By Patricia Winton
I love
tuna...and pasta. Together or separately. I eat them because I like them.
In
Italy, yellow fin tuna is favored over the paler variety. It has a stronger
flavor. I love to open a can packed in olive oil to make a summer salad. The
tuna, drained, crumbled in a bowl with halved or quartered cherry tomatoes,
black olives, and a bit of basil. And there’s tuna with cannellini beans,
another summer salad with chopped red onion, drained beans, and tuna. Both are
staples on my table all summer long. In winter, I cook with it.
Pasta.
What can I say? Here on the boot it is noble fare, eaten stuffed or sauced,
baked or boiled. It can be as simple as tangled strands of spaghetti with oil
and breadcrumbs or as elaborate as linguini with shrimp and artichokes bathed
in cream. The sizes and shapes are infinite. You could eat pasta every day for
a year without repeating a recipe.
But put
them together—pasta and tuna—and you reach perfection. Here are two recipes fit for a dinner party,
one with canned tuna and one with fresh. Both are elegant, the first for those
with a thin purse, the other for those with a fat one.
Pasta with Tuna, Tomato, and Cream
1 pound dried pasta (if the package holds 14 ounces, that’s okay)
1
5-ounce can of tuna, drained (Italians use
a darker tuna than Americans)
8
ounces canned tomato sauce
1 cup
heavy cream or half and half
1 clove
garlic, minced
¼
teaspoon cayenne pepper
2
tablespoons extra virgin olive oil
Salt
and pepper to taste
¼ cup flat-leaf
Italian parsley, chopped
1.
Put
the oil in a frying pan and add the onion, garlic, half the parsley, and
cayenne pepper. Sautè until the onions are soft.
2.
Add
the tuna and stir a moment to mix.
3.
Add
the tomato sauce and check for salt. Add more if needed.
4.
Let
the sauce cook over a low flame until it has reduced to a thick paste.
5.
In
the meantime, cook the pasta in boiling salted water until chewy and not too
soft.
6.
Add
the cream to the tomato-tuna sauce and stir to incorporate it. Taste and season
with salt and pepper as desired.
7.
Drain
the pasta, and add it to the sauce. Stir.
8.
Serve
with a sprinkle of chopped parsley.
Serves 4.
Pasta with Fresh Tuna
12
ounces cavatelli, fusilli al ferro, or other short fresh pasta
½ pound
tuna steak
½ pound
cherry tomatoes
½ onion
1 ½
cups dry white wine
½ cup
extra virgin olive oil
2
tablespoons pesto (see note below)
Salt
and pepper to taste
Note:
you may be able to find fresh pesto in a specialty shop; otherwise put this
recipe on hold until spring.
1.
Wash
and dry the tuna; cut it into small, even cubes
2.
Wash
and stem the cherry tomatoes, and cut them into quarters.
3.
Peel
and finely chop the onion
4.
Put
the oil in a frying pan and add the onion; cook until soft and translucent.
5.
Add
the tuna and let it brown on all sides.
6.
Bathe
the tuna with the wine and allow it to cook over medium heat until evaporated.
7.
Add
the cherry tomatoes, salt and pepper, and cook, stirring from time to time with
a wooden spoon, for about ten minutes.
8.
Meanwhile
cook the pasta, taking care not to let it get too soft.
9.
Drain,
reserving a little of the starch-laden cooking water.
10.
Add
the pasta to the sauce and stir.
11.
Blend
in the pesto and enough of the cooking water to make the dish creamy.
12.
Let
the dish set for a couple of minutes for the flavors to mingle and serve.
Serves 4
6 comments:
Patricia, I love that combination too, so thanks for two great-sounding recipes to add to my appalling collection. I'm looking forward to trying them.
Good, Judy. Hope you enjoy.
I love tuna and cannellini beans! There's a tuna/pasta recipe I used to make that included roasted red peppers, tuna and toasted bread crumbs. Yummy! My character in Allergic to Death serves her clients a lunch of tuna and cannellini beans!
I'll try that roasted red pepper-tuna combination. Sounds delish!
I love both tuna and pasta. I'll have to try these. I'm happy with linguine with vegetables--zucchini, any color pepper, roma tomatoes, onions, and black olives. We buy a huge bag of dried shitake mushrooms at the oriental grocery store and always add some to our meals. They have a rather strong taste, but they blend beautifully with most dishes. Now I'm hungry.
I hope you enjoy them, Polly. I went mushroom hunting at the end of last week, and we enjoyed grilled and oven-baked mushrooms. I'm using the remainder today in a sauce with cream and shallots--for either pasta or over grilled chicken breasts.
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