Monday, August 12, 2013

Spaghetti Estivi Freddi


Here's my recipe for a delicious summer pasta dish called Spaghetti Estivi Freddi, which means chilled summer spaghetti. It's sort of what we Americans would call a "pasta salad" and thus it's great for a picnic or for eating outdoors on a hot summer evening. It's quite easy to make, though it does require a little planning, as you must prepare the marinated mushrooms ahead of time. As with all simple dishes, success depends upon the quality of your ingredients, so try to get the best and freshest things that you can find. I was able to obtain everything needed for this dish at a rural supermarket so you shouldn't have any trouble. 

Marinated Mushrooms

You will need:
  • 2 pounds small mushrooms
  • 1/2 to 1 cup extra-virgin olive oil
  • a pinch of freshly-grated nutmeg
  • 2 lemons
  • 3 garlic cloves, sliced
  • 1 shallot, sliced
  • Several sprigs of fresh thyme, or 1 Tbsp dried thyme
  • 2 "Turkish" bay leaves
  • salt and fresh-ground black pepper

  • A large skillet/sauté pan
  • a capacious glass or other container to hold the mushrooms while they marinate

Choose small mushrooms, ones with caps not much larger than an inch or so in diameter. White "button" mushrooms, cremini, "Baby Bella", portobello— they're all the same mushroom, just at different stages of growth. The youngest are the white ones, the brownish cremini or "Baby Bella" are a bit older, and the large portobello are the oldest. Either the white "buttons" or small cremini/"Baby Bellas", or a mixture of the two, will work. Try to choose mushrooms whose gills do not show; the cap should curve around and touch the stalk. These are fresher.

It is a myth that washing mushrooms causes them to absorb a bunch of water. Wash them in the following manner: fill a large bowl (or your sink) with cold water and add the mushrooms. Swish them around, rub each one to remove any dirt, then lift them out of the water with your hands and place them onto a kitchen towel to drain and dry. Blot the mushrooms with the towel if necessary. If any of the mushrooms are larger than about an inch in diameter, then halve them.

Heat about one half of the olive oil in the pan over medium heat. Add the mushrooms and cook them, shaking the pan and turning the mushrooms, for about 5 minutes. Grate a bit of a nutmeg (the equivalent of a pinch) into the pan, toss the mushrooms again, and remove from heat.

Remove the zest from the lemons using a citrus zester or a very sharp knife. You want only the yellow colored part of the lemon peel, not the white part. If you're removing the zest with a knife, chop it finely after it's removed. After you've removed the zest, cut the lemons in half and juice them.

Put the lemon zest, lemon juice, sliced garlic & shallot, thyme, bay leaves and remaining olive oil into the marinating container. Add the mushrooms and any juice/oil from the sauté pan. Salt and pepper the mixture to taste. Give everything a good stir to make sure all the mushrooms are coated with the marinade. Cover and refrigerate for at least 12 hours, up to 5 days.

Spaghetti Estivi Freddi

You will need:
  • 1.5 pounds good Italian spaghetti
  • 1/3 cup best-quality extra-virgin olive oil
  • 3 large garlic cloves, chopped or put through a garlic press
  • about 1/2 cup chopped fresh mint leaves
  • about 1/4 cup chopped fresh basil leaves
  • 1/3 cup freshly-squeezed orange juice
  • about 20 good-quality pitted ripe (black) olives
  • 6 anchovy fillets
  • about 1.5-2 cups of the marinated mushrooms from the preceding recipe (remove just the mushrooms from the marinade)
  • salt and fresh-ground black pepper

  • a medium-sized sauté pan or saucepan.
  • a large pot for cooking the pasta
  • a large serving dish

Roughly chop the olives and the anchovy fillets.

Put the olive oil in a pan and add the chopped/pressed garlic. Set the pan on the stove over medium heat and gently cook the garlic until it turns golden brown. Be cautious not to burn the garlic! Remove the pan from heat and add the mint and basil, the orange juice, the mushrooms, the olives and the anchovy fillets. Stir well.

Bring a large pot of water (at least 8 quarts) to a boil. Throw in a handful of salt and the spaghetti. Cook the pasta, stirring periodically, until quite al dente, usually about 8-9 minutes, but this depends upon your particular brand of pasta. A good rule for this recipe is to cook the pasta for 2 minutes less time than the package suggests. 

Drain the spaghetti well, then transfer it to the serving dish. Pour the other ingredients onto the pasta and toss well. Season to taste with salt & fresh-ground black pepper. Since this dish will be served cold, you may wish to slightly over-salt, as cold food tastes less salty than hot food. Let cool to room temperature then refrigerate until well-chilled. You may prepare this dish hours in advance.

Serve, preferably outdoors, along with good, crusty bread and a light, crisp red or white wine.

24 comments:

rcocean said...

Great recipe and sounds delicious.

Lem the artificially intelligent said...

I love spaghetti.

I used to cook some for myself when I had my own apartment. Sometimes, I had enough left to take to work.

Evi L. Bloggerlady said...

I prefer linguini to spaghetti but it is all good. And if you are going grain free, you could substitute spaghetti squash and still make this work. i love marinated mushrooms and anchovies.

Chip Ahoy said...

A guy I know quit his job with the State Parks Dept. because it was too easy and too idle. He said half his day was removing his clothes and soaking up sun. He described it as heaven and ideal, for somebody else. He wanted to learn to cook so he took a job with a very good hotel in Colorado Springs and did learn to cook that way, by becoming a hotel chef.

Then used his newly acquired cooking-knowledge to start a catering company down there. He told me about catering unusual things such as field-catering in Garden of the Gods, a park of unusual rock formations that have the vibe of statues in an otherworldly park.

And then one fine Summer day, responding to a remark about fresh pasta available in packages in groceries, he said, "One day I'll be able to afford fresh pasta."

!

Honestly, sometimes I don't know when I'm being put on.

The first batch I rolled myself was successful without knowing one single thing about what I was doing, and so delicious besides that it overtook ordinary spaghetti immediately, and best of all, because it was rolled out and the dough stretched, the pasta, fettucini, is the thickness I ended up with, was bouncy.

It bounced around, stretched when pulled with a fork from a wet pile on the plate, and snapped back. It was positively alive compared to dry pasta. And very fun to eat.

Compared to dry dead zombie pasta.

But unlike dry pasta, it cannot be al dente.

Since then I learned on my own to incorporate semolina flour into the dough

And I learned the importance of resting the dough for at least 20 minutes. The pasta is less bouncy after appreciating this.

And I do not see an insistence on incorporating semolina in the cookbooks I've read about pasta, the Italian ones I've read disappoint because they fail to mention it where I expect them to emphasize it.

Although they do acknowledge commercial dry pasta is made from semolina.

So why not suggest that for home use? Is it that odd an expectation to have different types of flour onhand?

Semolina is rough flour before it is smashed to powder. It adds a density and body that pasta with white flour only will lack. And whole wheat flour is not that suitable for pasta, it tends to break too easily when used by itself so you end up with a plate of broken bits if handled too much and it is very easy to overhandle it.

I mention this because making pasta, forming the dough, rolling it out, cutting it, is easy as opening a box and dumping it in salted water.

↑ Lie.

Sometimes I lie for dramatic effect.

It is still very easy to do. Whip up the dough in a bowl. Rest it. Roll it out evenly. Fold it up loosely. Cut evenly in a controlled fashion, mechanically, perpendicular to the roll. Boil in salted water. Drain.

Boil in salted water, salty like the sea, which sea? I do not know, Adriatic sea, I guess, and without oil.

People who dump oil in boiling pasta water do not know what they'e doing. Here's why.

They say to prevent sticking. It sticks because you're a dummkopf. The starchy surface is desired because it helps sauce adhere, the salted pasta water clouded with starch is used to form sauces, often, even usually but not always. If the surface of the pasta is oiled then the sauce slips off.

By good quality dry spaghetti, what is meant by that among other things is spaghetti that is cut with bronze dies. Modern dies are silicone, much easier for manufacturing, replacing and expense and such, but they leave an untextured surface. You can actually feel the difference with your fingertips between dry pasta run through bronze dies and pasta run through silicone dies. One holds sauce much better than the other, so look for it.

Roger J. said...

Palladian--thanks great recipe--an even simpler recipe for summer pasta would be pomodoro crudo--The freshes sweetest tomatoes you can find, with olive oil and garlic--stir that in and let it sit. don't mush it up. Cook your pasta and add it to the bowl with the tomato mixture. The cooked pasta will warm it up a bit, but should be room temperature. And as always--good bread and wine to accompany--Simple and fresh ALWAYS works

Anonymous said...

Good German Frauen make gute Nudels. Ja. Bouncy.

Lem the artificially intelligent said...

There was a lot of work making those Danishes. I'm talking about the video Chip posted a while back. I had some fun with it.

deborah said...

Looks delish, Palladian.

What I wouldn't be without, now that I finally got around to using it is pre-cooked lasagna noodles. You not only don't have to mess with the boiling, but the layering goes super fast, and the sauce absorbs more-so into the noodle, yielding a non-slip slidey result.

ndspinelli said...

Palladian, I love anchovies!!

Dust Bunny Queen said...

Sounds fabulous. I would have to halve the mushrooms since we never get button mushrooms. I love anchovies too. The lend a very unique flavor.

Regarding fresh pasta versus dried. I totally agree. There is nothing like the fresh. My father was recently downsizing his kitchen and gave me his pasta machine. One of those hand crank kind that you attach to the edge of the counter. It can make several different widths of pasta, fettuccine to spaghetti. I plan to make some lasagna with the fresh flat sheets. You haven't HAD lasagna until you have used the fresh noodles instead of those rippled edged things.

Dust Bunny Queen said...

Sorry Deborah. Posted after I saw yours.....Not trying to diss you or your noodles.

:-D

deborah said...

No prob, DBQ. I knew as I posted that the real deal is superior to store-bought.

Those pasta rollers are very impressive.

Anonymous said...

I would put some fresh basil in that garlic, olive oil and tomato mixture Roger. My best childhood friend's mother was Sicilian and made that dish for us many times.

Roger J. said...

Inga--you are right about the basil. Its a very adaptable dish, and fresh basil, like Paula Deen's butter and heavy cream--nothing is made worse by the addition of fresh basil.

Roger J. said...

another variation, I suppose is Spaghetti San Giovanni, traditionally served on June 21--consists of cherry tomatoes, or other sweet tomatoes--simmered briefly in olive oil and put over pasta. Its unique because it does require garlic (a mortal sin, of course)--but it is light and sweet.
I suppose Nick Spinelli could correct me on the theological points.

And by the way--Anchovies are a wonderful flavor enchancer--anyone have recommendations for the best anchovies?

Roger J. said...

Oh--and a shout out to Palladian--have genuinely appreciated your food posts--top quality--and also to Pastafarian on how to make a classic cocktail. Tried you whiskey sour and it was fantastic.

Roger J. said...

Damn--the pasta san Giovanni does NOT call for garlic. profound apologies.

Palladian said...

In my opinion, dried pasta made from durum semolina is superior to fresh pasta in many dishes where you need a good, firm texture. Fresh pasta has its place— ravioli, tagliatelle, pappardelle— but in this recipe, you really need to use dried pasta.

WWIII Joe Biden, Husk-Puppet + America's Putin said...

The mushroom recipe sounds delish.

Dust Bunny Queen said...

In my opinion, dried pasta made from durum semolina is superior to fresh pasta in many dishes where you need a good, firm texture

Agreed again. I think that fresh spaghetti type noodles in this dish would be too mushy. One of my favorites is linguini in a lemon cream sauce. You would have a gloppy mess if you used fresh pasta.

IMO... Where the fresh pasta really shines in in ravioli, lasagna and fettuccine type dishes. Fresh spinach fettuccine topped with a light butter, olive oil, garlic sauce (maybe a dash of red pepper flakes) and fresh grated Parmesan or Romano cheeses. A little crunchy sea salt and nom nom nom.

Evi L. Bloggerlady said...

I grilled some fresh sardines the other day. They were okay. They were better in Europe.

I did it with smelts and they were better than the sardines. Tasty.

I would love to get some fresh anchovies and pan fry them.

ndspinelli said...

Rogerj, That dish sounds like real Italian food. Just a few ingredients, FRESH, and simple.

Regarding anchovies. I have tried several but now I have found the ones I love. They are Ortiz anchovies in a glass jar, from Spain. These are meaty, tender, anchovies. I like the glass jar because I don't use a lot of anchovies in a dish. And, the unused stay better in the jar. They make a whole line of anchovies in cans also. I pay ~$18 bucks for a jar, but it's worth every penny. When it comes to food, price is not as important as quality. Hell, you pay a good price for imported parmesan, romano, anchovies, etc. But, you don't use that much, and it keeps a long time.

ndspinelli said...

Evi, I love smelt!!

Palladian said...

ndspinelli said... "Regarding anchovies. I have tried several but now I have found the ones I love. They are Ortiz anchovies in a glass jar, from Spain. These are meaty, tender, anchovies."

I agree, the Ortiz anchovies are great!

I don't think I've ever had anchovies that I didn't like, and the Moroccan canned ones you find in most supermarkets are perfectly good. If you don't use them up fast, just dump the can in a little jar and top up the jar with olive oil so that the fillets are covered. They'll keep in the fridge for a long time.