Las Vegas Review-Journal

This quite possibly may be your new favorite pasta

- By Alison Roman New York Times News Service

Choosing a favorite pasta is like choosing a favorite outfit: An obviously impossible task, and yet there are those you keep coming back to, riffing on endlessly until you’re sure you’ve exhausted all combinatio­ns, then still finding more to love. For me, that pasta is this briny, tomatoey, almost stewlike seafood number. (Please don’t ask me to choose a favorite outfit.)

I always start with a basic, lighter-than-usual tomato sauce, using canned, peeled tomatoes and thick slices of garlic toasted in olive oil. I add a few hunks of mild, firm fleshed fish like cod, halibut or swordfish, to gently poach in the brothy tomatoes, and a few unpeeled shrimp, their shells flavoring everything in the pot. (If you prefer shrimp that’s already peeled, that’s OK.) After everything mingles together for a few minutes, it becomes the sauce dreams are made of, born to coat fat tubes or thin strands of al dente pasta.

The rest depends on my mood and on the type of seafood available to me when the craving strikes, which is … well, often. I’ve made versions featuring fresh squid, cut into bite-size rings and simmered in the sauce; oily sardines seared on the side and served on top; and whole tins of salty anchovies melted into olive oil alongside a healthy pinch of chile flakes.

The beauty of this method of preparing seafood, other than the obvious (there is pasta involved), is that it’s nearly impossible to overcook, dry out or — everyone’s worst fish-based fear — get stuck to the pan.

The seafood also subtly flavors the sauce, making it taste far more complex than it ought to considerin­g the number of ingredient­s you’re using. Think of it as a very casual, one-pot bouillabai­sse with half the steps and done in a fraction of the time, and where just about any seafood is welcome.

Toss in a last-minute handful of crushed green olives, a smattering of parsley leaves and a drizzle of nice olive oil, and you’re in business. If you were feeling especially in need of extra carbs (and who isn’t, really?), this is the exact dish you’d want to serve with toasted garlic bread on the side. Use it to soak up any extra sauce the rigatoni didn’t get to while you polish off those shrimp, and think about how nice it is to have found your new favorite pasta.

Seafood pasta with tomato and crushed olives Yield: Total time:

4 servings

35 minutes

• 8 oz rigatoni or another tubeshaped pasta

• Kosher salt

• 3 tbsp olive oil, plus more for drizzling

• 4 garlic cloves, sliced

• Pinch of red pepper flakes (optional)

• 1 (28 oz) can whole San Marzano tomatoes, crushed by hand

• 1/2 lb mussels or clams (optional)

• 1 lb firm-fleshed white fish, such as cod, halibut, swordfish, hake or flounder, cut into 2-inch pieces • 1/2 pound shrimp, peeled and deveined if you like

• 3/4 cup Castelvetr­ano or other green olives, pitted and crushed • 1/2 cup parsley, tender leaves and stems, chopped

Cook pasta in a large pot of boiling salted water. Once it reaches al dente, drain and set aside while you finish the sauce.

Meanwhile, heat olive oil in a heavy-bottomed Dutch oven over medium heat. Add garlic and season with salt. Cook, stirring occasional­ly, until garlic is lightly browned and toasted around the edges, about 2 minutes. Add red pepper flakes, if using.

Add tomatoes and then fill the empty can about 3/4 of the way up with water. Swirl the can to loosen the tomatoey bits left behind and add that to the pot. Season with salt, bring to a simmer and cook, stirring occasional­ly, until sauce has thickened slightly (it should still look quite brothy), 10 to 15 minutes.

Add the mussels or clams to the sauce, if using, along with the fish, and season again with salt. Let the seafood settle into the brothy tomato sauce and gently swirl the pot, encouragin­g the seafood to cook evenly. Cook a minute or two, then add the shrimp, swirling the skillet again. Cook until all the seafood is just cooked through and the mussels or clams have opened, another 3 to5minutes.

Add the pasta and very gently toss to coat, cooking another 1 to 2 minutes, just to let the flavors meld. Add olives and remove from heat.

Divide among bowls, top with parsley and drizzle with olive oil before serving.

Directions: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6.

 ?? PHOTOS BY MICHAEL GRAYDON AND NIKOLE HERRIOTT / THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Think of the sauce for Alison Roman’s seafood pasta as a casual, one-pot bouillabai­sse, infinitely riffable and ready in a fraction of the time. Fat tube pasta, such as paccheri or rigatoni, are great for catching every bit of sauce in this versatile recipe.
PHOTOS BY MICHAEL GRAYDON AND NIKOLE HERRIOTT / THE NEW YORK TIMES Think of the sauce for Alison Roman’s seafood pasta as a casual, one-pot bouillabai­sse, infinitely riffable and ready in a fraction of the time. Fat tube pasta, such as paccheri or rigatoni, are great for catching every bit of sauce in this versatile recipe.
 ??  ?? Thick slices of toasted garlic f lavor the sauce.
Thick slices of toasted garlic f lavor the sauce.
 ??  ?? The sauce in this recipe will be brothier than a tomato sauce.
The sauce in this recipe will be brothier than a tomato sauce.

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