#1
Posted 18 November 2010 - 07:53 AM
What's yours?
#2
Posted 18 November 2010 - 09:36 AM
#3
Posted 18 November 2010 - 09:44 AM
Chris Hennes
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#4
Posted 18 November 2010 - 10:36 AM
I like to use water (and milk, depending on what I'm doing) soaked/"blanched" anchovies, too, when wanting some of the character but not all the sharp bite...will try it here. Or, like caramelized onions and grey liver, perhaps I will let my childhood food demons go, and just do an honest puttanesca.
Thanks for the input so far, folks!
Edited by paul o' vendange, 18 November 2010 - 10:42 AM.
#5
Posted 18 November 2010 - 12:45 PM
In a true bit of culinary heresy, I used tobasco sauce in place of the chilies in mine. I made it the first time and realized I had no chilies anywhere, and then used the tobasco instead and I liked the smokey flavors and how it complemented the capers, olived, and anchovies.
And this will really call the wrath of the culinary gods on me, but I like putanesca sauce as a base for braising chicken.
#6
Posted 18 November 2010 - 01:38 PM
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#7
Posted 18 November 2010 - 01:54 PM
Thanks for the idea!
#8
Posted 18 November 2010 - 02:18 PM
- sauté onions and garlic until just this side of brown;
- slide in a healthy dose of anchovies and sauté them until they break down;
- add some oil-cured or kalamata olives, a handful of capers, and a can of whole San Marzano tomatoes, lightly crushed with a wooden spoon and simmered until velvety and dark; and
- pump in a final glug of olive oil near service.
Lightly sautéed tomatoes, no anchovies, little oil: that just ain't gonna do it for me.
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#9
Posted 18 November 2010 - 02:31 PM
Lightly sautéed tomatoes, no anchovies, little oil: that just ain't gonna do it for me.
OK, OK, I'll relent.
Oh, not on using unblanched anchovies. On the name. Penne Putain. A gentler, more L'ile de France cousin.
#10
Posted 18 November 2010 - 02:34 PM
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I took my potatoes down to be mashed
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#11
Posted 18 November 2010 - 02:44 PM
Très raffiné...
LOL - not two minutes ago my wife showed up with our boy, fresh home from school (and Trader Joe's, along the way)...with makings for...uh, yep. I had mentioned to her my pang for the stuff, and voila.
-her loot includes a tin of Cento anchovies. Seems the universe is conspiring to tell me something...
#12
Posted 18 November 2010 - 03:19 PM
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#13
Posted 18 November 2010 - 03:42 PM
#14
Posted 18 November 2010 - 03:44 PM
She's being mighty saucy, that one. [Austin Powers]Oh, behave![/Austin Powers]
#15
Posted 23 November 2010 - 08:25 AM
#16
Posted 23 November 2010 - 11:14 AM
In terms of alternative uses, I like it with grilled fish as well as pasta (An extra glug of oil and some lemon juice is good here to make it almost a dressing and to split slightly).
I also recently made the happy discovery that it goes tremendously well with cauliflower, both as dish in it's own right, or by adding cauliflower with the pasta (Let some blanched, or even previously cooked cauliflower cook with the sauce for the last few minutes).
They are delicious.
#17
Posted 23 November 2010 - 01:42 PM
They all have colorful stories for how the recipe came to be called that. One says that prostitutes did not go out to do their marketing when respectable women were out, so they invented a recipe that doesn't call for a lot of fresh ingredients. On the Savage Nation, Savage claimed that they believed in the antiseptic properties of the garlic.
#18
Posted 23 November 2010 - 03:22 PM
Garlic, anchovy, tomatoes, red pepper flakes or crushed dried chile. Olive oil. Olives if I happen to have any around. Parsley to finish. No capers.
#19
Posted 24 November 2010 - 05:26 AM
Good for people who wouldn' necessarly use a jar full of capers for anything else (I go through them pretty quickly myself!).
I ended up doing my own version a while back, mainly to reduve the number of 1/4 full jars of things hanging around in my fridge. Got used over the next few days, but I wonder how long you could keep it for? Is the 'mingling' a good thing? Or should the flavours be separate?
They are delicious.
#20
Posted 24 November 2010 - 07:01 AM
Is the 'mingling' a good thing? Or should the flavours be separate?
That raises an interesting question, Carlovski. Many more more at home in Italian cuisine than I will chime in, I'm sure, but it does pique my interest.
One of the reasons I love this stuff is precisely because of the "surprise" in its several bites - texture and taste. My want, personally, would be much like my want in ratatouille, the preservation of the discrete character from each contributor. Not therefore a fan of "melded down" ratatouille, and I suspect that although it would still taste wonderful, I would myself prefer to keep puttanesca similarly "fresco."
#21
Posted 29 November 2010 - 07:43 AM
What would necessarily be around: garlic, oil, anchovies, capers, red pepper flakes, a splash of wine.
What might be in the larder: fresh tomatoes, onions, olives, soprasetta,
It often sat before it was eaten because false eyelashes had to be applied, or a customer had arrived.
On the other hand if she was ready when it was ready it could be eaten a la minute.
#22
Posted 12 February 2011 - 03:34 PM
Anchovies melted into olive oil, garlic, tomatoes, kalamata olives, capers, red pepper flakes all tossed with hot, fresh cooked spaghetti. I'm very easy with the pepper flakes because she has a condition that can't handle very hot flavors. I just sprinkle a few more on my pasta at serving time.
The last jar of home canned tomatoes. We must do more this year.
#23
Posted 12 February 2011 - 04:16 PM
#24
Posted 16 February 2011 - 11:53 AM
www.maureenbfant.com
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