farfalle with roasted garlic, nuts, and raisins
Makes 3 to 4 servings
Here’s another no-cook way to dress pasta for success.
The garlic, raisins, and nuts make for a nice mix of sweet, salty, chewy, and
crunchy. You can also try making this with cashews and pistachios, which add a
sensational richness. (For detailed nut-toasting instructions, see Chapter 2:
Salads.)
Plump sweet golden raisins are best in this dish, but if you don’t
have them on hand, black ones work fine. You’ll need to make the Roasted Garlic
Paste ahead of time. It’s good to keep some on hand, anyway, so you can throw
this (and many other delicious items) together on short notice.
½ cup olive oil
2 tablespoons Roasted Garlic Paste (Chapter 1: Soups)
Salt for the pasta water
¾ pound farfalle (bowtie pasta)
½ to ¾ cup minced flat-leaf parsley
½ cup raisins (preferably golden ones)
½ cup chopped walnuts, lightly toasted
½ cup chopped almonds, lightly toasted
3 scallions (white and tender green parts), finely
minced
¾ teaspoon salt
Freshly ground black pepper
Red pepper flakes
GET
CREATIVE
- Use a high-quality olive oil for more flavor.
- Mash a couple of anchovies or a few squirts of anchovy paste into the olive oil along with the Roasted Garlic Paste (and then use less salt to season).
- Garnish each serving with a sprinkling of toasted breadcrumbs (see Chapter 7: Sides).
- Instead of the raisins, try currants, which are smaller and have a more delicate flavor.
- Make this vegan by using eggless pasta.
1. Place the olive oil in a large
bowl. Add the Roasted Garlic Paste, mashing it into the oil with the back of a
fork. Set aside.
2. Put a large pot of cold water
to boil over high heat, and add a tablespoon of salt. Place a large colander in
the sink. When the water boils, add the farfalle, keeping the heat high. Cook
for the amount of time recommended on the package, tasting the pasta toward the
end of the suggested time to be sure it is not getting overcooked. When it is
just tender enough to bite into comfortably but not
yet mushy, dump the water-plus-pasta into the colander. Shake to mostly drain
(it’s okay to leave some water clinging), and then transfer the pasta to the
bowl containing the oil and garlic paste.
3. Use a fork or a wooden spoon to
toss and turn the pasta until it becomes coated with the oil. Keep tossing as
you add the parsley, raisins, nuts, scallions, and salt. Grind in a generous
amount of black pepper, and sprinkle in a big pinch of red pepper flakes
(according to your heat preference). Toss quickly and thoroughly. (Shaking the
bowl helps.) Serve right away, making sure you dig down to the bottom of the
bowl to scoop up all the tasty morsels that might have landed beneath the
pasta.
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