Last night I went to a local food market and this woman was selling these delicious looking sausages. I decided to pick one up and make a pasta for lunch today. Below is the method that I followed. It's very basic and I'm not going to give specific measurements for anything because you can make the recipe according to your own tastes. This recipe is really easy and took me about 20 minutes to cook from start to finish, with about 10 minutes of that just waiting for things to cook.
So without further ado:
1. Put a tsp of garlic and half an onion into a frying pan with some olive oil and fry on medium heat. Get a pot of boiling water going and decide what pasta you want to use.
2. After 5 minutes add some wine and let it simmer away. You want to reduce the wine because it intensifies the flavour.
3. Once the wine has reduced to the point where it is almost becoming sticky then you can add some form of pasta tomato sauce - the choice is up to you. If it is too thick add some water.
4. By now the pot of water should be boiling, so you can add some salt to the water and your pasta.
5. Taste the sauce. Add salt, pepper, sage and sweet basil accordingly. Easy on the herbs though because they can quickly overpower the meal.
6. Almost ready! Now you just want to fine tune your sauce. If you think you need more sauce, add more tomato pasta sauce. If the sauce needs to be thinned out, add water.
7. Check you pasta - it should be about ready. Grab a colander and drain it when it's ready. Once it's drained, stick it back into the original pot and add some olive oil. Mix it up nicely - this will help the pasta not to stick together.
TIP: When I am pouring the hot water off the pasta, I stack the pasta bowls in the sink and put the colander on top of them. As you pour the water, it runs down over the bowls and warms them up. By the time your pasta is ready - your bowls are nice and hot. Them just stick them onto a dinner plate (like the last picture) so that you can carry them around easily.
8. Serve your pasta and sauce and chop some basil to throw over the top.
I hope that you manage to recreate this without too much difficulty!
Enjoy.
No comments:
Post a Comment