Wednesday, May 8, 2013

Roasted Vegetable Tomato Pasta Sauce with Fried Spaghetti


When I first mastered making fresh pasta it became the holy grail. So much so, that I invented my own principle – the Blue Apocalypse Razor. I thought that this was the best and thus, the only way you should have pasta. Dried packet pasta became downgraded to the status of canned goods. This was the attitude of the young me that was just starting to cook and intent on learning how to make things from scratch instead of the pre-made stuff. Because fresh and made from scratch is always better…right?! 

I mean, I spent so much time making fresh pasta, bruising my hands kneading the dough, straining my wrist winding the handle of the pasta machine, wounding myself cutting the pasta dough…then I have to wait and watch paint dry, wait…I mean the pasta. No pain, no gain right?!

But this way of thinking shows a lack of understanding of how pasta is used and that different types of pasta have their own unique qualities.

Comparing fresh and dried pasta is like comparing apples and oranges, they each have a different taste and texture. Fresh pasta isn’t always better, it depends on how you plan on using it, the sauce accompanying it and sometimes it's a matter of if you live north or south. Fresh pasta is lighter, tender and more delicate, making it better suited to simple sauces like cream or oil based ones such as alfredo and pesto. While dried pasta is sturdier and has a bit more bite so it can take on a thicker, richer sauce like amatriciana or bolognese. In Italy, as a result of geography, climate and history, dried pasta is commonly used it the South while the Central and Northern Italy are more known for using fresh pasta. 


Dried pasta is not just some convenient, inferior, alternative to fresh pasta. Especially when you can do awesome things to it like FRY IT!

This was a tip that I received from a friend about using dried packet spaghetti which I think is the best thing that you could ever do with it FRY IT! He told me it was an old skool Italian thing but I have not managed to find anything to confirm this so it exists as some urban legend.

Fried Spaghetti

Here’s how you do it.


Cook packet of dried spaghetti in a pot of boiling salted water until al dente, drain thoroughly. Heat up some olive oil in a frying pan with minced garlic, chillies and mushrooms. Saute the mushrooms until they are browned and add in the drained cooked spaghetti, fry for a bit until the spaghetti becomes a bit crisp and absorbs all the flavours of the garlic, chilli and mushrooms. At this point you can just eat the spaghetti but serve it with a tomato pasta sauce on top and it’s the bomb. 


As the spaghetti has been fried it now provides a textural contrast against the sauce. You also get two levels of flavour – the pasta sauce and also a flavour hit from the spaghetti itself which has been infused with the aromatics of the ingredients it has been fried with. I love the garlic and chilli hit in the spaghetti and also sauté mushrooms rather than soggy mushrooms if it were to have been cooked in the pasta sauce. 

Frying the spaghetti

The amount of garlic, chilli and mushrooms added to the frying pan is up to you. It’s best to fry the spaghetti in batches so for one serve you could have 1-2 crushed garlic cloves, 4-5 sliced mushrooms (button or swiss) and as much chilli as you can handle (I go for 2-3 small red chillies, deseeded and sliced). 


Garlic, Chilli and Mushroom Fried Spaghetti 
served with Roasted Vegetable Tomato Pasta Sauce.




Roasted Vegetable Tomato Pasta Sauce

(An original recipe by the Blue Apocalypse)


Ingredients


•    1 (400g) can of whole tomatoes
•    1 medium carrot, grated
•    1 celery, grated
•    3 garlic cloves, minced
•    1 onion, finely diced
•    2 tablespoons tomato paste
•    2 cups of stock
•    balsamic vinegar, salt and pepper

•    roasted vegetables – 1 red capsicum, 1 paprika, 2 eggplants, 1 zucchini
 

Roasted Zucchini and Eggplant

Method

To roast the vegetables


Preheat oven to 180C.


Slice the capsicum and paprika in half, place on baking tray and roast in the oven until the skin becomes browned. Remove and peel off the skin and roughly chop into 2 cm pieces.
Chop the eggplant and zucchini into 2-3cm pieces and roast in the oven for about 20 minutes. 


To make the pasta sauce


Heat some olive oil in a pot and sauté onions for a few minutes until they have softened, then add garlic and fry for a bit. Add grated carrot and celery and fry for a few minutes.
 

Add tomato paste, canned tomato, stock and capsicum, and simmer for 30 minutes. Season with salt, pepper and splash of balsamic vinegar to taste. Add the in the roasted eggplant and zucchini, and simmer for another 10-15 minutes. 

Serve on top of fried spaghetti.

11 comments:

  1. haha i've fried my spaghetti millions of times! usually only if there were left overs from the day before because its better than heating up last nights spag in the microwave.

    who told you southern italians use dry packet pasta? my family my sicily still make it fresh and dedicate full days to making fresh pasta for the whole family. thats my family anyway. don't know about the rest of the south!

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  2. I didn't realise that frying spaghetti was a common thing but after posting this I've had some people tell me that they often fry leftovers!

    I was looking into the difference between dried and fresh pasta and the South is more known for using dried pasta but I'm sure each family has their own traditions. Check this links http://www.clovegarden.com/ingred/pa_ital.html, http://www.ask.com/explore/comparing-northern-italian-and-southern-italian-cuisine

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    1. aw haw haw you don't need to send me FAQ links on italian cuisine. I live and breathe that shit!

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  3. Dumb question from the North American: I think that a capsicum is a "green pepper" but then what is a paprika? Is it another type of pepper? Thanks in advance...

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    1. Hello :) Not a dumb question at all! Yes, capsicums are also known as bell peppers, I used a red pepper. A paprika is another type of pepper. The recipe is a guide, feel free to use whatever you find at the markets. I love roasting peppers as it completely transforms the flavour and provides a sweet, smokey flavour to the sauce.

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  4. Okay, you win. That dish looks wonderful. I make my own pasta but seriously, I'd drive to your house to get your spaghetti to fry. :)

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    1. Thanks Maureen :) You'll have to give up your home made pasta one day and settle with some fried spaghetti!

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  5. I love pan fried gnocchi-it gets those lovely crispy edges to it and is so divine! :D

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    1. I love pan fried gnocchi too, especially with some chorizo as it takes on some of the oils from the chorizo giving it some spice.

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  6. Yum! I can relate to your comment of the down graded canned vegies but I am yet to make fresh pasta. I fry spaghetti with eggs, panchetta and parmesan when I make spaghetti carbonara.

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    1. Fresh pasta is good to make if you have some time but dried pasta can also result in great dishes. I have not made spaghetti carbonara before but I've ordered it out at restaurants and love the simple bold flavours of the dish.

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