Weeknight Wondermeal: Fusilli In Hot Tomato Oil, Served With Antipasto Lolita
Photo: Lisa Fountain
Ingredients
good quality extra virgin olive oil (about 2 cups)
1 shallot
4 tablespoons San Marzano tomato paste
4 whole San Marzano roma tomatoes in puree
asiago cheese (for garnish, if you can’t find locatelli – which I couldn’t)
8 ounces fuselli pasta (or other sturdy, thickish noodle)
Preparation
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If I made this for a larger group of people, I could have used a whole can of paste, but since it was only for we two, I was happy to find this tube of San Marzano paste available at Whole Foods. And I love the box design; it’s so pop art.
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I wanted fresh pasta, but Whole Foods selection didn’t wow me, but these super-long Pre-Raphaelite noodle tresses sure did.
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Next, I start with my EVOO, which I set into my saucepan over high to get nice and hot.
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In go my aromatics, which I let soften in the hot oil, stirring well, for about 5 minutes.
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In goes my black pepper and my red pepper flakes. Something about living in Syracuse strengthened the lining of my stomach, because there – unlike any other time and place in my life – I was able to eat seriously spicy food. Since I’ve moved to Boston, tho, I just can’t handle too much capsicum – woe is me. So I started with only about a teaspoon of red pepper flakes, adding more throughout the entire cooking process until I reached my limit. For you, dear reader, I recommend you hop it up all you like; the recipe is titled, after all, “Hot Tomato Oil” – pansies like me notwithstanding.
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It’s time to add the tomato component to my hot tomato oil: I start with a few tablespoons of my condensed paste, which I add to the pan and stir in well.
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Next comes the roma tomatoes, which I’ve fished out of the can. I don’t need the whole 17oz, so I only grab about 4 of them. These I squish and break into the simmering oniongarlicspicyoil. Finally, I add a few healthy dashes of paprika, which will promote the lovely red color I want, and about 2 tablespoons of suce, which will both balance and add more complexity to the sauce.
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One of my favorite stories about my redneck turned metro-sexual husband is about a particular night at Pastabilities, which was one of the first avante-garde restaurants we ever visited together (Macon isn’t known for much beyond Satterfield’s and Mama Louise’s H & H). Even though we were tight on funds back then, I wanted — no, I NEEDED — more than just a bowl of pasta for my dinner, and the $14 antipasto on the menu sounded promising. Clayton was skeptical. ”I don’t like luncheon meats on my salad,” he superciliously stated, with an assumed air of culinary confidence, and a parsimoniousness that just stoked my more sophisticated sensibilities into seething sarcasm. ”You don’t like what? And when have you ever had an antipasto?” ”Oh, I’ve had plenty, at places like Hungry Howie’s – $14 for some slices of baloney and ham on crappy lettuce just doesn’t do it for me.” I could regale you with the vitriol of my response, but then you m
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Whole Foods also has a fantastic antipasto bar, and these cool segmented trays into which you can put exactly what you want. I grabbed items in equal numbers: 6 peppered olives, 12 oil cured black olives, 1 large roasted pepper I could cut later, several gherkins, a couple of caperberries, some marinated artichoke hearts, 2 peperoncini, and one little sweet peppadew, which I eventually quartered and stuffed with goat cheese.
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Speaking of pasta, my long cool corkscrew curled noodles are perfectly cooked – just a little al dente – and ready to be sauced.
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Tender tendrils of pasta swim in spicy red oil and rich chunky tomatoes, and are topped with an abundance of shredded asiago cheese. It’s served alongside my fresh antipasto, a perfect cold accompaniment of meats, cheeses, and sharp vegetables – just right to offset the heat from the peppers and paprika in my pasta sauce. All in all, this meal took about 40 minutes to prepare – and about 15 minutes to scarf down with total abandon. A super-satisfying, simple and elegant dinner for any occasion; thanks, Pastabilities, for the inspiration!
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Yield:
2.0
Added:
Tuesday, May 31, 2011 - 11:14am