Bisceglie Ravioli With Cherry-Cherry Marinara

""Una ciliegia tira l'altra" (One cherry leads to another) is a saying in the Bisceglie countryside of Italy, which has become a gourmet tourist attraction. A series of cherry harvest festivals, weekend after weekend, gives a continual excuse to party. Here, cherries offer a surprise flair to an Italian classic dish. When you add the sauce to the pan with the cheesy-graham coated ravioli, they react together instantly, almost caramelizing - so delicious! Add bread and salad, and enjoy a filling gourmet dinner without spending the gas money to drive to an Italian restaurant. Note you can do Steps #1-4 (and even #1-6) in advance to get dinner on the table in a hurry. Cutting the cherry tomatoes and cherries is time consuming, but the intense flavor and presentation is worth it versus using canned tomatoes."
 
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photo by Bergy photo by Bergy
photo by Bergy
photo by Chef Jean photo by Chef Jean
photo by Bergy photo by Bergy
photo by Bergy photo by Bergy
Ready In:
40mins
Ingredients:
14
Serves:
2
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ingredients

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directions

  • Boil water and cook ravioli according to package directions; drain.
  • Meanwhile, stir the marinara ingredients together and let sit, so the tomato juices can macerate.
  • Make the graham crackers into fine crumbs. The blender is easiest for this, but this may take several tries; if the blender gets stuck, pick the larger pieces out of its blades and start the blender again.
  • Put the parmesan and cracker crumbs in a Ziploc-type bag and shake to blend together.
  • Fold the egg white and water together in a bowl.
  • Coat each ravioli in the egg white mixture, then put each ravioli in the cheese/cracker bag. Shake the bag until the ravioli are coated with the mixture on both sides.
  • Heat olive oil in a very large skillet over medium heat. Put the coated ravioli in and pan fry until the coating crisps on each side. This is quick - only 2-4 minutes total.
  • Pour the marinara in the pan with the ravioli. Cook for a minute or two, carefully stirring with a spatula, until the tomatoes and cherries are sizzling hot and the flavors have blended. (Note, this step may have to be done in two batches, one for each person's plate, if your skillet is not very large. If you increase this to serve additional people, you will almost surely have to do it in batches.).
  • Place half the ravioli and sauce on each plate and garnish with parmesan cheese, freshly grated if possible. Serve hot - immediately.

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Reviews

  1. This was delicious!! The vinegar balanced out the sweetness of the cherries perfectly and the graham cracker crust turned out to be more tasty then I thought possible. The only thing I found to be a little off was the amount of raviolis, I used 12 oz and still had enough of everything to make more, not that I'm complaining;) Great recipe!!
     
  2. This is a winner. It was wonderful. I thought that 5 oz for 2 servings would be a bit skimpy but it was just right. Clear instructions, easy to follow. Coating the ravioli and browning them gives a nice texture and a flavor boost. Creative use of the contest ingredients - I wish you luck in the contest and hope that others will try tis delish recipe Thanks to whoever created this recipe for a lovely dinner served with Italian meatballs, broccoli & cauliflower.
     
  3. I really like the idea of the cherry-cherry sauce. Just my personal taste, I'm not so fond of toasted ravioli, but this sauce seems to work as well with just boiled ravioli. The recipe is also easily scalable for 1-4 servings. I did struggle with the details of the sauce. It might be that more instructions could clarify what was intended, or perhaps there is a better way to achieve the desired sauce. I used half oregano, half basil for italian seasoning, which isn't the right blend (too much oregano, too much support for the tomatoes and not for the cherries). The use of the gelatin was very unclear to me - it can only partically hydrate in the oil/vinegar liquid, and any structure that develops is dissolved by the heat. If the goal is to have some liquid sauce, along with the cherry/cherry chunks, perhaps a puree would work better. To my taste, the added sweetener wasn't necessary.
     
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