Carciofi Alla Giudia
By: Patricia Turo
Published: Thursday, December 31, 2009 - 2:15pm

Ingredients




12 smalls artichokes
Canola or olive oil for frying

Kosher or sea salt

2 inches lemons,  quarters

Preparation

1 Cleaning the Artichokes 2 Cut the stems off and the tops 1/4 of the way down of all the artichokes. Remove the leaves down to the white leaves. The leaves are removed by pulling them back and snapping them off. It is not necessary to remove the hay in the middle, if the artichokes are very small, but if using medium size artichokes you must remove it with a small spoon, or a melon baller. Place them in a bowl of water with lemon juice to keep them from turning brown. 3 Cooking 4 In a pan of salted boiling water (you can use table salt), boil the artichokes for about 3 minutes. Remove them from the pan and turn them upside down on paper towels to drain. They should be completely dry before frying, or the oil will splatter. Once dried turn the artichokes over and gently open them up and loosen the leaves so they look like flowers. 5 Heat the oil and fry each artichoke upside down in the oil. This will set the leaves open. Turn them and fry them on the bottom side. The artichokes are already blanched and don’t need a long frying time, usually 3-5 minutes. Look for the color when frying; they should not be brown or green, but golden. 6 Remove them to a rack or paper towels to drain and immediately sprinkle them with a coarse grain sea salt. When biting into them you will sporadically taste the salt. Serve them on a large serving platter with quarter lemons, which should be squeezed over the top.

About


Roman Jewish artichokes are a centuries old gastronomic tradition. One of Rome’s treasured dishes, they are sometimes called Carciofi Romani.
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