About Deborah

Deborah
Deborah is a wife, mother, grandmother, traveler, bootlegger, and a very poor speller! As Victor Hazan so eloquently puts it, Deborah has chosen Umbria to be the home of her soul. When she can’t be there in body, she spends her free time cooking & reading about Italy. She blogs mostly about food and about trips – past and future – here: Old Shoes New Trip.

About Cindy

Cindy
Cindy lives in Eagle River, Alaska where her freezer is always full of salmon, halibut & shrimp. Cindy participates in several regular cooking challenges. You can read more about her cooking and life in the last frontier on her blog, Baked Alaska.

About Jan

Jan
Jan is a serious home cook who loves to read recipes and then do her own thing. Her focus is ingredient driven comfort food, often with an Italian influence. She is passionate about all things Italian, especially the cuisine & the language. Jan blogs about food and travels (next trip to Italy: May/June of 2012) at: Keep your Feet in the Street.

About Palma

Palma
Palma is a Marriage & Family Therapist in Palm Desert, CA. She’s an Italian-American with a passion for cooking, entertaining, & travel to Italy. She’s always planning her next culinary adventure to Italia on her blog, Palmabella's Passions

About Sandi

Sandi
Sandi is a true Southerner, but a traveler & Italian cook at heart. She lives in Alabama and knows more about fried green tomatoes than fricassees. Her family owned the WhistleStop Café for many years. Sandi also blogs at Whistlestop Cafe Cooking.

About Kim

Kim
Kim joins us after being our permanent sub on the Pomodori e Vino project. Kim loves to eat, drink, travel and cook - probably in that order. When she's not here, you can find her organizing and leading food, wine and beer tours in Europe as co-owner and operator of GrapeHops or blogging at What I Really Think or The Amy Foundation.

About Jerry

Jerry
Jerry is a food obsessed Canadian. He learned to love Italian food as a child while eating the meals prepared by his Napolitano uncle. He learned to cook Italian foods by watching his uncle cook these feasts for the family. This love of Italian food has been honed through serious personal experimentation in eating and cooking. Willing to try most anything once, Jerry isn't so sure about tripe! Jerry also blogs at Jerry's Thoughts, Musings, and Rants!

Our Subs

About Beth

Beth
Beth, along with her husband, Mike, is co-owner of two Italian Deli/Markets in St. Louis - Viviano’s Festa Italiano. When not creating yummy new menu items for the deli, she’s the pediatric research lab supervisor at Washington University School of Medicine. Read more out about Viviano’s Festa Italiano.

About Amy

Amy
Amy is a teacher in suburban Boston with far too many cookbooks, her Grandmother's meat grinder and canning jars, and a new Wolf stove. She appreciates cuisines from around the world, with a particular fondness for French, Moroccan, Italian, Vietnamese, and Indian cooking. Tweaking her cooking and eating habits resulted long-lasting weight loss and health benefits, proving that living well still tastes good. An old hobby is knitting; and a newer one is canning preserves. Read more from Amy on her blog, Destination Anywhere.

« Rabbit & Risotto Bake | Main | Braised Rabbit in Mustard with Fennel »

Rabbit Marbella

By Cindy Ruth

2-13-12%20rabbit.JPG

Our Flavor ingredient this week is rabbit. I love rabbit. It's not something I eat often, but each time I do I wish I would think to eat it more often. One of my favorite recipes is a slow bake with onions, fennel and white wine. Today I decided to make what is essentially a recipe for Chicken Marbella and use rabbit instead of chicken. For those of you who don't know what Chicken Marbella is, it's a baked dishe of chicken pieces, prunes, green olives and capers in a sweet sour sauce. I thought this would match perfectly with the rich rabbit.

I loved this dish. The sweetness from the brown sugar was cut by the tang of the red wine vingear and capers and olives. I will be making this dish again, either using rabbit or chicken.

Rabbit Marbella 3-4 servings
1 rabbit, 2 1/2 - 3 lbs, cut into pieces
5-6 cloves of garlic, peeled and minced
1/8 cup red wine vinegar
1/8 cup olive oil
1 tablespoon dried oregano
Salt and pepper to taste
1/4 cup pitted prunes
1/8 cup pitted Spanish green olives (I used the kind stuffed with garlic)
1/8 cup capers, drained, but use a little juice also
1 bay leaf
1/4 cup brown sugar
1/4 cup white wine

1. In a large bowl, combine the rabbit, garlic, red wine vinegar, olive oil, oregano, salt and pepper, prunes, olives, capers, and bay leaf. Cover and place in the refrigerator to marinate, at least 8 hours or overnight.
2. Preheat oven to 350 degrees F.
3. Place the rabbit pieces in a shallow baking dish without overlapping them. Spoon the marinade, including the prunes, capers and olives, over the rabbit. Sprinkle with the brown sugar and white wine.
4. Bake 50-60 minutes, basting frequently with the marinade and juices.
5. Transfer to a large platter and serve along with the pan juices.

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Comments (1)

Irene:

Cindy, you take the best food photos. I've got to taste this dish. Adding rabbit to my grocery list.

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This page contains a single entry from the blog posted on February 13, 2012 1:19 AM.

The previous post in this blog was Rabbit & Risotto Bake.

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