Showing posts with label Pasta. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pasta. Show all posts

Saturday, August 11, 2012

Garlic Roasted Eggplant and Tomato Pasta



It’s summer time and the tomatoes are easy!  Actually, the eggplants are here in abundance as well.  As you all know roasting vegetables concentrates their flavors and adds a hint of smokiness that enhances everything under the sun.  Here’s a simple dish that is tons tastier than the effort required to make it.  Because it is made from the ripest tomatoes and the sweetest baby eggplant brushed with garlic-infused olive oil and roasted until sticky and intense.  Just toss them with pasta to spread the love.

Ingredients
11 small eggplants
Sea salt
2-3 cloves garlic
1/4 cup or 60ml olive oil plus more for greasing the baking sheet
3 medium red ripe tomatoes
10 1/2 oz or 300g your pasta of choice (I used whole wheat penne.)
Parmesan for serving (optional)

Method
Preheat our oven to 400°F or 200°C and grease your baking sheet with olive oil. 

Cut the eggplants in half lengthwise and layer them in a colander.  Sprinkle each layer with salt and leave to drain.



Mince the garlic and pop it in a small pot with the 1/4 cup or 60ml olive oil.  Heat the oil gently and remove it from the stove as soon as the garlic starts to sizzle a little bit.  You do not want it to turn brown at all.




Slice the tomatoes into thick slices and cut the little core pieces out.  Lay the slices out your greased baking sheet.


Rinse the salt and the brown stuff off of the eggplants and line them up on the baking sheet with the tomatoes.




Brush the eggplants and tomato slices with the garlic infused olive oil.  Sprinkle everything with sea salt.



Pop the baking pan in the oven and roast for 20-30 minutes or until the edges of the vegetables are turning brown.  Turn them over and brush them again with more of the garlic olive oil.  




Return the baking pan to the oven for another 10-15 minutes.

Meanwhile, cook your pasta according to package instructions in some lightly salted water.  When the pasta is boiled, reserve a cup of the pasta water and drain the rest. 



Return the pasta to the hot pot and pour the remaining garlic olive oil into the pasta and stir.



When the vegetables are done, scrape the baking pan to remove the eggplants and tomato slices and any sticky stuff you can get off of the pan as well.



Add them to the pasta pot and stir thoroughly.  



If the pasta seems dry, add a little of the reserved pasta water. Serve with some grated Parmesan, if desired.

This dish is so rich and flavorful!



Enjoy!









Thursday, November 10, 2011

Poached Salmon and Tomato Sauce with Pasta



I have an unusual piece of salmon.  Perhaps unusual is not a fair description because every salmon has a tail.  It’s just not the customary piece people buy and cook.  I ended up with this lovely shiny tail when I bought a whole frozen salmon from the frozen butcher.  By which I mean he sells mostly frozen products, not that he is made of ice. 


The nice guys in the white rubber aprons cut my whole fish apart into steaks with an exposed electric saw that made me shudder for their fingers.  And then they popped all the pieces in a plastic bag, which I put in my freezer.  Gradually we have eaten all the proper pieces, that is to say, the steaks and now I am left with just the tail.  It seems to have a lot of meat so I decided to poach it, debone it and use the meat and poaching liquid to make a sauce for pasta. 

Here goes.

Ingredients
1 piece of salmon tail – a little more than 1 pound or half a kilo of fish.  Substitutions encouraged.
8 garlic cloves
1 can (425g or 15oz) whole or crushed tomatoes
1/2 cup dry white wine
6 springs of fresh thyme (4 for poaching liquid, 2 to serve)
1/2 teaspoon sugar
Sea salt
Black pepper
Olive oil
250g or 8 oz pasta

Method
Chop the garlic up and the sauté it with a little olive oil in a relatively deep saucepan.


Add in the can of tomatoes and, if they are whole, break them up with the spoon.



Add in the white wine and the 1/2 teaspoon of sugar and bring to a boil.


Meanwhile, season your fish tail with sea salt and several grinds of fresh black pepper.


Let the poaching liquid boil for just a few minutes then turn it down to simmer.

Add the salmon tail and enough water to bring the level up to at least cover half of it.




Add in four of the sprigs of thyme and cover the pan.  Set your timer for 25 minutes. 

Halfway through, turn the salmon over.  


When the timer dings, remove the salmon from the poaching liquid and leave it to cool.


Turn the heat under the poaching liquid back up and let it boil along merrily until reduced by half.


Meanwhile, put your pot of salted water on to boil for the pasta.  Cook your pasta of choice according to package instructions.  Drain and keep warm. 

When the fish is cool enough to handle, peel the skin off with a knife and your fingers.  Remove the meat from the top half of the tail.  Remove the spine bones.




Turn that baby over and remove the skin from the bottom half.


Break the fish up into bite-sized pieces.   Chop the reserved thyme into little pieces.


When the poaching liquid is thickened enough, remove the old pieces of thyme.


Depending on your pot, add the pasta to the sauce or the sauce to the pasta.  Add in the salmon and the fresh thyme.



Gently stir or give it a toss to mix through.


Enjoy!  This will feed at least three, possibly four, hungry people. 






Monday, November 7, 2011

Quick Pasta Dinner



So we walked in the door after the flight from Hong Kong.  At 8:05 p.m.  By 8:25, I had dinner on the table. Seriously.  

If you don’t have mushrooms or grape tomatoes, use whatever you have in the vegetable drawer.  Zucchini would work, or finely sliced cauliflower or broccoli, or asparagus cut into pieces, with whole fresh tomatoes or even a can of crushed tomatoes.  If you don’t have haloumi, add feta or some other salty cheese in at the end.  This is not even a recipe as much as a suggestion of how to add flavor to pasta.

Ingredients
250g or 8 oz of dried pasta
3 medium portabella mushrooms
2 large handfuls of grape tomatoes
3 cloves of garlic
90g or 3 1/4 oz haloumi cheese
200g or 7 oz baby spinach
Extra virgin olive oil
Parmesan cheese
Sea salt
Chili flakes or crushed red chili

Method
Put a large pot of water on to boil.  Add some salt.

Meanwhile, slice the mushrooms, the garlic and halve the tomatoes.


Slice the haloumi and fry it till brown on both sides, in a non-stick skillet with a drizzle of olive oil.  





When your water is boiling, add the dried pasta.  Drizzle in a little olive oil and give it a good stir so it doesn't all stick together. 


Push the haloumi to the sides of the pan and add the mushrooms and garlic to the skillet.



Fry gently until they soften.  Add the tomato halves and cook briefly.


Use your spatula to cut the haloumi into one-inch pieces.


Check on your pasta.  When it is within a minute of so of being cooked, add the spinach to the pasta pot.  


Stir well and then pour the pasta and spinach into a colander to drain.

Add the spinach and pasta to the skillet.  


Stir well and top with freshly grated Parmesan and some chili flakes.  



Serve with extra Parmesan and a good drizzle of the olive oil.


The weekend in Hong Kong was wonderful but it’s good to be home and cooking again.