Cooking with Sakuya: Aglio e OliosteemCreated with Sketch.

in #food7 years ago

Are you hungry, lazy, and can't cook to save your life? You could order pizza again, add hot water to yet another cup of instant noodles; or you could just follow this recipe to exchange 15 minutes of your life for a filled tummy with 50% less self-loathing!

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I caved in to my stomach and settled with this shot in my kitchen.

'Aglio e Olio' may sound like a made up word, but it's actually a real word from a made up language known as Italian. All it means is spaghetti with garlic and oil, but that doesn't sound as fancy to you so I'll stop calling it that now.

I know cooking is intimidating to a lot of people, but this dish is so simple anyone can do it. Tons of other recipes claim this, so feel free to leave an angry comment here if you found it was somehow the exact opposite of cheap, easy & delicious.

What you'll need:

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Good olive oil is where most of your budget should go to.

For two people, or one very hungry person.

Core ingredients:

  • Salt to taste
  • 250 Grams of pasta
  • 1/2 Bulb of garlic
  • 1/2 Cup of extra virgin/regular olive oil

Optional, but I'll make fun of you if not used:

  • 1/2 Cup of grated parmigiano-reggiano (or any good cheese)
  • 1/2 Of a lemon's juice
  • A few sprigs of parsley
  • Chili/Pepper flakes

You like roasted tomatoes:

  • 125 Grams of cherry tomatoes

You don't like roasted tomatoes:
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Preperation

This might look like a ton of garlic, but we're going to cut and cook them in a way that infuses most of its flavour into the oil. Use less if you're afraid, but I think you'll regret it.

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Do not chop or mince these! We want to slice them thinly across to make them into 'garlic chips'. You don't have to be precise, but try to keep them uniform so they finish browning at roughly the same time.

Next, rinse the tomatoes and cut them however you want, I just halved them down the middle. We're also going to salt and pepper them before we wring out the pan.
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Let's cook

Now we're going to set a pot of boiling water for our pasta, while we roast our tomatoes. Skip straight to the toasting of garlic if you don't have the tomatoes, but you'll obviously still need to heat a pot of water. What's great about this dish is that if timed right, the pasta will be finished cooking the moment we're done with the 'sauce'. These both take about the same duration and thus, can be done side by side.

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Salt the water generously!

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Heat a bit of regular olive oil to medium-high heat. Then, add your tomatoes and cook them for 3 to 4 minutes or until they begin to blister. I usually let them go a bit longer until their skin is smoky and charred but that's my personal preference; cook them however you like!

Remove and reserve them for later while we add our garlic and oil to the same pan we used. Regardless of whether you use regular or extra virgin olive oil, we want to toast these on medium low heat. At the same time, don't forget to start cooking your pasta in your now hot and ready pot.

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Make sure to give your pasta a good stir.

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Be patient. We don't want to burn these, we don't want to fry them; we want to slowly bake every ounce of garlicky goodness into our oil. Once they start bubbling a little, toss in your red chili/pepper flakes.

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These are are really mild, I can't handle spicy stuff either so trust me on this one.

The box on my pasta says 8 minutes, so we're going to undercook it by a minute to make it 'al dente'. This means I'll take them out after 7 minutes so the pasta finshes cooking in the sauce instead of being overcooked or soggy when we serve them.

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Don't rinse your pasta at any point, lest you err the wrath of an angry Italian.

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Laugh at my pasta scoop all you want, its teeth are actually really helpful with picking spare strands of noodles up. Anyway, regardless of whether you have this amazing tool, we're going to drain our pasta and more importantly; save a 1/4 cup of this starchy pasta water we have.

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Don't toss it into the sink just yet!

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I also put in a bit of some dried herb I found lying around

Just on time, 6 minutes later our garlic is right where we want it to be. Add in the aforementioned pasta water, this will not only give our sauce more cohesion, it'll stop the browning process and prevent our garlic from burning.

Regardless, please be watchful of them; if it's too dark, it starts getting bitter but we also don't want them to be too light. We're looking for a nice golden-brown, which is another reason we kept the heat moderately low.

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Now unanimously dump your pasta in, along with the tomatoes and chopped parsley if you have them. Don't forget to also squeeze in the juice of half a lemon before giving it a good toss.

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You didn't forget the cheese, did you?

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This should go without saying, but taste and adjust for seasoning. Mine was perfect but yours might need another pinch of salt, maybe a bit more acidity from lemon juice or simply more starchy pasta water.

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A nice dash of cayenne for me.

Time to eat

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Here I tried to plate up another nice portion of pasta, before giving up and just eating the rest straight out of the pan. I also somehow ended up making this at 6 in the morning so I'm forced to finish all of this by myself. Hooray!

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Damn, that was good.

If you don't believe me how tasty this is, go eat or make it yourself sometime. It's one of those dishes where every ingredient comes together so perfectly and you're left with a synergized flavour that has you chomping down these carbs like no tomorrow. Despite it's simplistic nature, there's a good reason it's one of the most commonly eaten pastas in Italy.

Thanks for tuning in my friends, I hope you'll give it a try sometime soon. Buon Appetito to every pasta lover out there!

Maybe I'll have another recipe for something else in the future....

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Sort:  

That really looks good, definitely one-up from my usual ramen (hey, at least I get the non-pleb type, spicy).

A well-seasoned aglio &olio is amazing, especially if the cook actually makes it al dente, the minus 1m tip is pure gold.
Reminds me of how you need to pull out a steak way before you might think to get that perfect soft and savory medium rare, because it holds some heat and continues to cook by itself even when out of the fire.
Damn now I'm hungry.

That's a splendid comparison with the steak, and it reminds me of another helpful tip. A good meal of pasta deserves to be eaten piping hot, so try not to serve them up on cold plates from the shelf.

Instead, heat them up by ladling some of the boiling water used into the bowls. When you’re ready to eat, just empty the water and towel-dry the heated dishes before you top the noodles in them. This helps keep it 'alive' before it reaches table guests mouths (who are all busy on their phones) or in this case, allows me to take some pictures first!

look fantastic and I am sure that taste even more fantastic!

Have a lovely day 🍀

@kam.ila

This post gets a 0.03 % upvote thanks to @futasakuya - Hail Eris !

Looks delicious!! Thanks for the detailed play-by-play!

It's my first time making a post like this, I'm glad you think my amateur cooking looks good!

reSteemed .

Lovely article... even if I know the original recipe is much more simple... 3 ingredients... but nice personalization!!

Keep writing such good original articles. Google is happy and going to drive thousands of visitors to your page :-)

That's why I left pretty much everything that wasn't the 3 ingredients in the optional area! That being said, I think stuff like the red chili/pepper flakes adds a nice touch I think most people shouldn't miss out on.

Thank you for compliments though I think your prediction is a bit of a far-stretch haha

thanks for sharing @futasakuy. this can provoke the hunger out of someone. lol. great post

No problem, glad you liked it

Just great, I've been looking for a good recipe just for this dish! Have made my own version but just couldn't get like I've had it in some good restaurants. Thank you!

You're welcome, I hope yours turns out well. It's a very adaptable dish with lots of takes on it, but this is what me and my foodie friends agree on. Something I think people undervalue is using a good block of parmesan reggiano, it just brings so much to pastas in general, especially if you use the portions near the rind.

Jeez, that's a good step by step. Yummy looking stuff!

Thank you for your kind words. I wanted readers to be able to follow through without being overwhelmed with details, so I kept it concise; just like the recipe itself.

Nice job and can't agree more on a good olive oil investment.

Not a wise idea to cheap out on what essentially 'makes or breaks' the dish

I'm italiano! Real aglio e olio recipe doesn't have tomatoes or cheese

Well aware tomatoes are not traditional, which is why I've left them in another section altogether. Despite this not being authentic, I think (without the tomatoes) it stays true to the classic method and doesn't stray far enough to not warrant the name.

It's not like I'm adding cream to Carbonara (which is a horrible sinful act), that would diminish the entire point of even eating/making it!