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Aliya LeeKong
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Tagliatelle with Maitake Mushrooms, Pickled Chilies & Egyptian Dukkah

View fullsize maitake pasta 2.jpg
View fullsize maitake pasta 1.jpg

TAGLIATELLE WITH MAITAKES, PICKLED CHILIES & EGYPTIAN DUKKAH

Winter and pasta for me go hand-in-hand, and, as always, I love to get a little experimental with flavor combos.

Maitake mushrooms are such a favorite – they are meaty and nutty (and have actually replaced my weekend bacon, if you can believe!).  I did a pop-up dinner at a little store in my neighborhood in Brooklyn, and I created this dish for the dinner.  Hard, pan-roasting the mushrooms and finishing them with butter and salt make them irresistable and is a key step in the recipe.  They need a proper sear to bring out what’s best in this dish.  

The sauce is super thin and easy and gets an extra hit from the pickled pepper juice.  I top up the pasta with some of the actual pickled peppers, chopped cilantro, and Egyptian dukkah, a gorgeous nut and spice blend with coriander that complements the mushrooms beautifully. 

This can be as homemade or not as you want.  You can use my fresh pasta recipe or store-bought.  You can pickle your own cherry peppers or grab a jar at the grocer.  And the spice blend, Egyptian dukkah, can be bought from a specialty store, or you can use my recipe below - it stores for a month, so have fun sprinkling it on salads, a nice, seared piece of fish or on your next rice bowl.  Enjoy!

Serves 6

1 pound fresh or dried tagliatelle

1-2 tablespoons canola oil

4-5 tablespoons unsalted , divided

2 (8 ounce) maitake mushrooms, hand torn into bite-sized pieces

1 shallot, finely chopped

3 cloves fresh or roasted garlic, minced

¼ cup white wine

¾ cup chicken broth

1/3 cup heavy cream

¼ cup pasta water

scant ¼ cup pickled cherry peppers, juice reserved

small handful of fresh cilantro, finely chopped

2 tablespoons Egyptian dukkah

salt & freshly ground black pepper, to taste

Bring a large pot of water up to a boil and season generously with salt until the water tastes salty.  Add the pasta and cook until tender but still a bit firm to the bite, about 8 to 10 minutes if dry or according to package directions if fresh. Drain pasta reserving ¼ cup of the pasta cooking water.

While the pasta is cooking, heat a large skillet over high heat.  Add the tablespoon of canola oil, and when the oil starts to smoke, add the maitake mushrooms in a single layer.  If they don’t all fit, you may need to repeat the process depending on the size of your skillet.  Cook for 2 to 3 minutes.  The cooked side of the mushroom should be golden brown and crispy.  Flip the mushrooms and throw in 2 tablespoons of the unsalted butter.  Season the mushrooms generously and cook for another 2 minutes.  Remove mushrooms using tongs to a paper towel-lined plate.   If repeating, use the other tablespoon of canola oil and only 1 more tablespoon of butter. 

Lower the heat to medium-low, add another tablespoon of butter and the shallots and garlic with a bit of salt.  Let cook for 3 to 4 minutes until the shallots are translucent.  Increase the heat to medium-high and pour in the white wine.  Reduce until most of the wine has evaporated and the shallots are almost dry.  Then, add in the chicken broth, heavy cream, and pasta water.  Reduce in half.  The sauce should coat a spoon but shouldn’t be too thick. 

Remove the sauce from the heat and swirl in a final tablespoon of butter along with 2 teaspoons of the pickled cherry pepper juice.  Taste and adjust seasoning.  Throw in the pasta, maitakes and chopped cilantro and toss to coat.

Serve immediately garnished with a few pickled cherry peppers and about 1 teaspoon of Egyptian dukkah per plate.

Egyptian Dukkah

Yields approx 1 ½ cups

¼ cup hazelnuts, roughly crushed

¼ cup pistachios, roughly crushed

½ cup white sesame seeds

¼ cup coriander seeds

2 tablespoons white cumin seeds

2 tablespoons fennel seeds

2 tablespoons dried mint

pinch of chili powder

½ teaspoon black pepper

1 ½ teaspoons salt

Preheat the oven to 350° F.  As opposed to toasting in the skillet, I like to toast this blend up in the oven so the nuts and spices toast evenly.   

Line a baking sheet with parchment paper.  Add the hazelnuts, pistachios and all of the seeds and make sure they are in a single layer.  Toast for 8 to 10 minutes – you should smell a really nutty fragrance.

Transfer toasted nuts and spices to a mortar and pestle or a spice / coffee grinder. I like a slightly rough texture for this, so grind until there are still bits and pieces and it’s not completely powder. 

Combine with the dried mint, chili powder, black pepper and salt.  Store in an airtight container, preferably in a cool spot – it will keep for about a month.

 

 

tags: pasta recipe, homemade pasta recipe, mushroom pasta, egyptian dukkah, how to make egyptian dukkah
categories: all 3, appetizers 1, blog, holiday, main dishes, man-friendly, recipes, vegetarian, spices
Wednesday 02.24.16
Posted by Aliya LeeKong
 

Handmade Pasta: How-To + Recipe

HANDMADE PASTA: HOW-TO + RECIPE

If pizza is my ultimate comfort food, pasta is a very close second.  I actually haven’t made pasta from scratch for a really long time and, lately, with the weather getting cooler and the fact that I'm going to serve it at my pop-up in a few weeks, I’ve been wanting to break out my pasta roller and get started.  I bought a couple cookbooks for inspiration to get me started.  The dough recipe is actually super simple, and I find myself wondering why I don’t make pasta from scratch more often at home instead of buying it at the store.  Oh right, time! That little thing that tends to escape all of us...But if you are planning on having a dinner party, nothing is more impressive than serving a plate of homemade tagliolini!  And it's something you can make in advance and cook quickly while your guests are enjoying a drink (or two...). 

 

MAKING THE DOUGH

There are two types of dough when making pasta; one for the different shapes of noodles (spaghetti, tagliatelle, fettuccini etc…) and one for filled pastas (ravioli, tortellini, agnolotti etc…).  The only differences between these two is that the filled pasta dough just adds a little bit more liquid to make the dough more pliable for making shapes and is a bit thinner since you are often double layering it. 

My go-to recipe is pretty simple:

Serves 6-8

2 cups 00 or all purpose flour

2 eggs + 3 yolks

1 1/2 tablespoons water

1/2 teaspoon salt

Mixing is very simple. Just create a mound with the flour ( “00” is the most commonly used in Italy, but all purpose works just as well) pour all the liquid (whole eggs, yolks, water) in the center and slowly, with a fork, combine everything until the dough starts to come together and is not sticky.  Now comes the hard part: kneading!  You want to knead the dough for at least 10-15 minutes, doesn’t sound like a huge task but it is essential to create a smooth pasta dough.  You will see as you knead the dough the roughness when the dough first comes together starts to disappear the more you work the dough.  Once the dough is nice and smooth, form in to a ball and cover with plastic wrap and let it rest.  If you're rolling it right away, you can allow rest it for 30 minutes at room temperature.  If you're rolling it later, keep it in the fridge and allow the dough to come back up to room temperature just before.  Because of the eggs in the dough, you want to use this within 24hrs to ensure freshness or freeze it for later use. 

 

HAND ROLL OR MACHINE?

Having a pasta machine is essential to rolling out the dough.  You can, of course, do it with a rolling pin, but it will take a lot more time and effort, not to mention a lot of upper body and arm strength!  The process of kneading alone makes my arms and hands ache, but the result is just too delicious to give up on.  There's also just something soothing about the process of rolling out the dough with a machine, going through every size on the rollers and then creating your pasta shape.  The key is to start the pasta dough on the largest setting of the machine and work down from there, cutting the dough and doing it in batches. 

Start by cutting the dough into quarters.  Flatten the quarter piece a bit and put the dough through the largest setting, once through. Fold the dough on itself (take both ends fold over and meet in the middle) rotate 90 degrees and put through the machine on the same setting again - you basically just want to get a rectangular shape to start.  Raise or lower the setting (depending on the machine) and run through again.  You want to get thinner and thinner, running the dough once at each incremental setting.  If it gets too long, cut it in half and roll each piece separately.  After the dough has made its way through, I usually end on the second to last setting for stuffed pastas or the third to last for thick noodles.

 

SAUCES AND FILLINGS

And now for the good stuff: the filling and the sauces!  First, though, a note on cooking.  In boiling, heavily salted water, fresh pasta only takes 1 to 2 minutes to cook, so if you spend the time up front, know that, at the very least, you are saving on cook time! 

For my pop-up, I'm doing a roasted maitake mushroom pasta with pickled chilies, garlic and some Egyptian Dukkah.  I know - major and not so traditional.  BUT I love a good simple tomato sauce with noodles, and this recipe is such a great go to.  There are so many others to choose from; Bolognese, avocado-basil pesto, and classic brown butter and sage.  The possibilities are endless - it really just depends what mood you are in!  Same with choosing the filling for stuffed pastas, you can go the traditional route and do a ricotta filled ravioli or go with the season and do a pumpkin ravioli for fall, a pea ravioli for spring etc…

The important part is to make sure you have all the essential tools to create and roll out the perfect dough - the rest you can just make up as you go along!  That is the fun part after all..

Enjoy!

 

 

tags: how to make pasta, pasta how to, how to roll pasta, how to make ravioli, ravioli recipe, homemade pasta recipe
categories: all 2, holiday, lifestyle, main dishes, side dishes-1, vegetarian, traditions
Friday 10.16.15
Posted by Aliya LeeKong