#1
Posted 06 November 2002 - 11:14 AM
Instead of just my old standbys, I'd like to simmer up a nice big pot of Pasta e Fagioli -- which I order often in restaurants, but which I've never prepared myself.
My restaurant experiences with this soup have taught me that there are good ones and very mediocre ones and a few great ones.
Any of you make this wonderful soup at home? Will you share your methods???
IF YOU'RE HAPPY AND YOU KNOW IT SLAP YOUR FRIENDS.
#2
Posted 06 November 2002 - 11:21 AM
Actually, this is one of the simplest soups to make, and there are a boatload of variations to it, all based on personal preferences. I probably make it differently every time, so I'll let others chime in on specifics.
VarmintBites
#3
Posted 06 November 2002 - 11:35 AM
Proscuitto or pancetta??? Or something else??Lots of cured pork...
IF YOU'RE HAPPY AND YOU KNOW IT SLAP YOUR FRIENDS.
#4
Posted 06 November 2002 - 11:55 AM
Jaymes, you'll see these as the major variables: liquid (water, beef stock, chicken stock); beans (cranberry, cannellini, kidney, etc); meat (some put beef in their soup); pasta type; seasonings (I like rosemary in mine, whereas others believe that would be sacrilege); other ingredients (+/- tomatoes, carrots, etc.).
Have fun and experiment.
VarmintBites
#5
Posted 06 November 2002 - 11:59 AM
Varmit - do you cook your beans from scratch the day before? In the same broth? Use the cooking water from beans?...beans (cranberry, cannellini, kidney, etc)...
Do canned beans work okay, or would that seriously compromise flavor and texture??
IF YOU'RE HAPPY AND YOU KNOW IT SLAP YOUR FRIENDS.
#6
Posted 06 November 2002 - 12:04 PM
However, I often want pasta e fagioli NOW, so I'll used canned beans. The canned beans are much softer and result in a mushier soup. Good, but not the same.
VarmintBites
#7
Posted 06 November 2002 - 01:39 PM
#8
Posted 15 January 2005 - 03:09 PM
Finally, it's soup weather, even way down deep in the heart.....
Instead of just my old standbys, I'd like to simmer up a nice big pot of Pasta e Fagioli -- which I order often in restaurants, but which I've never prepared myself.
My restaurant experiences with this soup have taught me that there are good ones and very mediocre ones and a few great ones.
Any of you make this wonderful soup at home? Will you share your methods???
Bumping this back up, for further discussion
I had a terrific cup of Pasta e Fagioli today at lunch.
Chunks of a nice skinless pork sausage, which I could not determine it's origin.
woodburner
#9
Posted 15 January 2005 - 05:31 PM
I used the quick oven method for the dried white beans in my pantry (reminder: preheat oven to 250 F. Bring 2 quarts of water to a boil, add 1 tsp salt, and one pound of dried beans. Return to boil, cover put in oven for 1-1.5 hours). I also added some garlic and a tied up bunch of thyme to my bean cooking water.
After the beans cooked for 1 hour, I added a cup of dilitini to the pot, allowed to par cook for 5 mintues, then added a can of crushed tomato and a can of water and simmered for 30 minutes. Adjusted seasoning (another tsp salt, some ground pepper, 1 tsp vinegar, 1 tsp sugar, 1/4 tsp smoked paprika (I had forgotten to fry up some bacon to add, using the paprika also keeps it vegetarian, not that we really care), hmm, I also added a spoonful of onion confit) and allowed to sit with the heat off for another 30 minutes (some of the solids stuck to the bottom of the pan, and allowing it to rest with the heat off, they became unstuck w/out burning or scraping to mush).
I had some for lunch, the rest is all packaged up in 1 or 2 portion containers, so I can have them in the freezer for him to bring to work for lunch or reheat for a future dinner.
#10
Posted 15 January 2005 - 06:26 PM
#11
Posted 15 January 2005 - 10:12 PM
So, a big thank you to all of you that helped me out so long ago.
IF YOU'RE HAPPY AND YOU KNOW IT SLAP YOUR FRIENDS.
#12
Posted 17 January 2005 - 09:24 AM
What really, really made the soup was that I added prosciutto rind to the soup as it cooked. It leant the whole thing a viscous texture and porky flavor throughout. It's nothing at all new but really it makes a giant difference.
#13
Posted 29 April 2012 - 07:07 AM
I'm lurching between these two approaches, one from the New York Times (purist, few ingredients), and one from the Dean & Deluca cookbook (adds parmigiano rind, many ingredients):
New York Times
Dean & Deluca
The NYT recipe seems just a bit too austere, but I'm afraid of overwhelming the intrinsic flavor of these high-grade beans by putting in the Reggiano rind (I do have one).
Not planning to add all the other D&D ingredients (dried basil anyone?)
Advice, anyone?
#14
Posted 29 April 2012 - 07:20 AM
#15
Posted 29 April 2012 - 07:34 AM
Making this tonight with Rancho Gordo borlotti beans, which are soaking as I type.
I'm lurching between these two approaches, one from the New York Times (purist, few ingredients), and one from the Dean & Deluca cookbook (adds parmigiano rind, many ingredients):
New York Times
Dean & Deluca
The NYT recipe seems just a bit too austere, but I'm afraid of overwhelming the intrinsic flavor of these high-grade beans by putting in the Reggiano rind (I do have one).
Not planning to add all the other D&D ingredients (dried basil anyone?)
Advice, anyone?
This stuff is comfort food, so make it taste the way you want it to. My own tastes run to the more minimalist end of the spectrum, because that's what I grew up with, but I have to agree with Wholemeal Crank, the parmigiano rind should be fine. And don't lose track of the fact that the flavours of the beans and the pasta provide a background for the seasonings, so I wouldn't worry about their being overwhelmed (although if the rind is from a really seasoned cheese, you might want to scale back the amount you use, or it will take over the whole show). The only crucial thing with pasta e fagioli is that all the flavours should come together really seamlessly (the reason it's often even better warmed up than freshly made).
#16
Posted 29 April 2012 - 07:39 AM
Pasta e Fagioli on Food52
#17
Posted 29 April 2012 - 07:52 AM
The rind is really QUITE old, and definitely still good, smells gorgeous... Perhaps I should only put in a small portion of it?
#18
Posted 29 April 2012 - 09:19 AM
#19
Posted 29 April 2012 - 11:03 AM
Thanks everyone -
The rind is really QUITE old, and definitely still good, smells gorgeous... Perhaps I should only put in a small portion of it?
This isn't meant to sound nitpicking, but is the rind from a very mature cheese, or have you just held on to the rind for quite a while?
If the latter, using the entire amount suggested would be fine.
If the former, it would be fine too, if you're okay with the flavour completely dominating the dish (and why not?).
But dominate it will: We have a piece of parmigano that is about 4 years old, and while it is perfectly sound, even a few small shavings have a remarkably big presence. This isn't a euphemism for it smelling bad, but it is as though the flavour of an entire cheese is concentrated into a piece the size of a fist.
#20
Posted 29 April 2012 - 12:38 PM
I would add the parm rind for sure and I would suggest adding a sprig of fresh thyme instead of the dried in the D&D recipe. I love thyme and beans though so I am biased.
Captain Jack Sparrow
#21
Posted 29 April 2012 - 02:04 PM
Ashen - thanks for the thyme tip. I have some sage poking up so I was thinking I'd use that.
#23
Posted 29 April 2012 - 07:30 PM
Photos of my past e fagioli coming tomorrow in the Dinner thread.
#24
Posted 30 April 2012 - 06:20 PM
Edited by mskerr, 30 April 2012 - 06:21 PM.
#25
Posted 02 May 2012 - 02:00 PM
www.maureenbfant.com
#26
Posted 02 May 2012 - 07:54 PM
I also thought I'd seen somewhere, perhaps on Bourdain, that in Italy, they stir the soup around the hollowed out center of a parm wheel to incorporate the cheese... Maybe this was another dish? Can't remember!
#27
Posted 03 May 2012 - 11:21 AM
Pasta e Fagioli
Start with about 1 cup of dried white kidney beans. (If you're in a hurry, use canned.)
In a large stew pot or Dutch oven, set the washed and picked-over beans to cook in about 1 qt flavorful chicken broth, along with 2 large cloves garlic, mashed and chopped. Bring the beans to a boil over high heat; then cover tightly and simmer slowly until they’re just barely tender. If they dry out before they're done, add a little more hot water/chicken broth/liquid, as needed. Monitor them very carefully, to be certain that you do not overcook them. You're going to add more ingredients later on and cook them some more and you don’t want them disintegrating into mush, so this is important.
While beans are cooking, prepare your seasonings.
Start with about as much good-quality, imported pancetta as you can afford. Try for at least ¼ pound. ½ pound is better. More than that is even more wonderful. If you’ve purchased it in a chunk, then chop it into medium-small dice. If you’ve bought slices, then julienne them. (Lately, I've been using a domestic brand that I buy at Costco/Sam's. It's not grand enough to just wrap around melon and serve, but cooked up in a soup, it's perfectly fine. And, it's affordable enough that I can use 1 pound, or even more.)
Put chopped pancetta into a skillet along with a couple tablespoons good, flavorful olive oil, 1 white or yellow onion chopped, 1 carrot peeled and chopped, 1 rib celery chopped, 2 more large cloves of garlic mashed and minced, 2 bay leaves, and about a tablespoon each of fresh rosemary and thyme. Saute until onions are clear and carrots and celery are tender and the whole thing looks “done.”
About 2/3rds of the way through the bean cooking time, add your seasonings to the bean pot. It takes about an average of 1 ½ hours for RG’s beans to get tender, so I add the seasonings at about the hour point. Stir in the seasonings, cover the bean pot and continue to let them simmer until just barely tender.
When the beans are just barely tender, add about 1 cup tomatoes. You can use chopped fresh tomatoes, or canned diced or crushed tomatoes, or tomato sauce. I’ve used left-over marinara, and it was great.
Give the pot a stir, and then turn heat to high. Add 2 cups more liquid – water or chicken broth. At this point, taste for salt, and add some if needed. When soup is boiling, add 1 ½ cups dry pasta. You can use small shells, elbow macaroni, ditalini, etc.
Reduce heat to medium and simmer briskly until pasta is al dente. Adjust seasonings. We like crushed red pepper, so we add that, along with black pepper.
Ladle soup into individual soup bowls and top with grated parmesan or Romano or whatever you like. Serve with crusty bread.
I've just tried to think back over what I do, so hope I haven't forgotten anything.
IF YOU'RE HAPPY AND YOU KNOW IT SLAP YOUR FRIENDS.
#28
Posted 05 June 2012 - 07:22 AM
- put some olive oil in a pot
- add a clove of garlic
- add a sprig or two of rosemary
when you start to get a "the garlic is a cooking smell" throw in the cooked beans ( canned (already cooked) , dry, fresh, or frozen (to cook beforehand)
- add water and salt
- boil just a little bit
- pass all or most of the beans through a food mill
- put the bean mush in a pot (it should be a little liquidy because the pasta will absorb quite a bit of water)
- boil
. add dried spaghetti broken up into 2 inch size pieces
- cook for about 10 minutes
done.
(you can drizzle a little oil on the top if you like)
#29
Posted 05 June 2012 - 02:29 PM
To respond to somebody about the meat, I do use pancetta/proscuitto. I've found a domestic (US) version at Sam's/Costco that, while not as good as the real Italian stuff of course, also costs much, much less. I wouldn't use it to wrap a slice of juicy melon, but it's so affordable that we can put lots of it in this soup.
And it's spectacular.
IF YOU'RE HAPPY AND YOU KNOW IT SLAP YOUR FRIENDS.
#30
Posted 05 June 2012 - 05:07 PM
Here's what I do:
. . .
Start with about as much good-quality, imported pancetta as you can afford. Try for at least ¼ pound. ½ pound is better. More than that is even more wonderful. If you've purchased it in a chunk, then chop it into medium-small dice. If you've bought slices, then julienne them. (Lately, I've been using a domestic brand that I buy at Costco/Sam's. It's not grand enough to just wrap around melon and serve, but cooked up in a soup, it's perfectly fine. And, it's affordable enough that I can use 1 pound, or even more.)
To respond to somebody about the meat, I do use pancetta/proscuitto. I've found a domestic (US) version at Sam's/Costco that, while not as good as the real Italian stuff of course, also costs much, much less. I wouldn't use it to wrap a slice of juicy melon, but it's so affordable that we can put lots of it in this soup.
I'm confused. Do you use pancetta or proscuitto, or does it matter? Your comments about "wrapping around melon" make me think of proscuitto, but in your instructions you referred to pancetta, which seems to me to be a more natural choice.
Janet A. Zimmerman, aka "JAZ"
Manager
jzimmerman@eGullet.org
eG Ethics signatory
About.com guide, Cooking for Two
Ten ways you can help the Society for Culinary Arts & Letters
Also tagged with one or more of these keywords: Italian
Regional Cuisine →
United States →
Florida →
Florida: Dining →
Where's good in the Ft Pierce Area?Started by Dave Hatfield , 29 Dec 2012 |
|
|
||
The Kitchen →
Cookbooks & References →
Northern Italy recipes, cookingStarted by MsLunaRay , 19 Dec 2012 |
|
|
||
The Kitchen →
Cooking →
Pasta thicknessStarted by pacman1978 , 13 Nov 2012 |
|
|
||
Regional Cuisine →
Europe →
Italy →
Italy: Dining →
FrascatiStarted by MaLO , 10 Sep 2012 |
|
|
||
The Kitchen →
Kitchen Consumer →
Domestic sheep's milk ricotta online: anyone tried it?Started by Maureen B. Fant , 08 Sep 2012 |
|
|










