on each crostoni and drizzle with finishing-quality olive oil. Sprinkle a teaspoon of parsley, a pinch of sea salt, and coarsely grind black pepper over each crostono. Arrange the crostoni on a serving platter or board, or rest one toast on the edge of each individual serving dish, and serve.

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