Spaghetti Pie

Has anyone else ever noticed that comfort foods are often starch-laden carbohydrate-stuffed stomach bricks?  Don’t get me wrong, I LOVE it that way.  Nobody appreciates that kind of comfort food more than I so.  NOBODY.  But along that line of thinking, what could possibly be more comforting than a nice warm pasta dish……(wait for it)…….served in a pie crust??

Not much, that is the answer.  There are not many things (except brownies maybe) that could be more comforting.

Spaghetti pie is wonderful.  It really is.  It can be really rich and really filling which is a wonderful thing on boogery cold days like the ones we have been living through lately in my neck of the woods.

I decided to make mine a little lighter by using chicken instead of beef.  I also used a sauce that is a bit more like a puttanesca sauce rather than the traditional spaghetti sauce.  The briney taste mixed with the rich pie crust was just wonderful.  This is also a dish that does very well as leftovers.

Spaghetti Pie

My Recipe

2 boneless skinless chicken breasts, cooked and cubed (you can grill or boil)

2 Tblsp. extra virgin olive oil

1 onion, minced

3 cloves garlic, minced

1 can chopped tomatoes

1 can tomato sauce

1/4 cup chopped olives (I used Spanish olives, but any briney olive will do fine)

1 Tblsp. capers

1 tsp. dried oregano

salt and pepper to taste

Double pie crust (I make mine homemade, but you can buy the refrigerated stuff.  It works just fine.)

Enough spaghetti pasta for 4 people (The easiest way to measure is to hold the uncooked pasta between your index finger and thumb, and for every adult, have a bundle of pasta that is approximately the width of a dime.)

Preheat oven to 350 degrees F.

Boil the pasta to almost al dente in salted water.

Heat the olive oil in a large skillet.  Cook onions and garlic.  Add tomatoes, tomato sauce, olives, capers, oregano and salt and pepper.  Heat through.  Add chicken cubes.  Toss cooked pasta into sauce.  Set aside.

Line a deep dish pie pan with the bottom pie crust.  Add pasta and sauce (this will make a a very deep pie, so beware!).  Cover with top layer of pie crust.  Crimp edges of pastry and cut vent holes into the top.  Brush with egg wash (1 beaten egg and 1 Tblsp. water).  Bake for 30 minutes or until crust is golden.

All things considered, this dish really doesn’t take long to make.  I can make pie pastry in my sleep at this point and if you buy it, that’s one less step.  The thing about the preparation that takes the longest is the cooking of the pasta.

This was a really filling a delicious dish.  I’d even dare say that this could even be a Martian-friendly meal.  Most of my martians would like it, at least.

Give it a try.

Enjoy!

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Creamy Quickie Pasta

I think that it’s important to stress the creative aspect of cooking.  Once you have the hang of the art and you are familiar with what combinations work best, a cook will find that a cookbook and recipes are not always necessary when throwing together a week night meal.  Sometimes a cook will use the knowledge that they have accumulated and make a quick and savory meal simply from throwing a bunch of stuff together.  It’s something all cooks should strive for when the decision is made to become prolific in the art of cooking.

Tonight I needed something quick and something made from accessible ingredients available in my pantry and freezer.   I had penne pasta, ham, and the usual staples.  I decided to make a ham-y pasta with a savory bechamél sauce.  Obviously a pancetta or prosciutto would have been better, but the ham did quite well.

Cubed Ham

Just cube up some ham.  I made two servings so I only used about 1 cup of cubed ham.  Throw the ham in a dry skillet (i.e. no oil) and sauté until the ham starts to brown slightly.  It will look like this:

Caramelized Ham

Remove the ham from the skillet and prepare to make your bechamél sauce.  Don’t be intimidated, it’s an easy sauce that you can use all the time.

Bechamel

Simply use equal parts of butter and flour (I used 2 Tblsp. of each) and cook the two for about two minutes.  This is to cook the raw flour taste out and it makes a slightly nutty taste.  Now you add milk or cream.  Milk is perfectly fine.  I used about 2 cups of milk and stirred vigorously until the sauce started to get thick.  At this point, turn the heat down and start adding seasoning.  A very traditional spice for a bechamél is nutmeg.  It adds a warm and spicey taste to the sauce and I highly recommend it.  You only need a tiny bit (1/4 tsp.).  There was no need to add any additional salt since ham was going to be a part of the dish but I added black pepper, onion powder, and garlic powder (1 tsp. each).   About 1/4 cup of Parmesan cheese went in last for a little zing (and more salt).   I then added the pasta and stirred to coat.  Then I tossed in the ham and served warm.  I served it with a side of green vegetables (green beans, but spinach would have been delicious too).  This was a quick, and lovely dish that I just kind of threw together.  And you know what?  It was awesome.

Creamy Pasta

Don’t be afraid to experiment.  Not every delicious meal made in your kitchen needs to be a big event right out of a cookbook.  Give yourself a little bit of credit and allow your skills to grow by playing around with food and flavors.    Enjoy!

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Pad Thai Heaven (Or Hell…)

I really like posting about ethnic foods, don’t I?  This shouldn’t be an odd thing, honestly.  We live in a nation that is the home of so many different cultures that there is no excuse for not experimenting with ethnic food.  I actually know people who are completely unwilling to try the foods of different cultures (aside from a taco) and I really can’t understand that kind of closed-mindedness; and that’s all it is.  Closed mindedness.

Pad Thai is an ethnic food that should be easy for a closed minded person to try.  It has familiar ingredients (particularly in the recipe I’ll be sharing with you tonight) and it’s also delicious.  It’s a peanut sauce with many different notes of taste.  It can also be hot as hell, but in the best way possible.

The story behind this recipe is SparkPeople.  It is a *FREE* online community that supports weight loss and healthy lifestyles.  I have been a member of this community for about three years now.  I love it and have written about it on my personal blog a few times.  The site offers a recipe page where members share healthy low-calorie and low-fat recipes.  As usual, I tend to stay away from user-generated recipe pages and I have had some bad luck with SparkRecipes, but I did find some gold within.  This recipe is called Pong Pong Pork Chops, but this peanut sauce is so good, that I use it on chicken breasts or I double the recipe and make Pad Thai Noodles.  This recipe is super easy to make and you don’t need many specialty ingredients (most I keep in my house all the time).  Here’s the recipe exactly as it was from the website, with the original author credited:

Pong Pong Pork Chops

Spark People Recipes (ONCEMORE2006)

4 pork loin chops

1 medium onion, sliced thin

2 cloves garlic, minced

2 Tblsp. soy sauce

2 tsp. hot mustard

2 tsp. Splenda

2 tsp. sesame oil

2 Tblsp. Tabasco Sauce

4 Tblsp. peanut butter

½ cup water

1 tsp. powdered ginger

In a non-stick skillet sauté onion and garlic with a small amount of water until onion is translucent and set aside.

Trim all fat from chops and make small cuts through any membrane on the outside to prevent chops from curling.

Brown pork chops on both sides and then return onions and garlic to pan.  Mix the rest of the ingredients to make a sauce, then with more water if needed.

Add to pan the chops, onions and garlic and heat through.

Serve with rice.

Chicken breasts can be used instead of pork.

YIELD:  4 servings.

This recipe is fantastic as is.  Tonight, however I made Pad Thai Noodles.  Basically, all I did was double all of the ingredients except for the pork chops (there were no pork chops tonight.  I simply sauteed two chicken breasts to serve on top of the noodles), the onion, and the garlic.  To make Pad Thai Noodles this way, start boiling your noodles first.  Then saute your onion and garlic in the water just as the recipe instructs.  When the onions are translucent, add all of your sauce ingredients to the pan and stir until mixed.

Pasta Preparation

When you make pasta and a thick sauce to go with it, you should position the pots together closely on your cook top.  This is so that when the pasta is finished you can scoop it into the sauce.  It is not good cooking practice to pour your pasta into a colander and then dumping dry pasta into a thick sauce like this.  A thick sauce like this always benefits from a bit of pasta water because the water is hot and starchy.  Use a pasta scoop (it looks like a ladle with teeth) to put the pasta in your saucepan.

If your sauce is still thick after the pasta has been added, you have that big pot of pasta water and you can add a little bit at a time to the sauce until it reaches the perfect consistency.  It needs to be thick, but not gummy.

Pad Thai Noodles

I used fettucini as the noodles in this dish.  Regular spaghetti noodles work also.  I point this out so that you realize that you don’t need to buy specialty pasta for this dish.  Tonight I had a box of fettucini in my pantry and used it.  That’s how a lot of my cooking goes.  Whatever is in my pantry that might work gets thrown into the pot.  And let me tell you, this dish was GOOOOOOOD!  It was spicy, so if you’re a wimp about spice, just cut back on the Tabasco.  Enjoy!

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Spaghetti Carbonara

Everybody in my house is currently sick.  My toddler is sick, I am sick, and my husband (a.k.a. the other toddler) is sick.  We’ve spent the week eating “sick food” and while it is helpful, I really wanted a comfort food today since I am starting to feel a little better.

Back on Wednesday, I was watching a movie called “Heartburn” with Meryl Streep and Jack Nicholson.  In this movie, Meryl Streep made Spaghetti Carbonara and she and Jack Nicholson were lying in bed eating it happily.  Since then, I have been unable to get my mind off of a big bowl of Spaghetti Carbonara.  It is a dish that I love, but it is a dish that can be a little tricky.

It’s one of those recipes that has millions of variations and depending on that variation, it can be one of the greatest things you have ever tasted or it can be one of the worst disasters ever concocted in a kitchen.  Usually, when I go to make a tricky dish such as this, I go to a website like FoodNetwork.com where the recipes are submitted by chefs and cooks rather than regular people.  I’ve had a lot of bad luck with recipes from AllRecipes.com and RecipeZaar.com because these sites are user generated, and that can mean that that particular recipe was made up and never tested or tested on a boyfriend or mom.  Honestly, some of the recipes I have tried from those places have been just awful.

Happily, to my surprise, I came across a great and simple recipe for Spaghetti Carbonara at AllRecipes.com.  You can find the recipe and it’s reviews here.

* 1 pound spaghetti
* 1 tablespoon olive oil
* 8 slices bacon, diced
* 1 tablespoon olive oil
* 1 onion, chopped
* 1 clove garlic, minced
* 1/4 cup dry white wine (optional)
* 4 eggs
* 1/2 cup grated Parmesan cheese
* 1 pinch salt and black pepper to taste
* 2 tablespoons chopped fresh parsley
* 2 tablespoons grated Parmesan cheese

If you’ll notice the ingredients and if you’ve never made this dish before, you might be a bit taken aback by the 4 eggs.  Spaghetti Carbonara has a bit of a cream sauce that is made by the eggs, cheese, and the little bit of fat.  It’s simple and it’s very easy to make…but it can go terribly wrong very easily.  I’ll give you what tips I know so that you can enjoy this dish without coming face to face with a curdled mess.

1. In a large pot of boiling salted water, cook spaghetti pasta until al dente. Drain well. Toss with 1 tablespoon of olive oil, and set aside.

Bacon Rendering

(A small note about crisping bacon:  Make sure not to over-crowd your pan so as not to boil the bacon.  You want to make the bacon very crisp and slowly render the fat.  Keep your heat on Medium and do the crisping step in two or three batches.)

2. Meanwhile in a large skillet, cook chopped bacon until slightly crisp; remove and drain onto paper towels. Reserve 2 tablespoons of bacon fat; add remaining 1 tablespoon olive oil, and heat in reused large skillet. Add chopped onion, and cook over medium heat until onion is translucent. Add minced garlic, and cook 1 minute more. Add wine if desired; cook one more minute.

3. Return cooked bacon to pan; add cooked and drained spaghetti. Toss to coat and heat through, adding more olive oil if it seems dry or is sticking together. Add beaten eggs and cook, tossing constantly with tongs or large fork until eggs are barely set. Quickly add 1/2 cup Parmesan cheese, and toss again. Add salt and pepper to taste (remember that bacon and Parmesan are very salty).
4. Serve immediately with chopped parsley sprinkled on top, and extra Parmesan cheese at table.

Spaghetti Carbonara

Okay, now I’ll give you the tips.  Tip #1, if you follow this recipe exactly, you will end up with a curdled mess.

Instead of cooking the pasta ahead of time and setting it aside in a bowl, cook it alongside the bacon and add it hot from the pot.  When pasta is hot and freshly cooked, it absorbs sauce and flavors.  Always use that tip when making a pasta dish for better consistency and better flavor.

Make sure to whisk your eggs VERY WELL.  It also helps if you whisk the cheese in with the eggs and add 2 Tblsp. of milk to the mix.  It coats the pasta better.

Once you have added the hot pasta to your bacon and onions, turn the heat off.  Stir this mixture first to coat the pasta with the fat.  Then, while the pasta is still hot, add the egg mixture and stir vigorously until the pasta is covered in a creamy sauce.  If you see that the saice is getting sticky or is too thick, add some of your pasta water to the mix and it will thin right out.

This is a great dish and I am feeling so much better after a nice hot bowl of it.  Please try it.  Enjoy!

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Spaghetti with Meat Sauce and Garlic Bread

On tonight’s menu in my house was a quick and easy Spaghetti with Meat Sauce.  This is a weeknight meal that can be prepared very quickly, but it’s also nice enough to serve to company.  This is actually one of my go-to dishes to serve to company that I maybe don’t cook for very often and want to impress.

The part of this meal that wasn’t so quick was the garlic bread.  I made Italian bread form scratch and then toasted it and made garlic bread.  The recipe I used can be found here at Great Chicago Italian Recipes.  I figure if you’re going to make Italian bread, you need to ask an Italian how to do it.  This recipe was actually great.  The only things I’d like to add are that before you bake the bread you should whisk an egg white and 1 Tblsp. of water and brush it over the dough, and to follow these little tricks that I wrote about here (that’s right, you smart-ass loyals from merrywifeofcanon….I’ve been cheating on you with another blog and I didn’t tell you about it!)  The thing is, bread can be really tricky but the reward of warm fresh bread is so worth the effort.  But it does take some practice.  I’ve made loaves that resembled bricks more than bread.

0051

Anyhow, here’s the fresh Italian bread.  It turned out great.  Now to make it Garlic Bread Isplit it in half horizontally and cut slices.  I then drizzled extra virgin olive oil over the slices and placed them 3-inches away from the broiler and let them toast.  Keep an eye on them because it goes fast.  When the slices are toasted and golden, pull them out and, while the are still hot, rub a peeled garlic clove on the tops.

Garlic Bread

This is the best way to make garlic bread.  The garlic melts on the hot bread and the aroma and taste of garlic is fresh and much better than any prepared spread or garlic powder.  And it’s easy.  If you were to use store-bought Italian bread, you’ve got a quick garlic bread.

Now, let’s talk about the main dish.  The first thing to do is get out a dutch oven and fill it with water and set it to boil.  Always use a big pot to make pasta so it can swim around and cook better.

Olive Oil and Salt

When the water starts to boil, add a good handful of salt to the water and a Tblsp. or two of olive oil.  The salt is to season the pasta and the olive oil keeps it from sticking together and clumping.  Get that water going before you start on your sauce.  Your sauce will be done before your pasta.

For tonight’s pasta I used ground turkey for the meat.  It’s heart healthy and contains less fat.  However, ground turkey can tend to taste very flat (not that it really matters in this case as it is simply a part of a flavorful sauce) and the best thing that I know of to give the meat a little extra taste is 1 Tblsp. of Worcestershire Sauce for every pound of meat.  It gives the meat a little depth of taste that otherwise wouldn’t be present.  Get that turkey in a skillet and start browning it.  Add the Worcestershire Sauce and salt and pepper to taste.

Canned Tomato Sauce

The base of this sauce is simple canned tomato sauce.  I used to use the brand name stuff in a jar until I realized the versatility of canned tomato sauce.  I use it in braising liquids, sauces and soups.  The best part is that I got these cans on sale for $0.88 a can.  You can’t beat that.  Just dump those two cans into the skillet with the browned turkey (if there’s a lot of liquid in the skillet, drain it off before adding the tomato sauce.)

Meat Sauce Spices

I know that this looks like a lot of spices, but you only use a little bit of each and they all lend something.  1/2 tsp. of red pepper flakes, 1/2 Tblsp. garlic powder, 1/2 Tblsp. onion powder, 1 Tblsp. brown sugar, 1/2 Tblsp. dried parsley flakes, 1/2 Tblsp. dried oregano, 1 tsp. dried basil, and 1/2 tsp. dried thyme.  If any of these look weird to you, it might be the brown sugar.  I know that some people use white granulated sugar in tomato sauces, but I actually hate that taste and prefer brown sugar.  A tomato sauce is a dark taste anyway, so the brown sugar helps with that while cutting the acidic taste of the tomatoes.  Stir the mixture well and cover and let simmer on Medium Low heat until the pasta is cooked.

I know that portioning out pasta can be tricky.  Honestly, I don’t have any witty suggestions for how to accurately portion out pasta.  I’ve done it so many times that I can tell by sight.  I can tell you that a pound of pasta will easily feed four big eaters…I don’t think that helps though.  Just remember that in your hand, the pasta will look like it won’t be quite enough.

The pasta needs to cook for about 8 minutes or so.  Pick a strand out when it starts looking cooked and taste it.  That’s the best way to gauge the done-ness of pasta…take it out and chew on it.  This whole dish will prove to be more successful if you taste it.  This recipe is set to my personal tastes and that may not fit exactly with your personal tastes.  Get a spoon and taste the sauce once it is heated through.  If it’s not quite right, play with the spices and experiment.  That’s a big part of what cooking and creativity in the kitchen is.

Spaghetti with Meat Sauce

But there it is!  A fancy, quick meal that can put the dullness of your day behind you.  This sauce will serve four people, but it makes fantastic leftovers as does the bread.  Just wrap the bread in aluminum foil and throw in in a warm oven to reheat.  Enjoy!

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