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A Week's Worth of Snacks, All Made from Ricotta Cheese
The Faster Times

2009_08_03-ricotta.jpgYou probably haven't heard of The Faster Times; it's a new online newspaper that hasn't been up and running for long. They have a pretty extensive food section, though, and their columnist on snacking is none other than Melissa Clark, one of our favorites.

In an article from June she wrote about seven ways to snack on a really good ricotta cheese, starting with pure and simple ricotta "marbles" and moving on to scrape-out-the-last-bit-with-a-Triscuit-and-make-a-canapé.

Do you have a favorite ricotta you like to splurge on once in a while? Here's how to make the most of it.

 
 

We've mentioned all the things you can do with ricotta cheese before (there's this post on the top five, or a top ten list for ricotta salata). But this article is devoted solely to simple snacks. We're talking things like a spoonful of ricotta with a broken tortilla chip in it, drizzled with hot sauce (Day 4: "South of the Border Ricotta").

Clark is devoted to Salvatore Ricotta, which is a local New York ricotta made in Brooklyn. And we'd agree that most of these snacks are good because the cheese itself is exceptional, so go buy something rich and delicious and enjoy it one of these seven ways...

Ricotta Here, Ricotta There, Salvatore Ricotta Everywhere, from The Faster Times

Related: Recipe: Easy Ricotta Gnocchi

(Image: Faith Durand)

Tags

Roundup - Nationwide papers, Cheese, Melissa Clark, ricotta, snacking, The Faster Times

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Comments (3)

About 10 minutes ago as I was shutting my fridge, I saw my container of ricotta and thought "I need to find a new way to use it"


Thanks for the calories! ;)

posted by Icanmakeit on August 3rd 2009 at 11:35pm
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I just made my own ricotta this weekend for the first time. Won't be the last! What a no-brainer, and it tastes like a completely different (read: much, much better) cheese from containerized ricotta from the grocery store. It couldn't have been easier. Great on pizza. It is extravagant in the amount of milk it requires (like all cheese) but once a month or so I think it's worth it.

posted by Charlotte on August 4th 2009 at 5:49am
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Has anyone an alternative for cheese cloth to strain the milk as I'd like to have a go at making it.

posted by hrhprincessfiona on August 11th 2009 at 3:30am
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