• Home
  • About
  • Books
  • General Posts
  • Food
  • Media Kit
  • Contact

Norman Mathews

  • Home
  • About
  • Books
  • General Posts
  • Food
  • Media Kit
  • Contact

Brasciola alla Spera

Home FoodBrasciola alla Spera

Brasciola alla Spera

June 17, 2019 Posted by Norman Mathews Food

One of my very favorite Italian dishes is brasciola, rolled and stuffed beef slices simmered in tomato sauce. In my youth, I refused to eat brasciola, though it was one of my grandfather’s specialties. Mind you, Nonno was a great cook. Admittedly, I was a very finicky eater as a child. Fortunately, I grew out of that. I can’t fathom how many wonderful foods I would have missed out on had the dreadful pickiness continued.

What turned me off about my grandfather’s recipe was that he used raw ground beef, which he tricked up into a meatball-type mixture, as a filling. It never seemed to be cooked right to me, with a mushy, unappealing texture. Only when I moved to New York to attend college did I grow to love this dish.

The change came about because of the Spera family—beloved Brooklyn relatives who invited me for Sunday dinner every week when I knew no one in New York. While my grandfather always used round steak, Ann and Teresa Spera used flank steak, which I find a more appropriate cut for this dish. However, the completely different filling was what won me over.

No traditional stuffing can be said to exist for brasciola. Every recipe you encounter is distinctively different. That’s one of the beauties of it. Use whatever suits you. I’ve seen recipes that include prosciutto, pesto, pine nuts, and raisins. The Speras used both bacon and salami. The bacon is unusual, but I find it gives the brasciola a particularly deep and satisfying flavor. I never actually got a copy of their recipe. Thus my version is simply an imitative recreation of what they told me they used.

On my many trips to Sicily, I wanted so much to taste the local rendition, especially in the Palermo area from which my grandparents immigrated to the United States. Sadly, I have never once seen it on a menu—not in Sicily or anywhere else in Italy. Is this something only home chefs cook? When the word has appeared on a menu, it generally referred to a simply grilled cutlet of meat.

I begin with a large flank steak, which has been trimmed of fat, butterflied, cut into two equal pieces, and pounded as thin as possible. Fortunately, either Frank or Jerry Ottomanelli, of Ottomanelli & Sons Meat Market on Bleecker Street in Manhattan expertly do this for me. The bacon, which I order cut to medium thickness, is blanched in water for about ten minutes, then rinsed and dried thoroughly. This becomes the first layer in the filling.

Layer the blanched bacon on the steak.

Next comes the salami, which goes on top of the bacon. I tend to use a homemade hot soppressata from Faicco’s Italian Specialties, also on Bleecker Street, because I’m fond of its piquant flavor. However, any spicy salami will due.

Layer the salami over the bacon.

The sliced hard-boiled eggs are layered, then the remaining ingredients are sprinkled on top of the meats. These include breadcrumbs, grated Parmigiano, parsley, fresh oregano, and garlic. Though most cooks use raw minced garlic, I prefer a somewhat muted taste, so I gently warm the garlic in olive oil first. Careful not to let the stuffing come too close to the edges of the meat, or it will fall out in cooking.

Place the eggs and remaining ingredients on top.

Once the stuffing is in place, roll the meat carefully from the narrow end, like a jelly roll.

Roll jellyroll fashion.

I make one tie with kitchen string first.

Make one tie and knot.

Then I fold the ends under and wind the string around all parts of the roll. As you can see in the photo, I’m a bit compulsive about this because I don’t want to lose any of the filling while I brown the meat in olive oil on all sides.

Tie securely and brown in a skillet.

Take the browned rolls and cook them a large quantity of your favorite tomato sauce. Simmer for about four hours, partially covered. Turn the rolls several times during the cooking.

Simmer in tomato sauce.

Remove the cooked brasciole (that’s the plural form) from the sauce and carefully cut away all the strings.

Cut off the strings.

I always let the brasciole come to room temperature before I try slicing it because it cuts more easily and neatly. You then very gently reheat the slices in the tomato sauce.

Slice and sauce.

Serve a plate of pasta as a primo course, using the sauce, which has developed a wonderful flavor from the brasciole. Then serve slices of the brasciole enrobed in tomato sauce as a secondo, accompanied by a green vegetable.

To print or download the recipe, click here.

To learn more about the major role that the Spera family played in my life (beyond cooking), click here and read my autobiography, The Wrong Side of the Room: A Life in Music Theater.

Share this:

  • Pinterest
  • Tumblr
  • Yummly
  • Reddit
Tags: Beef BrasciolaFlank SteakHard-Boiled Egg StuffingMeal Roll in Tomato SaucePasta AccompanimentSalami StuffingSicilian Meat DishStuffed Meat Roll
1
Share

About Norman Mathews

This author hasn't written their bio yet.
Norman Mathews has contributed 63 entries to our website, so far.View entries by Norman Mathews

Loading

Go to Books Tab for Information on My Autobiography

.
On Sale Now!

Featured in Kirkus Reviews The Best Books of 2018

My article, “When News Drives Creativity,” which discusses Trump’s executive order not to report civilian death’s by drone, is featured in Theater Art Life Magazine. Click here.

Critical Acclaim for The Wrong Side of the Room

“The book’s second half is fully stocked with accounts of stage shows galore—not to mention impressive name-dropping (Barbra Streisand, Betty Grable, Dorothy Lamour, Gene Kelly). These anecdotes from the theater’s social scene glide alongside vivid imagery from the author’s performances and other successes. The book also has a delightful, chatty sense of humor with moments of wry wit that make it exciting to read.
In the end, it effectively celebrates a life of artistic inspiration alongside the giddiness and glory of live theater.”

—Kirkus Review

Read the entire Kirkus Review here.

 

Readers’ Favorite Review
by Asher Syed

The Wrong Side of the Room: A Life in Music Theater by Norman Mathews is an autobiography chronicling the author’s life as he transitions from a confusing and often abusive childhood, born in a sleet of uncertainty (literally, as it turns out). Masked by imagination and written with a humor that most would not be able to apply to such situations, Mathews is able to harness this creativity and hitch it to his own ambitions as a rising star. When an injury threatens to derail an ascent that defies all odds, Mathews is forced to reinvent and reignite himself once more, and does so amid a whole host of personal and professional turmoil, scandal, and the kind of stories that are all the more shocking – and inspiring – because they are actually true.

Norman Mathews delivers a riveting memoir with The Wrong Side of the Room that opens with a contentious genesis and powerfully surges through to its finale. This is the ultimate tale of a man who is knocked down seven times and gets up eight, except in this case our tenacious narrator is struck to the ground far more than that. But he does continue to rise and appears to have carved out a genuine niche for himself until, “I woke up one morning with a strange pain in my back and running down my right leg. In a few days, it got much worse, and I began limping.” With the support of his partner Todd, he buys a Steinway, dives into formal education, and…well, at first that all implodes too. But Mathews is the consummate phoenix and, much like he displays in the writing of this book, skillfully maneuvers the trajectory of his life’s own narrative into a story that we are fortunate enough to have shared in The Wrong Side of the Room.

Impressively candid, exceptionally informative, deftly written, organized and presented, “The Wrong Side of the Room: A Life in Music Theater” is an extraordinary memoir that will have special and particular appeal for anyone with an interest in show business. . .very highly recommended for both community and academic library Contemporary American Biography collections.

—Midwest Book Review

News

The Wrong Side of the Room is the Bronze-Medal Winner in the Non-Fiction —Music/Entertainment Category of the Readers’ Favorite Book Competition.

To see my coming-out video on YouTube, click here.

 

BOOK CORRECTION: In my autobiography on page 152, I state that Carolyn Morris died in a motorcycle accident. I learned from her daughter-in-law that though she was severely injured she did not die. She is still living in Rutland, Vermont.

Get a free copy of Chapter 1 of my autobiography just by commenting on whether you think Sondheim or I am right about setting Dorothy Parker’s verses to music. Click here.

Read my new article, Sicilian Classics from Nonni’s Kitchen in the Times of Sicily. The article gives 4  of my grandparents’ interesting recipes.

Read my interview about my autobiography, The Wrong Side of the Room, with Norm Goldman, editor of BookPleasures.com here

The Wrong Side of the Room has been listed on Vincent Lowry’s site eAuthorSource. Click here.

 

Follow Us

Contact Us

We're currently offline. Send us an email and we'll get back to you, asap.

Send Message

© 2025 · Your Website. Theme by HB-Themes.

Prev Next