Home Italy The Regions Displaying items by tag: bucatini
Displaying items by tag: bucatini
Thursday, 11 March 2010 20:42

Bucatini all'Amatriciana

 MAKES 4-6 servings

- 1/4 Ib (125 g) guanciale or pancetta, chopped
- 2 tablespoons olive oil
- 1 small yellow onion, chopped
- 2 cloves garlic, minced Pinch of red pepper flakes
- 2 1/2 cups (15 oz/470 g) peeled, seeded, and chopped fresh or canned tomatoes
- Sea salt
- 1 lb (500 g) bucatini, spaghetti, or rigatoni
- 1/3 cup (11/2 oz/45 g) grated pecorino romano cheese, plus more for serving

Guanciale, pork cheek that resembles unsmoked bacon and is cured with salt,
pepper, and sometimes garlic, is traditionally used in this dish from Amatrice, a small town near Rome known for its excellent pork products. Pancetta, rolled pork belly cured in a similar manner and more widely available outside Italy, can be substituted. Tomatoes, onion, garlic, and chile complete the sauce, which is usually served over bucatini, a thick strand pasta with a hole in the center.

In a frying pan over medium heat, cook the guanciale in the olive oil, stirring often, unti! golden, about 10 minutes. Add the onion and sauté until tender and golden, about 5 minutes. Add the garlic and red pepper flakes and sauté until the garlic is golden, about 1 minute longer.
Pass the chopped tomatoes through a food mill fitted with the medium disk or a medium-mesh sieve directly into the pan. Add a pinch of salt, bring to a simmer, and cook uncovered, stirring occasionally, until the sauce has thickened, about 15 minutes.
Meanwhile, bring a large pot three-fourths full of water to a rolling boil and add about 2 tablespoons salt. Add the bucatini, stir well, and cook, stirring occasionally, until al dente, according to the package directions. Scoop out and reserve about 2 ladlefuls of the cooking water, then drain the pasta. Return it to the pot.
Add the sauce to the drained pasta and stir and toss over low heat until well coated with the sauce, adjusting the consistency with some of the cooking water if needed. Sprinkle with the 1/3 cup cheese and toss again. Transfer to a warmed serving bowl and serve at once. Pass additional cheese at the table.

Buon appetito!

 

 

Published in Meat main dishes
Thursday, 04 March 2010 11:47

Lazio - Capital: Rome (Roma)

 

Lazio

Capital Fare

The food of Lazio is a culinary bridge between Umbria and Tuscany to the north and Campania to the south: hearty cooking of home and farm that has centered, cince the days of ancient Rome, around lamb, pork, bread, cheese, seasonal vegetables, and olive oil, with fish from Lake Bolsena and seafood from the Tyrrhenian Sea added to the mix. The cooking of the capita!, much of which developed in trattorias, osterie (neighborhood eateries), and restaurants, is a cuisine in its own right. Roman food is bold, flavorful, and resourceful, making the most of every ingredient, from variety meats and vegetables (especially artichokes and greens) to dried pasta, including spaghetti and bucatini.

Culinary Signature:

Variety Meats In the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, workers in the slaughterhouses of Rome's Testaccio district would be given, as part of their pay, the parts left over after carcasses were quartered. These parts became known as il quinto quarto, the fifth quarter. Neighborhood trattorias and home cooks devised all kinds of inventive uses for them, many of which have become classic Roman specialties, from oxtails and sweetbreads to pajata (milk-fed calf or lamb intestines, stili filled with coagulated milk) and coratella (heart, liver, and lungs cooked together).

Regional Specialties

Carciofi, artichokesGuanciale salt-cured, air-dried pork jowl, used like pancetta

Pasta all'amatriciana sauce of tomatoes and guanciale or pancetta, tossed with bucatini

Tonnarelli cacio e pepe sauce of pecorino and black pepper with square-cut spaghetti Spaghetti alla carbonara spaghetti with eggs, pecorino romano cheese, guanciale or pancetta, and pepper

Gnocchi alla romana disk-shaped dumplings made with semolina flour

Abbacchio milk-fed lamb, often served roasted or stewed

Saltimbocca veal cutlets, layered with sage and prosciutto

Coda alla vaccinara braised oxtails

Artichokes tender local specimens are prepared in a variety of ways, including alla romana (braised) and alla giudia (fried)
Puntarelle type of chicory with long, jagged, arrow-shaped leaves, served as a salad with a dressing of anchovies, garlic, and olive oil

photo: Artichokes are the signature vegetable of Rome, where they liven up the table in winter and spring. They are most often fried or braised, but also star in frittatas and pasta dishes. 

Published in Lazio

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