Sunday, April 13, 2025

Marcela Hazan's Pancetta Frittata

When I think of Italian food I don't always think of pasta.  I think of really simple fare. Dishes with a handful of ingredients. I think of things like a frittata. A simple egg dish with no more than five ingredients and no fussy presentation.

Marcela Hazan's Pancetta Frittata is probably one of the most simple yet delicious frittata I've ever made. It is simply 1 cup of pancetta cooked until it gets some color, 6 eggs, 6 tablespoons of Parmigiano-Reggiano, butter, and salt and pepper. It is so simple it doesn't call for herbs, so I didn't try to jazz it up and make it look fancy. It doesn't need to look fancy. It's peasant food at best, but you could entertain with it. It's easy and simple and Super Italian, our IHCC theme for this week, and it is absolutely creamy and delicious.

Do yourself a favor and make this simple dish sometime during this Easter season. It's perfect for an Easter Brunch and it is great served hot, warm, and room temperature. 

This is the epitome of the simple food we need to eating more.

Pancetta Frittata

Adapted from Marcela Cucina

by Marcela Hazan

Serves 4 as main or 8 as appetizer

1 cup finely chopped pancetta

6 eggs

6 tablespoons freshly grated Parmigiano-Reggiano cheese

salt and black pepper, to taste

1 tablespoon butter

Turn on your broiler. Put the chopped pancetta in a small skillet, turn on the heat to medium, and cook, stirring from time to time, until it becomes deeply colored and has shed much of its fat. Do not let it become crisp. Lift the pancetta from the pan using a slotted spatula in order to separate it from the liquefied fat, and put it into a medium-sized bowl. Discard the fat in the pan.

To the bowl with the pancetta, add the eggs, grated Parmesan, salt, and liberal grindings of pepper to the bowl and mix thoroughly with a fork or whisk.

Put 1 tablespoon of butter in a 12-inch nonstick skillet, turn on the heat to medium. Do not let the butter become colored, but as soon as it begins to foam, pour the egg mixture into the pan. Turn the heat down to very low. When the eggs have set and thickened, and they are creamy only in the center of the pan, run the skillet briefly under the broiler. Take frittata out the moment the surface of the frittata has set, but not browned. 

Super Italian @ IHCC!


No comments:

Post a Comment

Thanks so much for taking the time to leave a comment! At the moment I am having a huge problem with spam so I've had to add comment moderation and close off comments to anonymous users. I apologize for the trouble and hope to return my comments to normal shortly.