I loved caramelized onions, and I have some good looking feta that I'll try instead of the ricotta. We shall see. Molly, the blogger, served with with a salad with feta, sliced radishes, radiccio, endive and cilantro dressed in a mustard red wine vinagrette that looked wonderful, so if i choose that, I'll not use feta but perhaps some monzarella - if I don't have the ricotta salada. I have a bagful of fresh herbs that I harvested from the herb garden last week before a lengthy cold spell suggested pending doom.
Brandon tried squeezing a bit of lemon over his serving, and he found it quite tasty. At his suggestion, I have included optional lemon wedges below.
3 Tbs extra-virgin olive oil
1 lb. sweet onions, such as Walla Walla or Vidalia, cut in half from stem to root and then into ¼-inch slices
2 Tbs unsalted butter
5 medium garlic cloves, minced
½ lb. leeks, cut into 1/8-inch rings and washed
½ lb. red onions, quartered and sliced
1 bunch scallions, trimmed and cut into 2-inch lengths
½ cup water
Salt, to taste
Pepper, to taste
1 lb. rigatoni
To serve:
4 oz. ricotta salata, coarsely grated
¼ cup finely chopped fresh Italian parsley
1 small handful chives, finely chopped
Flaky sea salt, such as Maldon
Lemon wedges, optional
In a large (12- to 14-inch) skillet, warm the olive oil over medium heat until hot but not smoking. Add the sweet onions, and reduce the heat. Cook over medium-low, stirring occasionally, until softened and translucent; then raise the heat to medium and cook, stirring often, until deeply golden and caramelized. Remove the pan from the heat, and transfer the onions to a bowl. Set aside.
In the same skillet, heat the butter over medium heat. When it has stopped foaming and is thoroughly melted, add the garlic, leeks, red onion, and scallions, and cook, stirring regularly, until very soft and golden. Add the water, and cook until the liquid evaporates. Season lightly with salt. Remove from the heat, and stir in the sweet onions.
Bring a large pot of salted water to a boil, and cook the rigatoni until tender but al dente. In the last minute of cooking, return the onion mixture to medium-high heat. Drain the pasta, add it to the onion mixture, and toss over medium-high heat for 1 minute. Remove from the heat and toss more, if necessary, to thoroughly disperse the onions amidst the pasta. Serve immediately, topped with plenty of ricotta salata and sprinklings of parsley and chives. Salt as needed, and finish with a quick squeeze of lemon, if you like.
Yield: 4 servings
in atlanta's fair city, where girls are so pretty, i first set my eyes on sweet skittles malone
Sunday, November 30, 2008
Rigatoni, carmelized onions, ricotta and herbs from Orangette, the blog
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Blog Archive
- Aug 2012 (1)
- Jul 2012 (1)
- May 2012 (1)
- Apr 2012 (1)
- Mar 2012 (6)
- Feb 2012 (4)
- Jan 2012 (3)
- Nov 2011 (2)
- Sep 2011 (1)
- Aug 2011 (4)
- Jul 2011 (4)
- May 2011 (3)
- Apr 2011 (1)
- Mar 2011 (3)
- Feb 2011 (2)
- Jan 2011 (4)
- Dec 2010 (10)
- Nov 2010 (16)
- Oct 2010 (7)
- Sep 2010 (8)
- Aug 2010 (4)
- Jul 2010 (7)
- Jun 2010 (7)
- May 2010 (9)
- Apr 2010 (13)
- Mar 2010 (6)
- Feb 2010 (7)
- Jan 2010 (1)
- Dec 2009 (1)
- Nov 2009 (6)
- Oct 2009 (3)
- Sep 2009 (6)
- Aug 2009 (15)
- Jul 2009 (6)
- Jun 2009 (21)
- May 2009 (9)
- Apr 2009 (20)
- Mar 2009 (13)
- Feb 2009 (21)
- Jan 2009 (11)
- Dec 2008 (14)
- Nov 2008 (18)
- Oct 2008 (3)
- Sep 2008 (4)
- Aug 2008 (3)
- Jul 2008 (1)
- Jun 2008 (6)
- May 2008 (8)
- Apr 2008 (2)
- Mar 2008 (4)
- Feb 2008 (10)
- Dec 2007 (7)
- Oct 2007 (1)
- Sep 2007 (5)
- Aug 2007 (1)
- Jul 2007 (2)
- Jun 2007 (8)
- May 2007 (21)
- Apr 2007 (16)
- Mar 2007 (20)
- Feb 2007 (22)
- Jan 2007 (9)
No comments:
Post a Comment