If you haven’t noticed, I really like asparagus. I also can’t wait for the abundance of spring vegetables at the farmer’s market that will hopefully show up in the next few weeks (I picked up some leeks this weekend, so we’re getting there!) I am also a really big fan of pesto and will happily make it with anything green I might have lying around. For this light pasta, I combined my two loves into one springy dish, hoping for more of those 70 degree days we had last week. If you haven’t made pasta by hand, I might recommend watching a tutorial, many of which can be found on youtube. I’ll try to be detailed in my instructions, but since I learned from an Italian woman who taught more by sight than written instructions, I can’t promise that these are the best.
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$10 Mondays: Tagliatelle with Asparagus Pesto
Filed under Recipes
Tagliatelle alla Bolognese
Though I studied abroad in Bologna almost three years ago, sometimes it still feels like it’s only been a few months. My favorite part of the whole experience was the cooking lessons we were lucky enough to take with Rita, an amazing woman who runs two restaurants in Sardinia and her own cooking school in Bologna. Every meal we made with her consisted of several courses, lots of wine, and wonderful conversation. I still remember learning how to debone a fish (she made it look effortless; it was in fact very difficult), create handmade pasta, and deep-fry artichokes. However, the recipe that sticks in my mind (particularly on cold January nights) is her tagliatelle all bolognese. In Italy, every grandmother has her own bolognese recipe, and each of them will insist that it’s the best. This one is my favorite because it was the first I ever had. Rita told us that you know that a bolognese is done when no one flavor overpowers the others, and I think that this one creates a perfect harmony of creamy tomato, salty pancetta, and hearty beef.
Also, if you ever see a recipe that instructs you to use spaghetti or fettucine, don’t listen to them . True Bolognese know that the only way to serve their namesake sauce is with tagliatelle.
Rita’s Tagliatelle alla Bolognese
1 lb tagliatelle
2 tablespoons butter
1/2 lb ground beef
1/8 lb pancetta, roughly chopped
1/4 white onion, minced
1 carrot, minced
1 rib celery, minced
1 clove garlic
1 bay leaf
1/2 cup red wine
10 oz tomato sauce
1 tablespoon tomato paste
1/3 cup beef or vegetable broth
Salt and pepper to taste
Melt the butter in a large saucepan over medium-low heat. Cook the vegetables until soft,five to seven minutes. Crush the garlic with the side of your knife, leaving the skin on. Add the garlic and bay leaf to the pan and cook for one minute. Add the pancetta and cook until soft, two to three minutes. Increase the heat to medium and add the ground beef and brown, about five minutes. Pour in the wine and cook until it reduces slightly, then remove the garlic clove and the bay leaf and discard.
Then add the tomato sauce and paste, broth, and salt and pepper to taste. Simmer, covered, for an hour and a half or until all of the flavors have melded together.
Meanwhile, cook the pasta according to the directions. Toss with ragù and serve with freshly grated parmigianno reggiano.