Monday, April 13, 2009

Besides Pasta, What is There?

Pasta is so versatile that entire cookbooks have been written on the various ways to cook it. For instance, you can put the following on pasta for incredible eating experiences: (these are not recipes, but if you ask, I will provide. Most of these can be improvised if you have any cooking experience at all.)
1. Olive oil and garlic
2. Frozen peas and onion sauteed with a tiny bit of sugar
3. Basil and parsley pesto
4. Sauteed mushrooms with parsley
5. Sauteed Zucchini with onion and purchased pasta sauce (A&P Masters Choice of course)
6. Swiss chard and mushrooms

Now that you have some idea of the many things you can put ON pasta, know that another grain can be used, maybe without the satisfying quality of pasta, but good tasting in its own way: Polenta.

Polenta is simply cornmeal, but purchasing the box of Italian polenta is better because it tends to be sold as an "instant". The word, "instant" is a bit of a misnomer because it still takes 5 minutes of continuous stirring. Read the directions on the box carefully because Polenta can overcook and become hard in a flash. It can be cooked so that it is the consistency of mashed potatoes or using a TINY BIT more water, the consistency of cream of wheat. I prefer the consistency of mashed potatoes. That way, any of the juices from the veggies loosen up the polenta and it is really good.

I would not, under any circumstances, ever purchase the cooked polenta sold in the shape of a sausage preserved forever in a plastic casing sitting on the grocery shelf. I bought one once and threw it out at first taste.

ZUCCHINI AND ONION WITH A&P MARINARA SAUCE
olive oil-you can use from as little as 1 tablespoon to 1/4 cup (4 tablespoons) if you use less, make sure the heat is low to give the moisture from the vegetables time seep out.
garlic 3 or 4 cloves smashed
1 onion sliced thin
4 fresh zucchini sliced into thin rounds
1 jar of marinara sauce
bay leaf

Heat a deep frying pan and put in the oil and the garlic. Heat for a bit, but do not let the garlic brown.
Add the onions and cook until wilted.
Add the zucchini and cook for about 5 minutes.
Add the marinara sauce with a bay leaf and cook for about 15 minutes until zucchini is completely wilted and translucent. The sauce will also be a little thicker.
Put over pasta or polenta or even brown rice.

3 comments:

  1. the peas and onions pasta sounds delicious, but then, you know how i love peas!

    i like to make a pesto-ish sauce of sundried tomatoes, hot pepper flakes, a bit of oil, basil, garlic, and whatever raw nuts i have on hand - last time i used cashews. i blend it up, put it in a skillet with cooked fusilli, and sautee for a minute to blend the flavors and coat the pasta (it gets all in between the ridges, which is why i use fusilli). bet it would be yummy stirred into polenta.

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  2. oh that sounds delicious! Do you have a food processor?

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  3. kind of; my stick blender has a food processor attachment, but it doesn't work well at all. i just use the main blender attachment. it's a cuisinart and works well enough for this.

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