I was flicking through some of my cookbooks the other day, and came across another Nigel Slater book - The Kitchen Diaries. This is the first of his Diaries, where he looks into ingredients and recipes over a calendar year. Very useful if you are after seasonal dishes. So I flipped to September to get some ideas for Autumn/Fall, which of course we Antipodeans are in the midst of right now.
Nigel's year in food |
I found this simple mushroom pasta dish. Mushrooms are on our shelves all year round of course, but this ever-so-slightly cooler weather is perfect for a dinner like this. And it makes the hubby really happy. Turns out it is delicious, too. Even for me, the ambivalent pasta eater.
Serves 2
ingredients:
400g. of mushrooms, thinly sliced - I used 200g. Swiss Browns and 200g. button mushrooms
butter 75g.
2 tbs olive oil
3 cloves garlic, finely chopped
1 French shallot, finely chopped
1/2 tsp lightly dried chilli flakes
250-300g. pappardelle
a huge handful of parsley, chopped
salt and pepper to taste
a dash or 2 of ground nutmeg (optional)
40g. of parmesan grated
a small handful of walnuts
Method:
Tip the mushrooms into a frying pan with the butter and olive oil
Fry gently till the mushrooms start to go tender
Stir in the garlic and shallot, and cook for a few minutes more
Throw in the chilli flakes, stir and put aside
Put a large saucepan of salted water on to boil
Pour the pappardelle into the boiling water
Cook for 8 to 10 minutes till al dente (or however you like it)
Drain the pasta and fork it into the mushroom mixture
Add the parsley, salt and pepper, nutmeg if using, and the parmesan
Stir everything together gently
Scatter the walnuts on top
gather your ingredients |
slice and throw into your frypan |
throw in the butter and olive oil |
Mr P. stirring the mushies |
into the boiling water goes the pasta |
pasta slips into the mushies |
Mr P. stirs everything together |
throw on your nuts! |
Okay I confess; Mr P. made this! I just threw the pasta into the water and chucked on the nuts at the end. Well, he is the pasta and rice maker in the Pickings household. And I have to confess I jazzed up Nigel's recipe too. I added the chilli and walnuts. Oh and the French shallot and the nutmeg. Mr P. and I both thought the walnuts were essential to give some texture to the slippery, slidy, savoury dish.
As I have said before, you can read Nigel's prose like a novel. Here is a quote about this dish: definitely not "a fashionable chef's twee plateful of contorted food drizzled with a ring of jus". He says this is robust, loud-flavoured and awkward, but restores your faith in the pleasures of plain, simple eating. Yay Nigel!
my pasta foodle |
Mr Pickings loves a good pasta dish, as Mrs Pickings says. This was excellent even though being quite simple in technique and ingredients. Mrs Pickings is right - it needed the crunch of the walnuts and the zing of the chilli. The nice high quality pasta was a great addition.
ReplyDeleteYep it was fabulous durum wheat pasta with free range eggs. Really delish.
DeleteIt looks really good Sherry! I only really like certain pasta shapes whereas Mr NQN will eat any of them! :P
ReplyDeleteThis was a really nice form of pasta. It had a bit of bite and taste.
DeleteHi Sherry, this recipe sounds rather interesting and seems easy to make. Being a great lover of mushrooms, I'll be trying this one for sure.
ReplyDeletexx
hi debbie
Deleteit was delish! worth making for sure.
hi debbie
Deleteit was delish! worth making for sure.
This looks absolutely delicious! I adore fresh mushrooms and the combination of those silky thick pasta ribbons and the buttery sauce sounds divine. Great recreation of Sir Nigel's recipe (love the 'extras'!). Go Mr and Mrs P!!! :)
ReplyDeleteThank you very much Laura. It was a nice dinner.
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