
A Table of Many Sauces
(Serves 6)
Set a buffet table with a variety of wonderful sauces. In a couple of large bowls, pile different varieties of pasta and let guests sample a number of pastas and sauces. You could add a cold pasta salad, too. Include a green salad, crusty Italian bread, and bowls of freshly grated Parmesan or Asiago cheese.
Tip: If your pasta is going to sit out on a table for a while, toss it with a little oil to keep it from clumping together.
Pesto Sauce
Serves 4
5 cloves garlic (crushed, minced)
1/3 C pine nuts (chopped)
1 tsp. salt
1/2 C Romano cheese (freshly grated)
1/2 C Parmesan cheese (freshly grated)
2 C fresh basil leaves (chopped and tightly packed)
1/8 tsp. pepper
1 C olive oil
In a food processor, pulse garlic and pine nuts with salt. Add cheeses, basil and pepper; blend thoroughly. Through the opening in the top, add oil, very gradually, in a thin stream, making sure it gets incorporated into basil-cheese mixture. Serve warm or at room temperature.
---------------------------------------
Tuna Sauce
Salsa di Tonnato
( Serves 4)
7-oz. can tuna with oil
2 T olive oil
1 large clove garlic (peeled, sliced)
1/2 lb. fresh mushrooms (sliced)
4 medium tomatoes (peeled, seeded, chopped) *
1 T red wine vinegar
1 tsp. salt or to taste
1/2 tsp. pepper
1 1/2 tsp. dried Italian Seasoning
1 T fresh parsley (chopped)—garnish
Drain tuna, reserving 1 T of its oil. Flake tuna meat and set aside. In a saucepan, heat tuna oil and olive oil till hot. Add garlic and sauté till brown. Remove and discard garlic. (You’re just flavoring the oil.)
Add mushrooms, sautéing for 3-5 minutes, till soft. Add chopped tomatoes and vinegar, cover, and cook over low heat for 10 minutes. Add flaked tuna, salt & pepper, and stir in dried herbs. Cook for a few more minutes to warm tuna. Right before serving, stir in fresh chopped parsley.
---------------------------------------
Zucchini, Tomatoes & Pine Nuts
Zucchini con pinolo
(Serves 4-6)
1/2 lb. prosciutto (large dice) *
3 T butter
1/2 lb. fresh mushrooms (sliced)
1 pt. heavy cream
1/2 C Parmesan cheese (freshly grated)
salt & pepper to taste
In a saucepan, sauté prosciutto in melted butter (careful to burn). Add mushrooms and continue sautéing till mushroom liquid is reduced, about 7-8 minutes. Lower heat and add cream, stirring constantly, being careful not to boil. Add cheese and continue stirring. Serve immediately.
* If you can’t find prosciutto, capicola works just as well. It’s also considerably cheaper than prosciutto.
---------------------------------------
Sicilian Eggplant Relish
Caponata
(Yields 6 cups)
2 lbs. eggplant (peeled, 1” cubes)
1-2 T salt
1/2 C olive oil (divided)
2 C celery (fine dice)
3/4 C onion (fine dice)
1/3 C red wine vinegar
4 tsp. sugar
3 C canned plum tomatoes (drained, large chunks)
2 T tomato paste
6 large green olives (seeded and slivered)
2 T capers
4 flat anchovies (rinsed, pounded into paste)
salt to taste
2 T pine nuts (toasted)
Eggplant: preheat oven to 350. Sprinkle eggplant cubes with salt and set in colander to drain for 30 minutes. Rinse and pat dry. In a large bowl, toss eggplant with 2 T oil, place on foil-lined baking sheet, cover with foil, and bake 15 minutes till glistening and tender (not mushy).
Vegetables: heat remaining 2 T C oil in large skillet, add celery and onion, cooking 10 minutes till soft. Add eggplant mixture and cook, stirring, for another 2-3 minutes. Combine vinegar with sugar and pour into eggplant-onion mixture. Add remaining ingredients (except pine nuts).
Final cook: bring to a boil and simmer, uncovered, for 15 minutes, stirring frequently. Remove from heat and add pine nuts. Refrigerate (relish keeps for a good week or more). Serve at room termperature over cold pasta, or warm over hot pasta.
|
|
|
Tips & Glossary: Italian
Arborio Rice: a medium-grained rice. Its high starch content yields a creamy texture and is the basis for risotto.
Balsamic Vinegar: dark, thick vinegar with a sweet pungent flavor. Fermented, concentrated, and aged in wooden casks, sometimes up to 12 years. Can be pricey.
Caper: salty, pickled bud of spiny shrub native to the Mediterranean region. Most prized is the non-pareil, the smallest (approx. 1/8”), though other sizes are tasty and less expensive.
Formaggio: Cheese! Like France, Italy is a land of sublime cheeses, some 400 varieties. Here are some of the most widely sold in the U.S.
• Asiago (Alpine region; smooth or crumbly, great for grating.)
• Fontina (Alpine region; a Gruyere- or Swiss-type cheese with nutty flavor.)
• Mascarpone (southwest of
Milan; triple-cream, smooth and easily spread; used in Tiramisu.)
• Mozzarella (generic term for semi-soft cheese; “fresh” is eaten the day it is made; “buffalo” is from water buffalo. Used in lasagna and pizza when dried slightly.)
• Parmigiano Reggiano (Parma area; the true Parmesan, whose designation is strictly controlled in Italy.)
• Pecorino Romano (made of sheep’s milk; mostly from Sardinia. A hard, salty cheese used for grating.)
• Provologne (mostly from northern Italy; semi-hard, varying from mild to sharp flavor.)
• Ricotta (made of whey, a by-product of making other cheese; soft and creamy like cottage cheese. Used in lasagna.)
• Romano (an American term for Pecorino Romano and other cheeses.)
Italian Seasoning: blend of dried herbs used in Italian cooking—marjoram, thyme, rosemary, savory, sage, oregano, and basil. Packaged commercially and found in most food stores.
Pine Nuts: pinoli or pignoli; edible seeds of pine trees used in pesto sauce. Before cooking, release flavor by lightly browning in a heated skillet.
Plum Tomatoes: aka Italian tomatoes; oval-shaped. Used in sauces because they are meatier with fewer seeds than standard tomatoes.
Roasted peppers: buy or make your own: place under a broiler, or hold over a gas flame, till skin chars and blisters. Place in a closed paper bag for 15-20 minutes (to steam them). When cool, the skins slip off under water.
Prosciutto: especially Prosciutto di Parma, dry-cured ham from Parma. The real deal! Cured up to 2 years, is almost sweet and very expensive. You can substitute with capicola, a delicious, light peppery ham. |
|