Italian
Polenta, Goat Cheese, and Mushroom Tart
This soufflé-like tart makes a nice lunch or light dinner with a salad of mixed baby greens.
Penne with Spinach, Shrimp, Tomatoes and Basil
This attractive and flavorful main course is perfect for weeknight entertaining.
Grilled Pizza with Spicy Italian Sausage
O.K., it's time to think about dinner, but in the summer, just the idea of turning on the stove — let alone the oven — leaves you less than enthusiastic. That probably means using the grill, but you've had your share of hot dogs, kebabs and barbecued chicken.
Our solution? Something unexpected grilled pizzas. The dough is a snap to make; the pizzas are small and easy to manage; and since the sausages and colorful summer vegetables are also grilled, there's almost nothing to clean up. Plus, we splurged and added three kinds of cheese.
After you try this recipe once, you'll erase the local pizza joint's number from your speed dial. And who knows? You might just forget about your stove.
Pasta with Baked Tomato Sauce
Cook: Nancy Harmon Jenkins
Source: Cucinaamore.com It's difficult to imagine a more mundane-sounding dish than Pasta with Baked Tomato Sauce — and yet this extremely simple pasta is a breakthrough, not like any other you've ever eaten. And so good you'll make it again and again. The sauce is made from roasted cherry tomatoes, very ripe ones. These diminutive tomatoes with the big taste are then covered with a cheesey-garlicky-bread crumb mixture and set in the oven. Just before serving, you tear some basil leaves into the roasted tomato mixture and that's your sauce, right in the oven dish: add some corkscrew or butterfly pasta and you have dinner. Italian cookbook author Nancy Harmon Jenkins points out that the ony trick to this dish is using really ripe cherry tomatoes'which are easy to find all year long. If they're not available, use any red, ripe tomatoes and quarter them.
Source: Cucinaamore.com It's difficult to imagine a more mundane-sounding dish than Pasta with Baked Tomato Sauce — and yet this extremely simple pasta is a breakthrough, not like any other you've ever eaten. And so good you'll make it again and again. The sauce is made from roasted cherry tomatoes, very ripe ones. These diminutive tomatoes with the big taste are then covered with a cheesey-garlicky-bread crumb mixture and set in the oven. Just before serving, you tear some basil leaves into the roasted tomato mixture and that's your sauce, right in the oven dish: add some corkscrew or butterfly pasta and you have dinner. Italian cookbook author Nancy Harmon Jenkins points out that the ony trick to this dish is using really ripe cherry tomatoes'which are easy to find all year long. If they're not available, use any red, ripe tomatoes and quarter them.
By Fran McCullough and Suzanne Hamlin
Fisherman's Soup
(Cacciucco) This seafood soup, called cacciucco (meaning "mixture"), is a specialty of Livorno, a fishing port that is Tuscany's second-largest city. It has been made for hundreds of years, and variations of it appear all along the Tuscan coast. Traditionally, at least five types of fish and shellfish are included (one for each "c" in the name). If you like, do as the Italians do, and place a slice of toasted bread in each bowl before ladling the soup over.
Fettucine with Porcini Mushroom Sauce
Dried porcini are sold at Italian delis and in many supermarkets.
By Lucia Luhan
Farfalle with Butternut Squash, Mushrooms and Spinach
"To celebrate my birthday, my husband took me to Assaggio, one of my favorite restaurants here," writes Christy Wall of Portland, Oregon. "As I always do, I ordered the bow-tie pasta with wild mushrooms, butternut squash, spinach, garlic and olive oil."
Braised Kale Crostini
By Peggy Markel
Farfalle with Gorgonzola Sauce
As in all of Italy, pasta is served as a first course (primo) in Tuscany.
By Lucia Luhan
Spinach Gnocchi with Fontina Cheese
(GNOCCHI DI SPINACI ALLA BAVA)
Spinach adds great color and flavor to these light dumplings. The topping consists of melted butter and Fontina cheese, a product made in the neighboring region of Valle d'Aosta but used for many local dishes.
Potato-and-Sausage Torrelli with Ragù
(Tortelli di Patate alle Salsicce con ragù)
The recipe makes more pasta dough than you'll need for the tortelli. Roll out the extra, and cut it into 1/2-inch-wide ribbons for pappardelle, 1/4-inch-wide ribbons for fettuccine, or any length and width you prefer. The pasta can then be used fresh, or it can be dried for use at a later time (leave the pasta on floured kitchen towels at room temperature until it is dry). Or use all of the dough for any recipe that calls for one pound of fresh pasta.
Pasta with Shrimp, Tomatoes and Garlic
A fusion dish from Phyllis Vaccarelli of Let's Get Cookin', in Westlake Village, California. The flavors are basically Italian, but before cooking, the shrimp are coated with a "velveting" mixture of cornstarch and egg white used in traditional Chinese cooking, which helps keep the shrimp tender. Serve a watercress salad with balsamic dressing alongside. For dessert, construct a sundae with vanilla ice cream, diced mangoes and crushed amaretti cookies.
Rigatoni with Spicy Sun-Dried Tomato Sauce
By Jennifer Parisi
Penne with Tomatoes, Olives and Capers
Parmesan goes a long way on this meatless entrée, so use sparingly. Pour some Chianti.
Bruschetta Orzo Salad
By Julie Nash Broderick
Bruschetta with Sauteed Greens
The robust flavor of Grey Celtic salt complements the greens perfectly.
Fettuccine with Wild Mushroom Sauce
At the restaurant Becco in New York, where this dish is served, fresh porcini mushrooms are used when they are in season.
Pasta with Bolognese Sauce
This dish, a specialty of northern Italy's Emilia-Romagna, is named for the regions capital city. Although the meaty sauce is classically paired with tagliatelle (ribbon pasta just slightly wider than fettuccine), it also marries well with a variety of pasta shapes that trap the savory sauce.