Burrata Cheese, Three Ways

Burrata cheese, you… you complete me.  Mozzarella was my summer favorite, then I met you. Burrata (meaning ‘buttered’ in Italian), is made from the same stringy curd as buffalo mozzarella, but it is stretched and pulled into hollow ball and then filled with cream and the shreds of soft stringy mozzarella curds.


I had to poke it before cutting in. Would it spring back? Nope. That indentation stayed right there, as it should. And once cut into, it started oozing right away. How is this better than buffalo mozzarella you might be wondering? And why should you venture away from the nice neat slicing and stacking ability of mozz’ in your next tomato caprese salad?

Well, besides it being literally melt in your mouth luscious (which is selling point enough for me), it becomes saucy and spreads easily. I managed to coax it into wedge slabs for my plate of homegrown  grilled eggplant and peppers with fresh oregano. Once I dug in to eat, it transformed into a creamy sauce with some stringy bits and melded with a syrupy sweet 25-year aged balsamic vinegar, just the thing to counter the earthy slices of eggplant. A squeeze of lemon to finish and I had reached my summer culinary nirvana (see recipe below). The fresh greek oregano pictured in the background is not nearly as strong as dried oregano, usually a little goes a long way but in this dish I found I could use a little more of it.  As not all oreganos are the same,  your mileage may vary.

For breakfast it was burrata on toast with vanilla-honey scented peaches and white pepper. I sliced an 1/8 of a vanilla pod open and scraped out the caviar specks with a paring knife and stirred it into a tablespoon of wildflower honey and drizzled. Then I made some extra vanilla honey, because you really just can’t have too much of that stuff around.

Note: Burrata is best finished after 24-48 hours of opening. The cheese monger at my local Whole Foods mentioned they only carry it the warmer months, ie, spring and summer, so get it while you can. 

Recipe: Grilled Eggplant and Heirloom Peppers with Burrata,  Fresh Oregano and Aged Balsamic  Serves 2

Ingredients:

1 large or 2 small eggplants, sliced about a half-inch thick

Salt

Olive oil

Pepper

5 small sweet peppers, de-seeded and cored

1 half of one ball of Burrata cheese, carefully sliced into wedge slabs

2 Tablespoons chopped fresh oregano

2 TBS aged balsamic vinegar, (or if unavailable, balsamic vinegar reduction)

1 Tablespoon fresh squeezed lemon juice

Slice eggplant. Sprinkle liberally with salt and drain slices over a colander for 20-30 minutes. This will help to draw out any bitterness in the eggplant. Rinse off excess salt and pat slices dry. Heat grill or grill pan and brush eggplant slices and peppers with olive oil and sprinkle with pepper. Grill over medium high flame on the first side for 5-8 minutes, or until grill marks appear. Flip them when the purple skin on the sides becomes charred and the tops become somewhat tender and wet looking. Turn peppers a quarter turn every two minutes or as they begin to char.   After flipping eggplant, grill for another 5-7 minutes or until the eggplant looks tender or any moisture bubbles a bit.

Drape slabs of burrata cheese over the plated eggplant slices and peppers. Salt and pepper liberally, drizzle with aged balsamic vinegar, sprinkle fresh chopped oregano and finish with a squeeze of lemon.

About biscuitsandbobbins

Lover of food. Enjoys making things with hands. Taker of daily walks. Curious learner of new things. Loves an adventure.
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16 Responses to Burrata Cheese, Three Ways

  1. This cheese has been unknown to me until now! Thank you for sharing it’s deliciousness!

    Cheers
    Choc Chip Uru

  2. japolina says:

    I try not to learn about any new cheeses (or candy bars) as the ones that I know (and love) are dangerous enough to my waistline. However, this one sounds yummy and I may have to try it.

  3. Oh this is one super duper post! Breakfast, lunch and dinner… check! You’ve given me a new summer fantasy. I am going to have to take a few moments to really savor this. And you know where I’m headed and what I’m purchasing my last couple days in Atlanta. Too bad can’t share it with my Mom!
    Loved seeing your oregano in person and look forward to sitting down for a meal together next time :-)

  4. Thanks Wendy. Lovely catching up with you too. About your mom, I guess it seems it’s never a good week for that sort of thing! Nice meeting her and “O” too. Enjoy Charleston!

  5. Hi there, we had this cheese on holiday, the guy on the cheese counter insisted we brought some as it was made locally. Its so delicious, he told us to take it out of the fridge 1-2 hours before we ate it, which i was a bit sceptical about but it was fab and as you say so creamy. I hope we can find it here !

  6. Anastasia says:

    That burrata looks and sounds delicious – never saw it before!

  7. Allison says:

    I love burrata (as you might have noticed from my grilled apricots with burrata recipe)!

    I just noticed the heirloom peppers mixed in among the eggplant rounds in your recipe; thanks for helping me find a perfect way to use up all the heirloom peppers I just got from my CSA!

  8. Karen says:

    I absolutely adore burrata but finding it is not easy. Love all three ways you prepared it.

  9. Cinnamon Girl says:

    That burrata sounds so good. I need to get some! You prepared it beautifully!

  10. I discovered burrata on holiday in Italy several years ago and a love affair was born! Sadly, it is very difficult to find where I live. I am forever scouting menus looking for it when I travel. Your burrata dishes are making me very hungry and aching to travel!!

  11. Just found your blog Jodi. Loving this first post of bursts, it is such an undiscovered gem. Absolutely loving the aubergine dish. Can’t wait to discover more.

    Dave.

  12. ciao! luvFAB blog.
    thebestdressup

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