It's comfort food because the flavors are the backbone of so many Italian dishes, and a standard because it's easy and quick. Years ago, when I'd been working at San Domenico New York for only a matter of weeks, I threw a holiday party with my roommates at our apartment. I invited my new amici from the kitchen, who showed up in a group after dinner service was over, some time after midnight. This arrival en masse didn't only give a jolt to the party (comments of the "where did all these hot Italian men come from??" variety were overheard). It also provided for late-night feeding. When the guests who remained into the wee hours got hungry again, after finishing off all of my cocktail party nibbles, the Italians came to the rescue.
Exaggeration? Maybe a little... |
Garlic, olive oil, chile pepper, and pasta |
I give the recipe as 'spaghetti', though the pasta could be any kind, keeping in mind that pasta lunga (long pasta) really is best. Fresh pasta works equally as well, as the tagliatelle in these photos will attest. I add parmigiano reggiano cheese when I have it on hand because I like it, but you can add any kind of grated cheese, or not, as you see fit. Same with the parsley, or any green herb (I've often thought that a handful of chives would add an interesting verdant, onion-y dimension to the dish). Once you get the timing down, and know enough not to burn the garlic and chile pepper, you can have fun with personalizing your very own version of aglio olio peperoncino. Topless Italian men optional.
SPAGHETTI AGLIO OLIO PEPERONCINO
(4-6 people)
4 TBS. extra-virgin olive oil
2-3 garlic cloves, chopped up finely
Generous pinch of red pepper flakes
(or whole peperoncino broken up)
Salt and pepper to taste
¼ cup finely chopped fresh flat leaf
parsley
1 lb. spaghetti
1/2 cup grated parmigiano cheese
- Bring a large pot of water to a
boil.
- Once the water comes to a rolling
boil, add a generous couple of pinches of salt (the water should be briny,
almost like seawater), and toss in the pasta and stir.
-After the pasta has been cooking for
6 minutes, heat a large skillet over medium heat, add the olive oil until warm,
and then add the garlic and peperoncino, cooking until the garlic is barely
browned, a minute or so.
- When the pasta is al dente, drain
the pasta and add directly to the pan with the oil in it. Add salt and pepper
to taste.
- Toss pasta to coat it with the oil
mixture. Add the parsley and the cheese and stir until evenly distributed.
Taste and adjust for salt. If the pasta is dry, add a little of the salted
cooking water to the pan.
-Dig in!
Just reading this post, and it brought back so many memories. I remember this night so well...the delicious spaghetti aglio olio peperoncino and your San Domenico amici...what a vision in that NYC kitchen. Thanks for this recipe..and bringing back this memory...smile on my face as I type this....
ReplyDelete