Wednesday, February 10, 2016

Week Night Pasta with Punch

Spaghetti alla Puttanesca

Those who have read previous posts have figured out by now that I enjoy Mediterranean flavors and dishes that are far from shy and retiring. This dish meets both criteria and qualifies as relatively easy to prepare on a weeknight.

The dish is not ancient. Sources trace it to the 1950's or 60's. The name means something, but this is a PG blog so let's translate it loosely as street spaghetti. Quick, easy, and a bit garishly dressed.

Ingredients

16 ounces dry spaghetti
1/2 red onion diced small
4 to 5 garlic cloves rough minced
1/2 cup Kalamata olives, pitted and cut in half
28 ounce can peeled plum tomatoes
Rounded Tbs. capers
Rounded Tbs. Italian seasoning or oregano
large pinch of crushed red pepper flakes
3 baby bella mushroom tops, diced (optional)
3 anchovy fillets, minced
2 to 3 Tbs. extra virgin olive oil
salt and pepper to taste
1/4 to 1/2 cup fresh grated parmesan

Notes on Ingredients

  1. I find it difficult to open a tin of anchovies to use only 1 or 2 or 3 of them. I do not enjoy eating the rest - even on crackers. Instead, I buy tubes of anchovy paste and squirt lines equal to the number of anchovy fillets the recipe wants. When I am out of anchovy paste, I use splashes of fish sauce to acquire the same flavor.
  2. You owe it to yourself to buy the San Marzano tomatoes packed in puree with a basil leaf.
  3. Capers are good, but don't let their absence stop you from making the dish. Between the olives and the anchovy, you won't really miss them.
  4. The traditional recipe contained no mushroom. I find them to be a good texture difference and mushrooms soak up the flavors. Put them in, leave them out. Whatever works for you.
  5. This sauce tends to be chunky. I find a penne to be equally good for the pasta.

Method

Bring a large pasta pot of salty water to the boil, cover it, turn the heat off, and hold it ready to cook the pasta.

Heat the olive oil to shimmering in a large skillet and add the onion.  Include the mushroom, if desired. While stirring to avoid browning, cook the onion to translucent and the mushroom to soft. Add the garlic and herbs and cook until fragrant, about 1 minute.

Turn the pasta water back on to boil.

Add the tomato, the the anchovy paste, the olives, the capers, and the red pepper flakes to the onion and mushrooms. Use a wooden spoon or your hands to break up the whole tomatoes. Bring the mixture to the boil as the pasta water reheats.

When the sauce boils, reduce the heat to simmer. Allow the sauce to thicken a bit. When the pasta water boils, add the pasta and cook until al dente.

Drain and place the pasta in a large platter and pour the sauce over the pasta. Serve to individual bowls and liberally garnish with the fresh grated cheese.






Monday, February 1, 2016

Left Overs - What Are You Going To Do

My beautiful wife has incredible talents.

One of them is a talent with doughs and baking. Last Sunday, she made us biscuits from scratch for breakfast. If you want the recipe, look up Mile High Biscuits on the Cooks Illustrated site.

Unfortunately, a pan of biscuits is way more than we can have for breakfast. The end result? We had leftovers. What are you going to do?

Sunday afternoon, I bought a turkey thigh to solve the problem. Yes, a turkey thigh.

This morning I put it in the slow cooker with an onion, a large chunk of leek, a carrot, a stalk of celery, and a clove of garlic. I added enough water to cover all. While we were gone, the slow cooker chugged along on low.

When we came home, I discarded the veg as well as the turkey skin and bone. I was left with a rich turkey stock and this.


I diced some leeks, sliced some mushroom, and diced some sweet bell peppers. I also prepped a spice addition of bay leaf plus some Sunny Paris blend from Penzy's.



From this point I will saute the veg in 3 Tablespoons of unsalted butter. When the vegetables soften, I will add around a quarter cup of flour and the herbs and cook the paste for a minute or two. I will then add a quarter cup of dry white wine, 2 cups of the turkey stock, a half cup of plain Greek yoghurt, and a half cup of cream. As the sauce thickens I will season it well with salt and pepper.

At that point I will add the diced turkey back to the sauce and make sure all heats. Before serving I will add a half cup of frozen peas and cook until those heat. The sauce then goes over the biscuits.