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This recipe is from our Splendid Cheap Eats collection of affordable recipes. Browse the collection.
Adapted from La Terra Fortunata: The Splendid Food and Wine of Friuli-Venezia Giujlia, Italy's Great Undiscovered Region by Fred Plotkin (Broadway Books, 2001).
Serves 1 (multiply quantities by number of portions desired)
Nostrano is a particular Italian word. Very simply, it means "ours." Yet it implies much more: home, family, terrain, tradition. So sapori nostrani, in which the word is used in its plural form, would immediately suggest the comfort and intimacy derived from familiar flavors. I tasted this dish in Spilimbergo, one of Italy's foremost centers of the art of making mosaics. Many dishes there have that name even if they are more a combination of distinct ingredients that retain their characteristics rather than joining in a mosaic. This recipe uses most of the classic foods found in central Friuli.
Preheat oven to 350° F.
Once all of the ingredients are at hand, melt the butter in a small frying pan. Add the garlic and swirl until the butter takes on the garlic fragrance. Add the mushrooms and sauté actively just until they are soft and have yielded any of their liquid. Then toss in the parsley and remove the pan from the heat.
Pour the polenta into the middle of an ovenproof plate, forming a well in the middle. Line the well with the slices of prosciutto and then add the mushroom mixture. Cover this thoroughly with the slices of cheese and then place the dish in the oven. Bake for about 5 minutes, or just until the cheese has melted without burning.
Wine: Merlot, preferably from Grave