Penne Primavera

The cheese didn’t make it to the picture… sorry about that.

So, this was going to be a french dessert made of peaches, but I’m waiting for a sunnier day to take pictures of that. What we have here right now qualifies for Summer the same way I qualify for a “happy young woman”. You know it could be it, but somehow, it never is. And, of course, when in doubt I tend to turn to pasta, which is all very well and delicious, but it does put those additional kilograms here and there. But, to hell with that – there has to be some pleasure in this life, otherwise what’s the point? Might as well take a big swig of hemlock right now if I’m going to deny myself even that.

This is a genuinely my recipe –  I’ve invented it. Of course, hundreds of people have probably invented it too, because it doesn’t take some huge leaps of imagination, but it’s good and easy and that’s what counts. I  call it Penne Primavera, because I like faux-italian names and alliteration, but it works just as well with tagliatelle, fettuccine or spaghetti. Actually, pretty much every pasta in existence (with the possible exception of orzo and other minute pasta, because they get lost in the sauce).

The only actual difficulty with this recipe is the timing, because the sauce is based on melted cheese so it sets if you take it off the heat. Which means you’ve got to time it with boiling the pasta so that you have both ready at roughly the same time. It’s generally better to have pasta waiting for the sauce than the other way around, because if you have the sauce ready, you either have to leave it on the stove, in which case it burns or gets too thick and dry, or take it off, in which case it sets and doesn’t spread like it should. But it’s nothing difficult, really.
Oh, and it’s probably the only pasta recipe in the world that doesn’t really benefit from being sprinkled with grated cheese. No, really – it won’t ruin the dish, but it adds… nothing very much. So leave that Parmesan for Aglio e Olio, Primavera doesn’t need it.

Ingredients

  • Shallots (whole) – one to start with and say half per additional person
  • Tomatoes – one fresh tomato per person
  • Feta cheese – about 80-100 g per person
  • Olive oil
  • Garlic
  • Spices – the good old mixture of pasta spices, as usual

Preparation

Shallots and un-melted Feta cheese

Start with putting on a pot for boiling pasta. Then, chop the whole shallots thinly, down to the last green strand. If you end up with a mountain of greenery, don’t worry – it’ll shrink in cooking. Pour olive oil into a frying pan and fry the shallots on mild heat, stirring from time to time. When they get supple and nicely warm (the colour doesn’t change much), slice the cheese into thin slices and put them on the pan. Thin slices mean it’ll melt faster, but still you should keep the fire small and cover the pan for a while – that way the cheese will melt and not fry.

In the meantime, peel the tomatoes with aid from some boiling water (I usually use the pasta water for that, since it should be boiling now ; if it is, put pasta in) and chop them into small bits – the smaller, the better.
Now check on the cheese – there should be a white-ish, grainy mass with bits of green in the pan. Put in the tomatoes and all the juice that might have spilled during chopping. Mix it all up, add chopped garlic and spices, and cook on mild heat until surplus water evaporates and you’re left with a thick, golden mass. It will stick to the spoon, it will stick to the pan, so frequent stirring is in order.

Once your pasta is ready, you can pour the sauce over it and serve.

Serving

With a cameo by Great-Grandma’s China Plate ™

This is a dish of distinct flavor, and a colorful, jolly appearance – hence the name. It is also quite full of calories, as pastas generally are, so accompany it with a salad at most, and not a fried-chicken-and-cheddar salad, either. Chilled white wine will suit it very nicely, but so will most pink wines and  some lighter types of red. There are no unpleasant odors involved so it’s a good dish for an elegant or romantic occasion.

Cannelloni Verde

I’ve been facing quite a conundrum lately. You may have noticed already that I like cooking ;) . And I like eating, especially that which I have prepared myself – because I can make things exactly as I want them. However, those of you who do your own cooking will probably know that a cook shall always crave the consumer’s appreciation : we’ll put the plates on the table and then watch, hawk-like, for any telltale glances, eyebrow-twitching, tiny grimaces or sounds that can give us a clue. Do they like it? Or not??

Such is the fate of artists, I’m told, and a dreary one it is. I remember my father, for example, never muttering even a word of approval whatever Mother did, and actually deriding my brother for offering that which he knew she needed. Then again, no need to worry my readers about that kind of jerkassitude. Today, I’m facing a different problem. My new S.O. likes everything, will eat everything and be happy about it. Really.
And how’s  Kitchen Witch with cooking ambitions supposed to do? I mean, I can compose an exquisite symphony for a cheese quartet, and he’ll eat it and say, “It’s good, thank you” and then promptly give me a peck on the cheek and go to sleep. Or, I can bash some random vegetables into a pot, boil them yellow with a generous helping of groat, then proceed to add way too much salt, thus achieving something horrible and unfit for animals, because of the salt. And he’ll eat it and say, “It’s good, thank you”. And I know he means it, it’s not like he pretends so I won’t be hurt. It’s not really a problem, but it kind of demotivates me when it comes to cooking. In the end I just disregard him and do whatever I want, but feel bad about it.
All right, enough rambling. In spite of this terrible tragedy that is a partner easy to please, I have recently tried out a new recipe. It’s a pasta recipe and it’s got a faux-italian name,  so you can see everything is still normal around here.
Cannelloni is a type of pasta used for baking and not boiling. It’s made into tube shapes, not very long and with a large enough diameter (which varies) to allow stuffing. You can put pretty much anything in it, and here’s an idea.

Ingredients

  • Cannelloni pasta – you can buy it, it’s not that rare. The actual amount depends on how much can you fit in a baking dish.
  • Cheese – go with quark cheese if you want the spinach taste to come out. Feta cheese will get you a spicier, but still balanced dish (or you can mix those two). Choose camembert for a strong, piquant taste, though it will dominate.
  • Spinach – in 1:1 proportion with cheese
  • Leek (optional)
  • Onion – in 1:1 proportion with leek and 2:1 with spinach and cheese
  • Garlic
  • Olive oil
  • Sour cream
  • Herbal spices : rosemary, laurel leaf, black pepper, thyme, basil, tarragon and juniper are all good choices.

Spinach, onions, garlic and leek.

Preparation

Chop the onions and fry them on olive oil over medium heat. Add the spinach and garlic and  fry for a while (if you’re using frozen spinach, make sure you evaporate the water surplus). When you’ve got a nice, warm and not too runny green mass, add the cheese and leek. Simmer over medium heat to melt the cheese. At this point it will look utterly horrible, so you can frighten your kids with it. If you don’t want to, make sure they don’t see it as the sight will make them refuse to eat anything.

Once the unspeakable eldritch horror on your frying pan achieves a thick, smooth form, use a knife, a spoon, a kitchen baster or sheer force of will to stuff it into the raw pasta tubes. I repeat, just in case – you do not boil the pasta. If you do, it goes soft and you won’t be able to stuff it with anything. The stuffed tubes are then placed in a casserole (oil it up a little) and the surface covered in sour cream. This is important – if you bake them bare, the pasta will dry up even more and you’ll get hard, splintering shells. You need to keep the water in with a layer of cream. Some grated cheese can go on the surface, too. if you like.

Place it all in the oven and bake in medium heat – too much and it’ll just dry up to the point of in-edibility. It needs 30 to 40 minutes, when in doubt you can poke a pasta tube and see if it’s hard or softening.

This sounds a bit complicated, I know, but it’s actually a fairly simple recipe and useful if you want to create an illusion of haute cuisine without too much work. However, it has proven impossible for me to take a reasonable picture of the actual dish, so I’m sorry to say you’d have to take my word for it.
Serve with wine, depending on the contents (stuffing possibilities are endless). If there’s no meat in it, or it’s chicken, serve medium-dry white wine, as is the case with mine.

Thyme (thymus vulgaris)

I know a bank where the wild thyme blows,
Where oxlips and the nodding violet grows,
Quite over-canopied with luscious woodbine,
With sweet musk-roses and with eglantine.
- Midsummer Night’s Dream

The common thyme. Strong, fresh scent, beautiful, small leaves and the resilience of something much bigger and tougher. This ancient herb has been used by many nations throughout the world since antiquity, respected for its antiseptic and preservative qualities that could be profited of by cooks, medics and even embalmers. Even nowadays, many throat remedies are still made of thyme, coltsfoot  and marsh mallow, despite all the progress in pharmacology.

Thyme is an easy herb to keep, even in a pot on your windowsill. It likes sunny spots best, but will actually make do anywhere, as long as there’s some direct light. It does not need a lot of water – indeed, too much of it can hurt the plant – and will struggle along even if You forget about it for a week, which makes it a good start for beginner herbalists. Even dried up and brown, the plant will regain almost all of its strength when taken care of.
If You want to have some fresh thyme at home, the best way to go about it is to buy a live plant. Thyme is very difficult to raise from seeds and is usually propagated by cuttings, even by professionals. If You bought a plant and want to put it in a pot, remember that thyme is a survivor ; it has evolved to withstand harsh conditions and those are the ones that suit it best. The most important thing here is to keep the soil well-drained. But don’t worry : just take the intended pot and fill the bottom with a 3 to 4 cm layer of stones (gravel or sea pebbles, anything small) and the rest with soil. This will make Your plant feel right at home.
Thyme can also be used to great effects in gardens, as it really is rather decorative, very resilient and can take severe cold well. An interesting fact is that ants like to make nests among thyme roots, and gardeners have successfully drawn ants away from an undesirable spot by planting thyme bushes somewhere else.

Culinary uses

Because of the strong aroma, thyme herb is a great seasoning for all those dishes that need an extra zing. Meats of all kinds can benefit greatly from being marinated in olive oil and thyme (and will keep longer).  It’s a great ingredient for all kinds of salads and casseroles where the taste would otherwise be too bland. The only problem is that the leaves are very small, and if You have a live plant, You’ll have to pick quite a lot of them and it becomes tedious after a while. But that’s hardly a real disadvantage.

Medicinal uses

Thyme is most commonly used as an antiseptic, due to high concentration of essential oils. Most common use for it are throat infections, which can be treated with infusions, thyme oil (it’s hard to make as it has to be distilled twice, so at home best stick to infusions) or some more complicated recipes I will not dwell on right now. It is also used to stimulate the digestive system and can raise blood pressure, although not enough to be any danger to patients suffering from hypertension. Usually. Of course, ultra-high concentration of thyme oil should be avoided by them, but then again, it’s not likely to come across that sort of dose anyway.

Magic uses

In magic, thyme can be used to great effect. Due to the strong and persistent nature of the plant, it can be used in charms  to grant courage and resilience. The potent, healthy aroma invigorates the spirit and clears thought similarly to lavender, but with more emphasis on action. Thyme can also be used to ward off nightmares, be it the fresh herb, the dried herb used in a witch bag, or incense. It is definitely worth to keep this small, but noble bush at home.

I’m back! And reviving my plants!

Well, I’m back. Hopefully for good this time. Not everything has been done, and some of the things that have been done might benefit from being corrected, but I have this strange feeling that the more I wait to end all those decorating works the longer they take. But my house it no longer filled with stacks upon stacks of boxes and my kitchen is usable again, so I figure it’s time to shake things up a bit here, lest I lose my faithful readers. Well, what’s left of them, anyway.

Starting on a light and rather easy note, I’ve been trying to revive my houseplants, which have suffered somewhat because of all the chaos. Sometimes I just forgot about them, sometimes they were tucked away somewhere and nigh-inaccessible, but whatever the reasons, they had a hard time. And that’s not a good thing all in itself, but even worse for a herbalist. It’s a little difficult to convince people I know how to harvest and use plant remedies if my own thyme bush looks like Clint Eastwood in “The Good, the Bad and the Ugly”.
Of course, it’s not hard to get them back into shape, and most of you probably already know what I’m going to write. But maybe someone will benefit of even these trivial scraps of information, and I’ll get used to updating Kitchen Witchcraft more often.

So, potted plants. I don’t keep a lot of them, because there’s something a bit unnatural about keeping them in jars and whatnots and it irks me. Nowadays I just keep a few herbs to have fresh access to them, and a small lemon plant, the result of experimentally putting a lemon pip into soil some time ago.  This particular one has been poorly for a long time now, I suppose the soil was a wrong kind.  My basil plant is a survivor of many hard times, week-long journeys into the mountains and fantasy conventions, so even if it is a bit scraggy it’s doing pretty well all things considered. But even that one has suffered a bit. What to do, then?

Well, first of all, it’s important not to overwater. The first watering after a period of neglecting can be more generous, but that’s it. After this, stick to the regular intervals that are best for each plant. It’s also a good thing to nourish the plants with more than just water. And here we come to the pinch of the matter.

In the case of aromatic herbs, such as basilor rosemary, using practically any fertiliser should be avoided. Artificial fertilizer is a very bad choice, as it changes the taste of the herb and, in drastic cases, can interfere with its medical properties.  Using natural fertilizers is marginally safer, but it changes the taste just as well, and in the case of compost, much more. So, what to do? The answer is quite simple : use culinary waste to water your herbs.
You’ve probably heard more than once that boiling potatoes, for example, destroys quite a lot of their nutritional value. What really happens is that some substances diffuse in water and are no longer in the potato as we eat it. More nutrients-conscious cooks use the water to make soups or sauces, for example, but it can be very useful for Your neglected plants. The same goes for the water used to boil groat (buckwheat groat gives especially rich leftovers) or even rice, though white rice is definitely the poorest option. Water your herbs with it and they will feel better in no time.

The ultimate modern Kitchen Witch's brew : it does not contain eyes of newt, it has a real, positive purpose, and it's still eccentric as hell.

What’s important is to remember that there can be no table salt in the water if you want to use it for your plants. If you’re the kind of person who adds salt automatically to anything they boil, this is a good incentive to stop. Seriously, it adds nothing but a few percent of hypertension risk. And if You are like me, and hardly ever boil potatoes, you can still put the potato peels in a pot and boil them for about twenty minutes. Then let the water cool and presto, you have a nice vitamin pill for your herbs, although there’s something really strange in peeling the potatoes only to put them away and boil the peels. Even if I know I will be roasting them later I still feel like an old lady going slightly off her rocker. The same can be done with eggshells, apparently, though I haven’t tried yet.

Oh, and if anyone has any ideas for my lemon, please share them. Blessings.

What kind of pasta is on your plate?

Just sharing this nicely done and very helpful poster, found on Charming Italy. It’s a clear, very comprehensible, visual guide to all the different kinds of pasta a lover of Italian cuisine might bump into.

All hell just broke lose in my apartment in the form of a partial renovation, so I probably won’t have much time to cook and post about witchcraft, seeing as my kitchen is full of cardboard boxes stuffed with stuff and everything else is… somewhere. I think. So just be blessed and profit of the nice weather.

Spaghetti alla crema

It’s been some time since we’ve seen some serious activity here, hasn’t it? So, in order to make it up to You, and prove that I still can cook, I’ll be treating You to something special today.

This is a recipe I made up myself when there was some cream left over in my fridge. That’s why it bears this faux-italian name. But regardless of any naming issues, it’s really good and easily done, as I don’t usually go for hard-and-time-consuming. Even though the dish is simple to prepare, it still can be quite impressive, especially if You serve it with some interesting decoration. So You can keep this in mind for any sort of elegant occasion. It can also be very filling, especially in bigger portions – I’d advise to make smaller plates of this than, for example, of napoli or aglio. So if You want to impress a dear person with how You can prepare an elegant, showy meal, and are incidentally starving, this recipe is for You.
It can be done in vegetarian or “carnivorous” version. I’m presenting vegetarian here, with appropriate hints when necessary. Oh, and the usual reminder : You do not need to go along with my obsession for spaghetti. This sauce goes wonderfully with tagliatelle and its cousins (much better than napoli does), penne and fettuccine. I have not tried other kinds, so if You do, I’d like to hear about it.

Ingredients

  • Spaghetti no.5
  • Green olives (may be swapped for bacon for carnivores or both can be used)
  • Thick, sour cream
  • Garlic
  • Cheese
  • Olive oil
  • Seasoning: basil, oregano… the usual stuff (You can add some pepper to spice up the mild taste of cream)

Preparation

The sauce will be ready within minutes, so time Your activities accordingly. My advice is to chop, grind and grate everything beforehand and only start cooking when You have the ingredients ready and waiting. So dice the olives (and/or bacon) thinly, then follow up with garlic, and grate the cheese. Put the water on for boiling pasta.

If You’re going for the meat version, it will take slightly longer than just the olives. Either way, pour some oil onto a frying pan and fry the olives (bacon) for some time over small heat, taking care not to overdo. Supervise them as You wait for the water to boil. Put the pasta into the pot, stir so it doesn’t stick, and wait for some time. By now, Your olives (bacon) should be near-ready or ready, so if there’s any spare time, take them off the heat. You can add some of the garlic, but not all of it, now.
Check on the pasta. If it’s still too hard, but getting there, it’s time to finish the sauce. Pour the cream onto the mildly-heated pan and stir gently, then add garlic and seasoning. Keep the sauce over small heat so it won’t congeal as You wait for the pasta. Cover with grated cheese.

Serving

This dish should be served hot, and eaten right after preparation. It does not keep well, nor does it lend itself well to reheating. Straight off the stove is the only option.

Serve with rich, red wine that will be able to compete with the sauce. As it’s not actually full of vitamins, You might want to add a light salad, best served beforehand. After this, chances are You won’t really feel like eating anything else.

Achievement unlocked!

Dear readers! Kitchen Witchcraft is proud to present the first tangible result of our existence! The picture below has been made by one of our readers, who was kind enough to comment on his experiments with aglio e olio. It shows the dinner he made following advice posted here, and, apparently, he liked what he got.

This is what makes blogging worthwhile. Thank you!

Spaghetti aglio e olio

Aglio e olio ingredientsI really need to keep some decent intervals here, but unfortunately, nobody is yelling at me if I forget to post. It doesn’t help that I’m hopelessly lazy and short on herbs to write fillers about. So instead of trying to fight it, I’m going to yield to my nature (nice and mystic excuse, isn’t it?) and post the ultimate Lazy Recipe today.
This is what You do when You have no ingredients for other, more complicated dishes, or when You are dead against doing any work. It’s quick, it’s easy and it’s delicious. Quite healthy, too. So if there’s need to impress someone and do it fast, or just whip up something tasty while being absolutely exhausted, this is what You need.

Spaghetti aglio e olio – meaning literally ‘garlic and oil’ – is the simplest pasta recipe You could ever come across. Its only downside is that the ingredients must be of reasonable quality, because every little fault will show in a dish so simple. So use good, fresh garlic, high quality cheese (italian hard is best here) and only, absolutely only, olive oil. Other oils, even expensive ones such as grape seed oil, do not have the same aroma and they will result in something dull and bland.

Ingredients

  • Spaghetti no. 5 – as usual.
  • Garlic – three cloves per person at least.
  • Olive oil – quite a lot, for this particular dish, since it doesn’t contain anything else. But the exact amount depends on how oily You want it to be.
  • Cheese – a healthy amount of strong, piquant cheese. Grana padano is Your best bet, followed by parmesan.
  • Green olives – optional.
  • Seasoning herbs - fresh basil, oregano, maybe fresh rosemary  (sometimes, fresh parsley is used for this dish).

Tools

  • A frying pan big enough to hold everything is necessary, because You will be throwing all of the pasta onto it.
  • A (wooden) pestle if You want to do it my way.

Preparation

Since the ‘sauce’ consists of garlic heated with olive oil, there’s not much to do. So get the water for boiling the pasta ready, because everything else can be done while spaghetti is already in. As You wait for the water to reach the boiling point, grate the cheese and dice the olives if You feel like adding them.
As the water boils, put the pasta in. Remember to stir it so that it won’t stick.  Peel the garlic cloves and slice them, then pour olive oil onto the pan and heat it up.

Mashing garlic

Smashing pumpk- er, mashing garlic on a frying pan.

Now Your regular aglio e olio recipe will tell You to chop the garlic into small bits and toss it into the oil. But if You do that, You end up with garlic-flavoured oil (which is good) and small bits of semi-fried garlic that fly around and inevitably fall down to congregate on the bottom of the plate (which is bad). What we want, on the other hand, is a smooth mix of oil and garlic that spreads nicely on our pasta. So what do we do?
This is where the wooden pestle comes in. I say wooden, because I use a teflon-covered pan, but even for other kinds wood is the best material to use here. I’m certainly not going to bash at it with my marble pestle, especially since it wouldn’t accomplish much.

If You have a wooden pestle, slice the garlic and put the slices straight onto the frying pan. Then, use the pestle to mash the garlic while mixing it with the oil already there. Why, do You ask? Well, You could mash it in a mortar, but then You would have to transport it from one utensil to another and a) lose some of it in the process, b) have to wash all that has been used to do it. Mashing it straight on the pan prevents all that and ensures that all of our garlic ends up in the dish, while resulting in a smoother, more ‘sauce-like’ mixture.
If You’re not going to do this, chop the garlic into fine pieces and add it to the oil. Either way, heat them up together, stirring from time to time. Watch out not to overdo the heat – the garlic must not brown.

When spaghetti is ready (according to Your personal tastes), drain it and put all of it onto the pan where the garlic is cooking. Mix it gently to spread the oil and garlic on all of Your pasta. Add the seasoning and cheese – You’re done.

Aglio e olio

Little known fact about this dish - it isn't very photogenic.

Despite this long and rambling description, aglio e olio can be made in approximately 15 minutes. And, despite the not very impressive picture above, it’s a delicious dish. Yes, You do end up with more or less ‘bare’ pasta with green bits here and there and some cheese on top, but it’s still great. So great, in fact, that I got tired of trying to take a fancy picture of it and ate it.
Dry or semi-dry white wine is recommended – red might come out as too aggressive.

Cheese

‘Cheese is good. Cheese is alive’.
- Granny Weatherwax, in The Wee Free Men

CheeseThere might be something more to life than eating cheese and drinking wine, but quite frankly, there isn’t much of it.
Fame evaporates and so do lovers (metaphorically speaking, I hope), but a good cheese will wait in the fridge faithfully, intent only on being eaten*. It may not be as glamorous and exciting as some exotic fruit, or as showy as caviare or some fancy dessert. But it’s damn tasty, that’s for sure.
Right at the start of this little blogging folly of mine, I promised to explore the cheese subject in-depth. A good opportunity has just presented itself – my love of cheese is well-known to those close to me, so they’ve been presenting me with many dairy delicacies lately. It’s not every day You find five different kinds of cheese at home, so I couldn’t let this pass unnoticed.

Cheese is one of the oldest foods in the world – older than bread, surely, because milk-giving animals have been domesticated before humans learned to grow crops. Nothing conclusive is known about the exact place of its origin, but it seems logical that cheese originated more or less everywhere: all humans need to eat and are likely to experiment widely in that field, and milk was available pretty much to every ethnic group out there.  So if You’re feeling like giving Your respects to the ancestors, cheese is a good bet.

There are thousands of types and varieties of cheese, since all those Peoples who got the idea have been working on it ever since. They can be classed by many different criteria, such as type of milk used (cow, sheep, goat etc.), texture or type of fabrication process and so on. Since all this is not really that useful and can be read elsewhere, I will stick to my own examples. As seen on the picture, we have:

The blue vein

Made using a special variety of mould, these cheeses have a very characteristic apparition and a peculiar, strong taste. Can be made from any milk, but the most famous one, roquefort, is only allowed to bear the name if made from sheep milk and in the caves near Roquefort-sur-Soulzon.
When dealing with those, it’s important to remember that they are, for all intents and purposes, covered with mould. Do not wrap them up with other cheeses, even other “mouldy” ones. It’s also a good idea to wash the knife before using it on something else, unless You do want to spread the mould everywhere.
Strong, dry red wine is necessary – anything weaker will lose to the taste of cheese immediately. Incidentally, the “vein” can be anything from blue to green to red to even purple at times.

The ‘standard’ semi-soft

There’s actually nothing standard about them, seeing as the category is only semi-valid by itself, but those cheeses are the most popular around the western world – Gouda, Edam or Maasdamer, those are the cheeses that You will put on a sandwich most often. They can vary greatly in tastes and shapes, and their biggest advantage is being as close to ‘universal’ cheese as possible: they can be sliced for toast, grated for pizza or pastas and cut in large bits for fried cheese cutlets.
These cheeses keep well and start spoiling from the surface, so the places in question can be cut off without losing the rest. Just remember not to leave them unwrapped as they dry out and become unusable.

The soft-ripened cheese

Made of most varieties of milk, using a special kind of mould, but having almost nothing in common with the blue veins. Amazing, isn’t it? Those are the brie, camembert, coulommiers, or brique (all French examples, because I’m writing what I know). This kind of cheese does not, usually, keep at all, as it is intended to be eaten in one sitting. Tastes range from mild and creamy (brie) to sharp and piquant (ripe camembert). Always with red wine, dry or semi-dry, never sweet.
Mostly eaten individually, just like the blue veins, but some salad and pasta recipes call for them.

‘Hard’ cheeses

Those are the ones that crumble rather than cut and go ‘knock’ when You tap them. Grana padano, parmiggiano, peccorino – Italy is the leader here, as this kind of cheese is intended to be grated and used as a condiment for pasta (sometimes roasted meat). Assembled in big molds and aged for years, sometimes, they can be undistinguishable from their thick wax crust, until tasted. There is no mistaking their taste, and I’m not going to attempt to describe it. They are expensive, but worth the price.
Can be eaten individually, but are at their best with pasta. Indispensable for more “modest” types of spaghetti sauce, like aglio et olio or puttanesca, where a lesser cheese will make a dissonance.

I can go on much longer like this, but feel obliged to stop now for the sake of my dear Readers. And for a bite of brie.

ΦΦΦ

* I don’t need love,
For what good will love do me?
Cheddar never lies to me,
For when love’s gone,
Cheeses last on…
;)

Spaghetti al pesto

Everything you see I owe to spaghetti.
- Sophia Loren

Ingredients for pasta al pestoI’m back! I’ve spent some wonderful time with my significant other and we cooked quite a lot. Unfortunately, there was no time to take pictures since everything vanished instantly, but don’t despair. Today’s recipe has been specifically requested by someone who has discovered the joys of pesto through Kitchen Witchcraft and asked for more recipes with it. (Incidentally, if You would like to contact me, write at szalejjadowity@gmail.com.)
So we’ll be seeing more of this gourmet green goodness.

Ingredients:

  • Spaghetti no. 5 – suit Yourself. Again, tagliatelle, maccaroni or fettucine can be used as well.
  • Onions – half an onion per person.  This sauce needs less onion than napoli, but of course do as You will.
  • Tomatoes – two per person. If big, take one.
  • Pesto – three teaspoons per person.
  • Garlic – optional, pesto has quite a distinctive taste and should be strong enough.
  • Grated cheese – pesto contains it already, but there is no harm in adding some. A smaller amount than usual will generally suffice.
  • Olive oil – just enough to cook the onions, since pesto will add some as well.

Preparation:

Pesto sauce in making
Pesto is waiting to be mixed.

This pasta sauce is prepared in exactly the same way as napoli sauce, with pesto added towards the end. So prepare a pot of water for spaghetti. Dice the onions thinly and put them on a frying pan (or a saucepan if You prefer it). Pour some olive oil and let the onions fry over medium heat. Be careful not to let them turn brown as this changes the taste. When the onions have a yellow, semi-transparent look, they are ready. If the water is not boiling yet, take the onions off the heat as the next ingredient to be added are the tomatoes and they need to be peeled.

As You wait for the water to boil You can grate the cheese, chop the garlic and do all that needs doing. Once the water is boiling, put the tomatoes in and count to five. Take them out and peel them – the boiling water will make the skin go off easily. Dice the tomatoes and add them to the onions. You can turn up the heat now so that the sauce thickens faster.

Put the pasta in the pot. As You wait for it to boil, remember to stir from time to time so that it doesn’t stick to the bottom. Pay attention to the sauce and keep mixing it as it thickens, but don’t let it get too dry : some juice will be needed to absorb the pesto and let it mix smoothly. If You are adding garlic, do it now.
Once the tomato sauce reaches a satisfying density, add pesto and mix thoroughly. You can season the sauce with some oregano or basil, but it won’t be necessary.

A portion of spaghetti al pesto

This recipe should result in a grainy sauce that sticks to the pasta. The resulting colour will be brown-ish, and that’s how it should be. The taste, depending on how much pesto You add, is either stronger, suitable for dry, red wine, or fresh and light, calling for white wine. It’s all down to the tomatoes-to-pesto proportion.

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