“Little
darling, it’s been a long cold lonely winter.”*
Looking
toward the arrival of spring
I am, regrettably, behind in my postings. I had started this
when there was a little bit of warmer weather several weeks ago, when spring
seemed like a vague promise. It usually takes just one day of warmer weather to
get everyone thinking that winter has loosened its chilly grasp and we are
fooled that spring warmth might be right around the corner. My red haired food
co-pilot works at a college and bears this out for me. If there’s one nice warm
day, the coeds are wearing shorts and flipflops. But it doesn’t last. We know
it’s too early but hey, isn’t there more daylight? That should count for
something.
No matter what type of winter you had, it is
officially spring. Thanks to a
slight warm up when youngest daughter was home for her spring break, I made dinner with ingredients that looked back to winter but with a spring-like
lightness.
As you might know, I work in a restaurant. One of the menu
items uses Swiss chard, leaves only, which means unused stems. One day when the
chard was being prepped for steaming, I asked that the stems be saved. I would
take them home and use them. The chard was cut from the stems leaving a little
bit of the leaf behind. This would be used with pasta. I also roasted some
grape tomatoes to bring out more sweetness and fried some shiitakes, which would be
scatted over the finished pasta.
If you have never fried shiitakes, you should try it. The
shitakes cook to a deep brown, intensifying in flavor that is almost
bacon-like. (Almost. Bacon is
bacon after all). It would work with some other mushrooms too. I had wanted to
use maitakes but shiitakes were easier to find.
And what do you do if you don’t have any chard stems that
you brought home from work?
Prepare your chard in a similar manner, saving the leaves for another
meal and using the stems for this pasta.
I used a long, ribbon-like dry pasta made locally by Severino Pasta
called mafaldine. I used to know Pete Severino when he delivered his family’s
pasta to a restaurant in Philly where I worked. (That’s Pete holding fresh
noodles in one of their web page photos). Severino pastas are available at
Whole Foods. They also work in conjunction with Whole Foods, supplying them with
their fresh pasta items.
You can substitute with any long pasta, such as fettucine.
You can substitute with any long pasta, such as fettucine.
Malfadine with Chard stems, Blistered Tomatoes, and Crispy Fried Shiitakes
Although this might seem like a lot of steps, the prep
breakdown is as follows: you can fry the shiitakes while the tomatoes are
roasting and you’re waiting for the pasta water to boil. Some of the cooking liquid
with the chard stems becomes the basis of the sauce. Although you don’t use all
of the tomatoes in this recipe, roast all of them and save the leftovers to
toss into salad.
If you are using malfadine noodles, break them in half.
For two servings:
3 to 4 ounces malfadine (or other) dry pasta
2 cups(loosely packed) Swiss chard stems, sliced into ½” pieces
1 pint grape tomatoes
6 to 8 shiitake mushrooms
1 Tablespoon minced garlic
salt and ground black pepper
extra virgin olive oil
2 Tablespoons grated Parmesan cheese
shaved ricotta salata, optional
1. To make the blistered tomatoes: Heat oven to 450 degrees.
Rinse the cherry tomatoes under cold water. Toss the tomatoes with 2
tablespoons olive oil; season with salt and pepper. Place the tomatoes onto a
baking tray lined with parchment paper or a silicon mat. Scatter a few sprigs
of fresh thyme over the tomatoes (optional). Roast the tomatoes for about 15 minutes, until they take on
some color and have begun to split. Remove from oven and set aside.
2. To make the fried shiitakes, remove the stems from the
shitakes and discard. Slice the caps into ¼ ” thick slices. Place a small sauté
pan over medium heat. Add ¼” vegetable oil (such as canola) to the pan; when
the oil is hot, add the shitakes in batches and fry until browned and crisp,
about 4 to 5 minutes. If they appear to be cooking too quickly, lower the heat
under the pan. Gently move the shiitakes around as they cook. When the
shiitakes are done, transfer them to paper towels. Repeat until all of the
shiitakes are cooked. After all the shiitakes have been fried and drained,
transfer them to clean paper towels and set aside.
3. Place a pot
of salted water over high heat. Cover and bring to a boil and cook the pasta
according to directions, cooking the pasta one minute less than suggested.
Place a large sauté pan over medium high heat. Drizzle 2 to 3 tablespoons extra
virgin olive oil into the pan. Add the garlic and cook until fragrant, about 30
seconds. Add the chard stems, season with salt and pepper and sauté for a
minute. Add ½ cup of the pasta water to the pan. Cover and let the chard stems cook until
tender, about 6 to 8 minutes. Add about half of the grape tomatoes (and their
juices) to the Swiss chard. Set pan aside if the pasta hasn’t finished cooking.
3. Before draining the pasta, remove about ½ cup of the
pasta water and set aside. When
the pasta is cooked, drain the pasta. Place the chard stems back over the
medium heat. Add the pasta and mix the pasta into the vegetables. Add the
grated parmesan cheese and toss to coat; if the sauce seems dry, add some of
the pasta water to the pan. Remove the pan from the heat and divide the pasta
between two bowls. Scatter the shiitakes between the two servings. Drizzle each
portion with a little additional olive oil and shave some ricotta salata over the
pasta. Serve.
*Here Comes the Sun" George Harrison
Severino Pasta: http://severinopasta.com/
Chris Potter: http://www.chrispottermusic.com/ or
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1-wH_E4cM2Y
Severino Pasta: http://severinopasta.com/
Chris Potter: http://www.chrispottermusic.com/ or
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1-wH_E4cM2Y
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