Fried stuffed olives Ascolana style ( olive all’ascolana ) Italian recipe
This appetizer is one of the most representative of the Italian culinary tradition and it will surely be a hit with your friends: the fried stuffed olives Ascolana style!
Find this and many more recipes on the Giallozafferano App in English http://itunes.apple.com/app/giallozafferano-recipes/id384387249?mt=8
***
Hi everyone and welcome to the GialloZafferano kitchen, today we’ll be preparing the fried stuffed olives Ascolana style: they are a local appetizer from the Marches region, but they’re well-known and appreciated all over Italy. Today we’ll use a meat stuffing, but there are also those with a fish stuffing.
Let’s see what ingredients we’ll need:
• 2,2 lbs (1 kg) of soft tender olives from Ascoli
• 1 oz (30 g) of the soft, inner part of bread
• ¾ cup (80 g) of grated Parmesan cheese
• 1 egg / the grated zest of ½ lemon
• (A pinch of) nutmeg / (a pinch of) clove powder
• About a cup (200-250 ml) of white wine
• Salt / a small stalk of celery
• A small carrot / ½ onion • 3,5 oz (100 g) of chicken breast
• 3,5 oz (100 g) of beef meat
• 3,5 oz (100 g) of pork meat
For breading and frying, we’ll have:
• breadcrumbs / 2 eggs / some flour
• 2 cups (½ l) of extra virgin olive oil
So, let’s prepare the olives Ascolana style:
First of all, I’ve heated 3-4 tablespoons of extra virgin olive oil in a saucepan, then I’ve added the chopped carrot, celery and onion. Wait 15-20 minutes until they get soft, then add the finely diced chicken, beef and pork meat.
When the meat will be well browned, add a glass of white wine and let it evaporate on a very low flame. In all, you’ll need about an hour,60 min — low heat.
While the meat is simmering, we’ll apply ourselves to pitting our olives. So, take a small knife and make a spiral cut from top to bottom. Just to make things clear, it’s like peeling an apple without breaking its skin, so get as close to the pit as possible, as you can see, trying not to break the olive, also because you’ll have to recompose it with the inner stuffing.
Once the meat is ready and the wine has evaporated, add some salt, then remove it from the heat and let it cool down. Once the meat is cold, we’ll be able to mince it, with a food processor for instance, until fine-grained.
At this point, we can add the grated lemon zest… the clove powder and the nutmeg… the egg… the grated cheese… and the soft inner part of bread which I’ve previously smashed.
Now we can knead our mixture… add salt if necessary, and let it rest for a few minutes.
Now it’s finally time to start stuffing our olives, so take a small piece of the mixture, about as big as the pit you’ve removed, open an olive, put the stuffing inside and recompose it, closing it perfectly, and go on this way, with some patience, until all the olives are stuffed.
Once they’re all stuffed and recomposed, it’s time to bread them, so roll each olive in flour, whisked egg and breadcrumbs. After this procedure, if you want your olives to have a firmer breading, roll them again in egg and breadcrumbs. Now we have our olives, let’s fry them in very hot oil.
Remove them when they’re nice and golden brown.
After so much effort, here are our fried stuffed olives Ascolana style, ready to be served: you can serve them either hot or cold, they’re very good anyway.
From Sonia and GialloZafferano, bye bye, see you next videorecipe!


Da vera ascolana un consiglio…andrebbe inserita più carne all'interno dell'oliva, senza preoccuparsi che fuoriesca dall'oliva stessa. Comunque bravissima!
One of my favorite appetizers when we're in Ascoli.
Love the recipe. Fried olives taste great. I am going to share this with my readers at Abornewords. Check out our site.
Sicilian Nocellara olives are similar.
They are Italian olives from Ascoli, but you can use green large olives
where did you buy those olives???
Today we suggest you a really tasty appetizer from Marche!!
Olive all'Ascolana… Have you ever tasted it? ;D
@fmhs73 You're proposal is acceptable, however you forgot the ritual sacrifice. Your warnings were for naught, young one.
@GothChilde6969 , Yep. It sure is. Please, double check the recipe, oh omnipotent bartender. All hail the all knowing, all seeing bartender.
@GothChilde6969 you're mistaken. Wine certainly can be an ingredient. By itself, in a wine glass from which I am drinking, it is not.
Your first response SHOULD HAVE BEEN: "there is no wine in the recipe. Are you wishing to replace your mealtime beverage with something other than white wine? You may consider white grape juice as a replacement in this instance." But no… instead you chose to come off as a know it all bartender (certainly not a chef or cook). /FACEPALM…
@yellowsaffron sure it is. Wine is fermented grapes turned into a juice. Grape juice is un-fermented grapes turned into juice. How is that not a proper substitute? You eat this with the wine, nowhere in the recipe does it call for wine. Why can't you eat these with grape juice?
@GothChilde6969 It was not "use wine or don't make the recipe", but "if you don't like wine, make the recipe without it"! Grape juice is not an alternative, because it's not a substitute for wine.
@yellowsaffron this is true, but when someone asks for a replacement, I am sure you are aware that this means they still wish to do the thing required but in a different manner; with a different method; or through a different means. When someone asks for an alternative, it is polite to actually provide an alternative, rather than creating a barrier through stating that it is either, "this way or no way at all."
Like the song goes, "… it takes different strokes to row the world."
@GothChilde6969 Wine can be simply omitted!
@AOPolo What non-alchoholic beverage would you recommend to replace the white wine?
Above is word for word the comment I was replying to. Obvious troll is obvious.
Wine isn't an ingredient btw.
@GothChilde6969 Adding grape juice to this recipe would completely ruin the flavor of it. She wasn't asking to drink it. She was asking because wine is an ingredient.
@AOPolo She wanted a non alcoholic substitute for wine. That's grape juice. You eat this with wine.
@mesopotamianbeauty Don't be a noob. Gothchild is trying to get you to completely ruin the recipe by adding grape juice. S/he's trolling.
@GothChilde6969 Are you kidding? Adding grape juice to this recipe would completely ruin it.