Pappardelle Pasta with turkey meatballs, tomato sauce, and cheese-crumb topping. I made the meatballs from scratch, and cooked the sauce with onions and garlic. |
Monday we ate pancakes for dinner and I posted my simple all-purpose pancake recipe. Tuesday we ate pasta for dinner, and I was thinking about the huge number of pasta recipes that even a modest American cook would potentially follow. Spaghetti and meatballs -- baked with cheese, as in the photo or simply tossed together. Red lasagne. Pumpkin lasagne. Linguini with oil and garlic. Macaroni with home-made cheese sauce or even something as simple as Kraft Dinner. Lots more.
The Italians have so many types of pasta that there's a whole Encyclopedia of Pasta! From Abbotta Pezziende to Zizziridd' and Zugolotti and Zumari, pasta scholar Oretta Zanini de Vita documents 310 varieties of pasta from all over Italy. Some pasta shapes were native to small villages where tradition has died out and the pastas are no longer made. My Pappardelle (which in fact are from Trader Joe's) are number 174. They are identified as native to northern and central Italy, where they in fact figure in somewhat different preparations than the one I did. The subtleties of this collection are overwhelming.
The first two entries from the Encyclopedia of Pasta. |
I love pasta far more than I should. And since Rick burns carbs like an arsonist burns wood, we have it more than I should. So always looking for ways to change it up. This is a great post!
ReplyDeleteLove pasta! Truly never met a pasta dish I didn't like. And you're right -- so many different shapes of pasta. And so little time -- I guess I should get busy and try them all. :-)
ReplyDeleteI am a huge fan of pasta and could eat it far more often than we do. It's so versatile!
ReplyDeleteFunny how I seem to get stuck on the same handful of shapes ... I should expand my horizons!
ReplyDeleteThere is nothing more satifying than spaghetti and meatballs.
ReplyDeleteSo much pasta, so little time! Cheers from cArole's Chatter
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