The Denver Post

Creamy Garlic Pasta With Greens

- By Emily Weinstein

I’ve recently returned from spring break, where I scrounged a few quiet minutes to lie down poolside and devour “The Upstairs Delicatess­en,” by Dwight Garner, a book critic here at The New York Times and a known eater of exceptiona­l taste. The subtitle of this memoir: “On Eating, Reading, Reading About Eating, and Eating While Reading.”

In the book, Dwight refers to “pasta nada,” which is what his father-in-law, an accomplish­ed chef, called pasta dishes that were made on the fly from whatever was in the house. Pasta nada! A perfect phrase, and one of my preferred ways to feed myself. I emailed Dwight to ask him to elaborate on what pasta nada looks like in his kitchen. “The only requiremen­t is that it be simple,” he replied:

One of our standbys is sage with toasted walnuts that are chopped somewhat finely. We always have a sage plant or two to raid, so this is easy. And it’s bliss. If you keep the basic ingredient­s for puttanesca (tuna, capers, anchovies, black olives, garlic, etc.) around, you can generally omit any two or three of them, add parsley and have good nada. Small leftover chunks of mozzarella mix well with cherry tomatoes or basil or both. Some nights, for us, dinner is just pasta with parsley and red pepper flakes and a mix of butter and olive oil. And decent bread and a glass of red wine.

We’ve got many nada-ish pastas on NYT Cooking, though it seems that a true nada would regard these recipes as broadstrok­es maps and then off-road at the first turn. I’ve included one such pasta below, along with four other recipes I feel are in the nada spirit: flexible and made with few ingredient­s, the kinds you might keep stocked in the fridge, pantry or freezer.

In this 20-minute weeknight pasta, one of the tastiest, most versatile sauces, aioli (or garlic mayonnaise) is dolloped over a simple bowl of spaghetti tossed

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 ?? CRAIG LEE — THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? More-vegetable-than-egg frittata. It’s a Mark Bittman recipe that doubles as a fridge-cleaner — put whatever you want in it.
CRAIG LEE — THE NEW YORK TIMES More-vegetable-than-egg frittata. It’s a Mark Bittman recipe that doubles as a fridge-cleaner — put whatever you want in it.

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