Back in July, my colleague, food columnist Jenn Harris wrote about cacio e pepe‘s current grasp on the American palate. Ubiquitous and delicious, it certainly qualifies as a divine dish that can be made start to finish in less than 30 minutes. But while cacio e pepe has a stronghold on restaurant menus and is easy enough to make at home, the real star of flavorful, home-cooked fast food is the dizzyingly delicious aglio e olio.
Pure Italian comfort food, it is as simple as three ingredients: thin stringy pasta, garlic and extra-virgin olive oil. Some add chopped parsley — for color and more flavor (if that’s really possible) as the combination of parsley, olive oil and garlic is a holy trinity.
Eat it regularly and you may want some variety (or not). Add some protein like an egg, sardines or anchovies. Add vegetables, like broccoli rabe or cauliflower, mushrooms or olives. Use a different pasta shape — penne, orecchiette or whatever you happen to have on hand. (Non-stringy shapes may be considered sacrilege in Italy, but hey, this is California. We do things our way.)
Want to take it up a notch? Add sea urchin and clams. (There is a theory that aglio e olio is simply a version of linguini and clams minus the clams.) If you prefer to fashion your own variation, leftovers in your refrigerator are a good place to start — chicken, shrimp, legumes, greens. There is little that would not work as an addition.
Cacio e pepe may be having a moment in the spotlight but aglio e olio is in it for the long haul.
Three ingredients: spaghetti, pecorino cheese and black pepper. That and a little of the salted water the pasta was cooked in. Toss them together, and you have a great dish.
Time
25 minutes
Yields
Serves 6
Aglio e olio is the Italian classic no-sauce sauce of olive oil and garlic. Chile pepper, a squeeze of lemon, a pinch of salt and a bit of chopped parsley make the pasta pop.
Time
15 minutes
Yields
About 4 servings
Chef Hiro Sone tops a tangle of spaghetti and tender, young rapini with a sunny-side-up egg, showered with bottarga (dried tuna roe).
Time
30 minutes
Yields
Serves 4
When heated, uni melts into a kind of slightly buttery, subtly briny cream that add texture and depth of flavor to the sauce of classic Italian spaghetti with clams.
Time
25 minutes
Yields
Serves 6
In the Italian tradition of spaghettata, piping hot pasta cooked at home late at night, this spaghetti is laden with garlic, capers and pine nuts. Add red chile flakes to taste.
Time
20 minutes
Yields
Serves 4
Saute canned sardines in olive oil, garlic and fennel seeds. Toss with pasta, chopped parsley and fennel fronds and golden raisins. Top with bread crumbs toasted in sardine oil.
Time
30 minutes
Yields
Serves 4 to 6
In this Sicilian recipe the broccoli is cooked twice — first blanched and then sauteed in olive oil with pistachios, anchovies and chopped olives.
Time
35 minutes
Yields
Serves 6
Caramelized cauliflower adds depth to a simple pasta, teeming with garlic and chile flakes.
Time
35 minutes
Yields
Serves 4
This simple pasta dish is all about textures–crisp-tender broccoli rabe, slightly chewy orecchiette, crunchy garlic bread crumbs and creamy ricotta cheese, which melts into a sauce.
Time
30 minutes
Yields
Serves 4
Caramelized lemon adds umami flavor to this vegetarian pasta, packed with mushrooms and broccoli, finished with a grating of fresh parm.
Time
45 minutes
Yields
Serves 4 to 6
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