The Inspired Kitchen
Braised Fennel with Raisins and Pine Nuts
A Jewish Italian delicacy.
By Adeena Sussman
It’s
a little-known fact that many of the mainstays of Italian cuisine were in fact
introduced by the Jewish community that has inhabited Rome for over 2,000
years. Vegetables such as artichokes and eggplant were ignored ingredients
until they were noticed in the Cucina
Hebraica (Jewish kitchen).
Fennel is another case in point. "Fennel is now
considered a quintessential Italian ingredient," says renowned
Italian-Jewish cooking expert and writer Edda Servi Machlin, author of Classic Italian Jewish Cooking.
"But until the Jews began to use it, others turned their noses down at
it."
Jews have been living in Rome virtually uninterrupted for
over two millennia, having first settled there in large numbers after the fall
of the second Temple. Large communities of Spanish and Portuguese Jews came to
Italy after the expulsion from Spain in 1492, and Polish and German Jews
arrived in Italy in the 16th century. According to Machlin, it was the
Sephardic Jews who turned fennel into a delicacy that only much later found its
way into the Italian culinary mainstream.
Fennel is in season from fall through spring, and lends
itself to a variety of preparations. While I love a crisp, fresh, fennel salad
dressed with little more than lemon and olive oil, braising mellows the notes
of anise that stand out in the raw ingredient. This dish makes a great
accompaniment to fish or an herb-inflected roast chicken.
Serves 6
6 medium fennel bulbs
1/4 cup olive oil
5 cloves garlic, sliced
1 1/2 teaspoons salt
1/2 cup golden raisins
2 cups chicken stock or vegetable stock
zest of 1 lemon (about 1 tablespoon)
1 tablespoon lemon juice, or more to taste
Trim stalks and fronds (the green parts of the vegetable)
from fennel bulbs, reserving fronds. Slice bulbs in half. Using a sharp knife,
cut out tough inner root (it will be white in color) from each half. Slice
fennel into 1-inch thick slices, rinse, and dry. Heat olive oil in a large
stockpot over medium heat. Add garlic and cook until softened but not browned,
about 3 minutes. Add fennel and cook 2 minutes, stirring occasionally. Add salt
and chicken stock and bring to a boil. Reduce heat to a simmer, cover, and cook
10 minutes. Remove cover, add raisins, stir, cover, and cook an additional 5
minutes. Remove from heat, add lemon juice and lemon zest, and stir to
incorporate. Transfer fennel to a bowl and spoon some of the liquid from the
pot over the fennel. Top with pine nuts and fennel fronds and serve warm.
Adeena Sussman is a
food writer and chef based in New York. She writes the bimonthly food column
Season to Taste for Hadassah
magazine, and her work appears regularly on Epicurious.com, and in publications
including Gourmet, Time Out New York,
The Forward, the San Jose Mercury
News, and Sunset magazine. Visit her at adeenasussman.com.