While the pasta is cooking (I think we cooked about 2 pounds), put a heavy sauté pan on low heat. Add lots of olive oil, maybe a good cup. Add 5 or 6 anchovy fillets, and 4 cloves of minced garlic. Sauté on low until the anchovies melt and the garlic begins to sizzle. Add some chopped fresh basil and some hot pepper flakes and cook for another minute. Do NOT brown the garlic. Turn off the heat. In a large pasta bowl, cut up a stick of butter into small pieces. Grate about a cup of Parmesan cheese (the real stuff!). When the pasta is cooked and drained, add it to the pasta bowl, and toss with the butter for a few moments. Pour over the olive oil mixture, and add the grated Parmesan (save a little for the table), and toss until everything is coated. This is best served as a side dish due to its obvious richness, and was great with the Chicken D’Arduini, as it would with any similar recipe.
Wednesday, September 5, 2007
The Pan of Olive Oil that Launched a Thousand Emails
Well, maybe not a thousand, but I did get quite a few requests for the sauce that went with the homemade pasta my Uncle Bill made during my trip to New York. We did two videos together, one was the “Homemades,” and one was an amazing chicken recipe called Chicken D’Arduini. In that post I said I would try to demo the olive oil sauce that went over the homemade fettuccine. Well, I haven’t filmed that yet, and have lots of great excuses why, some of which are even true.
Labels:
Dressings,
Italian Cuisine,
Pasta,
Sauces
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13 comments:
Thx. Much appreciated.
Looks good! I can't wait to try this. Still... reading isn't the same effect as watching the videos, which are so fun to watch!
I agree!
It sounds like Bagna Cauda very rich indeed. Yumm
What brand of olive oil do you recommend? I keep trying more expensive olive oils and find them dissapointing.
Delicious recipe btw. Thanks for sharing.
It's funny, in blind tastes tests most people prefer the cheaper supermarket olive oils than the expensive brands. Obviously there are great expensive ones also, but for everyday cooking a Colavita is good, or Bertolli.
The base is called: Aglio, Olio e peperoncino.
Which simplay means: Garlic, Oil and a certain sort of small Chilis.
If someone of goes to Italy or somewhere near the mediterranean sea you should buy some bottles of really good olive-oil. The difference to the standard supermarket stuff is unbelievable. There's really good oilve oil in Marocco, Italy, Greece, Turkey, Israel, Libanon... Every region has its own special taste.
Keep up the good work!
2everyone: please use "Parmigiano Reggiano" ;)
Sounds lovely. When u mentioned 1 stick of butter is this 113g?
A stick is 4-oz, so yes.
Thanks. When u mention 2lbs noodles is this for fresh? How much sauce would this make for dried pasta like spaghetti or linguini noodles? Like a 500g packet? Will give my feedback soon after i've tried this.
How much basil? Also what can you substitute for hot pepper flakes? Will a bit of cayenne pepper added at the end be alright? Or could i saute one dried/fresh red chili chopped up? Making this tmr. =)
He didn't measure but maybe a 1/4 cup. Yes, any hot spice or pepper will work.
Made this and it was really good. I actually ended up with a bit more sauce cos i used less spaghetti so i reserved some and poured just enough to coat the pasta. The sauce was great to eat with warm crusty bread the next day. Hehe.
Oh and i used 2 dried minced red chili which managed to add a bit of heat. I didn't need to add salt cos the anchovies were already salty and i used salted butter. Yummy and so quick and easy to make. Thanks. =)
By the way, do u think squeezing the juice of one lemon next time at the end might be a good idea?
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