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Posted

I’ve cooked a few recipes from Six Seasons of Pasta: A New Way with Everyone's Favorite Food by Joshua McFadden and Martha Holmberg. I have no plans to cook every recipe but I’m enjoying it so I figured I’d make a topic for it. Please join in if you have the book. 
 

If you don’t have the book, there are several recipes available on the author’s website: https://www.joshuamcfadden.com/projects/six-seasons-of-pasta

 

I’ll start off with my favorite recipe so far, the pasta with fresh corn, jalapeños and brown butter. I posted it over in the dinner topic but didn’t say much about it - it’s excellent as written and very versatile as well.

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The book cautions that this should only be made with fresh sweet corn so I figured I should make it while local corn is still available at the farmers market. Half of the corn gets sautéed in butter so both turn brown and nutty.  Sliced jalapeños (I used Fresnos) go in next along with a splash of cream and we’re encouraged to smash the kernels to make a chunky, chile-infused purée. The rest of the corn goes in along with the pasta and enough pasta water to keep it saucy and emulsify the grated Parm & Romano. There was a handful of basil in there, too.
I had it with a spiny lobster tail, which was a treat. I added zucchini, red bell peppers and cherry tomatoes to the leftovers for a veg version.  I can see it working with all sorts of protein from leftover chicken to shrimp to grilled scallops or steak.  My favorite kind of recipe to play with!

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Posted (edited)

The book has several pasta salad recipes and a guide for building your own pasta salad.  I’m not a huge pasta salad fan but I’d picked up a box of black pepper barilotti pasta at Trader Joe’s and thought it would be good in a pasta salad with salami so I tried the recipe for pasta salad with roasted red peppers, salami, mozzarella and croutons on p 285 of Six Seasons of Pasta
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The recipe lightly dresses the pasta with vinegar and olive oil while it’s still warm, then adds more to dress the full salad. I’ve seen that done with potato salad but not with pasta though it makes sense. I had a jar of little cheese-stuffed red peppers (also from TJ's) that I quartered and threw in in place of the roasted red peppers and fresh mozzarella. I added cooked zucchini and raw tomato that weren’t in the recipe. This book includes the same torn croutons recipe as in Six Seasons with instructions to let the salad sit for 15-30 min before serving so they can soak up some of the juices. A good call. 

 

 

 

Edited by blue_dolphin (log)
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Posted

@blue_dolphin, my first thought was that you were so painstaking as to coil all those bits of pasta. It appears, from the TJ's website, that black pepper barilotti pasta comes coiled as in the photo. (Whew!) How was the texture? I can imagine something that thick becoming gummy.

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Nancy Smith, aka "Smithy"
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Posted
21 minutes ago, Smithy said:

@blue_dolphin, my first thought was that you were so painstaking as to coil all those bits of pasta. It appears, from the TJ's website, that black pepper barilotti pasta comes coiled as in the photo. (Whew!) How was the texture? I can imagine something that thick becoming gummy.


I can’t imagine rolling up each piece!  The texture of the pasta was good and the flavor was pleasantly peppery.  I suspect that the cooking time needs to be monitored carefully and the coils may unspool into limp noodles quickly if overcooked so I started tasting early and avoided that fate!

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