Sunday, December 14, 2008

Boiling to Death (in December)

I KNOW I SHOULDN'T BE COMPLAINING ABOUT BEING TOO HOT, not at this time of year, but honestly: some berk has put the central heating to such a furnace-like high, I frequently wake in the night thinking I've got childhood scarlet fever back. In the day I sweat so heavily it comes out in conkers.

Anyway I've a recipe here. Only really bad cooks will want to take advice from it. But here is how you do an elementary pasta dish.

The first thing to note is that the times given on cooking instructions for pasta tend, if anything, to be too long, so bear that in mind or else you'll risk overcooking your pasta to a floppy wet goo. Or a "paste", as the word originally means.

Basically bring a load of pasta to the boil. Measure out dry portions in bowls then you won't get sizes terminally wrong like so many seem to do...

Meanwhile, fry an onion (ideally in a wok), then fry mushrooms, anything else you wish to, sweetcorn from a tin. Add a can of chopped tomatoes. These you flash-fry (with the tomatoes) so hot you'd believe you were burning them. Sizzling away at them reduces the water-content. Delia Smith says that to make professional-style pasta sauces you need to simmer tomatoes on a low heat for hours on end to reduce them to a concentrated pulp. If you just oversizzle for a few minutes you'll begin to achieve this effect. Add herbs (esp. oregano that the police thought was cannabis last time they stopped me). When the pasta's done, drain then throw into the wok and stir all over. Ensure the seasoning's right (add pepper). Dole out half into a bowl. Add grated cheese + parmesan. Mix. Dole out more. Add cheese again. Mix. Ta-daa you're ready!

And if you really needed my instructions to achieve something like that I worry for you...

10 comments:

  1. Hey Gled. :-) Might have to try some of your receipes once I get some time off. Cheers.

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  2. On my last visit back there I noticed everyone's home seemed uncomfortably warm and all wore summer clothes in the middle of winter *!*

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  3. Getting pulled over for oregano, huh? You're funny!

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  4. At least you HAVE central heating...

    I'm writing this in my jacket, I'm that cold..

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  5. I usually use ragu and boil and drain my pasta before adding the sauce.

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  6. Gled, you should be able to control the temperature of your central heating in your room, you should be able to turn the knob, if it's anything like the one we had in Amsterdam.

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  7. Whitenoise: be my guest! Pls don't complain tho when you have to take time off work for dysentry...

    Bimbimbie: I came back from India in January: our London townhouse was HOTTER than Goa or Chennai!!!

    Geri:
    funny but true!! ;->...

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  8. Crushed: last place was so shiversome I woke up like a block of ice even in AUGUST...

    Janice: yeah man that's what I do too.. Never cook the pasta any way xcept by boiling... other stuff comes later... hope I made that clear: I don't fry dry pasta twirls..(!!!)

    Nicole: I have to use a dead metal lever on side of radiator that you only get a "result" from after 24 hours of extra boiling/shivering. Somebody downstairs has the ultimate controls that are taken out of my hands....

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  9. If you're not sure whether you're pasta's al dente or not, pick a piece out of the pan and throw it against the tiles in your kitchen (or the fridge) if it sticks, it's done. Clearly doesn't work for rigatoni, gnocchi or spirali hehe . Oh and at least you have 'controls'. We don't have air con so . . .it's just hot!

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  10. I always do al dente I hate overcooked esp with tortelloni or worse ravioli it totally ruins it letting in volcanically hot scalding water which does not go nicely on the old tastebuds...

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