Pasta alla Chitarra with Mushrooms

pastachitarra

Pasta alla Chitarra with mushrooms is one of my favorite pasta dishes.  This is Abruzzo’s signature pasta – made with a pasta guitar (it looks like a harp) to produce squrish-shaped spaghetti.

The sauce is very simple – cooks in about 10 minutes including preparation.  When sauces take minutes, I prepare it when the pasta is cooking.

One of my best friends in Rome, Elena gifted me a bag of dried porcini mushrooms.  I use them for special occasions and stored in my pantry where they are out of reach!

To restore the porcini back to life – add a cup of porcini to approx.  two cups of  hot water.  Set aside for twenty minutes, draining and rinsing well.  Save the flavorful liquid by adding to a next day risotto or a tender roast beef.  My grandmother haunts me when I throw out anything – it’s part of my roots!

In a large skillet, heat on medium-low, a drizzle of olive oil and butter (approx. 1 tbsp) and add two crushed cloves of garlic for a minute or until the garlic turns golden.  Add the porcini and saute for approx. five minutes.  Add one cup of the porcini liquid and a tsp. of tomato paste.  Remove the garlic and stir the sauce as the tomato paste dissolves.

Add the cooked pasta to the skillet and a handful of freshly grated Parmigiano-Reggiano (1 cup) to the skillet.  Mix the pasta in the sauce before serving.  Sprinkle finely chopped parsley (optional).

a presto,

Maria

Polpettine di Paolo

What I love also about blogging is meeting other bloggers as we share and break bread with recipes! My new blogger cumara is Adri Barr Crocetti. She purchased Breaking Bread in L’Aquila and loved my meatball recipe. Check out Adri’s blog.

Adri writes her lovely commentary about this tasty dish!:
http://thefrontburner.us/main/2010/09/29/breaking-bread-in-laquila/

What do you think? Would love to hear from you!

Pasta alla Chitarra con Polpettine di Paolo/(Pasta alla Chitarra with Paul’s Meatballs)

Paul’s meatballs were famous-not only for their flavor, but also for their size: he liked them small! Though, he was a fabulous cook, once he let me in the kitchen (and taught me how to make his favorites), he didn’t come back in. As queen of the kitchen, I began making his favorites, like this one. We would sometimes serve these meatballs on top of pasta alla chitarra, Abruzzo’s famous pasta. This is made with a pasta guitar (it looks like a harp) to produce squarish-shaped spaghetti. You can also use spaghetti or your favorite pasta. Growing up, my mother would serve it with our favorite rigatoni or penne pasta.

a presto,

Maria