The Edge Singapore

Pasta perfect

Yotam Ottolenghi reinvents and remasters mac and cheese

- BY KATE KRADER Bloomberg

Pasta is a food that makes most people look backward. The best-loved versions are those made in the past, by someone’s grandmothe­r or great aunt. No one likes to see the words “new” and “improved” in front of “mac and cheese”.

It is a brave chef who decides to upgrade a classic pasta.

That is where Yotam Ottolenghi comes in. The revered restaurate­ur and food writer has a singular way of picking up a treasured dish and seeing an opportunit­y to insert an unlikely flavour or two without disturbing the food’s integrity. In his most recent cookbook, Ottolenghi Flavor, the Israeli-born cook and his test kitchen assistant Ixta Belfrage redefined cacio e pepe by adding a hefty sprinkling of za’atar. The tangy mix of dried herbs and spices, invariably including thyme, oregano, sumac and sesame seeds (recipes vary around the Middle East), is one of the chef’s signature flavouring­s. The cheesy, buttery pasta instantly became livelier.

“It was a scary point, because it’s a recipe that already works,” said Ottolenghi at the time. “How do you change a perfect dish?”

The question arises again in his new book, Ottolenghi Test Kitchen: Shelf Love: Recipes to Unlock the Secrets of Your Pantry, Fridge and Freezer by Noor Murad and Ottolenghi (pictured). In it, the pair take on another classic (many would say perfect) pasta: mac and cheese.

The book, which highlights the behind-the-scenes work at the Ottolenghi Test Kitchen, came into focus during the pandemic. “The first lockdown of 2020 is what sparked the narrative for Shelf Love, where we were all raiding our kitchens to create dishes using humble ingredient­s but with the wow factor that we provide,” said Ottolenghi in an email.

The volume comes in soft cover, stocked like a trusty handbook with how-to pictures. It is divided into the areas of the kitchen we have come to know far too well: pantry, refrigerat­or and freezer. There are captivatin­g recipes for confit tandoori chickpeas and sweet potato shakshuka with Sriracha butter.

But for those of us who are drawn like a magnet to an Ottolenghi pasta recipe, the first order of business is his M.E. (Middle

Eastern) mac and cheese with za’atar pesto.

The genius of the recipe starts in Step 1, when the pasta cooks in milk — which becomes the sauce. That trick obviates the need to drain the fusilli and add flour, which can render the dish bland. The pasta’s starch thickens the milk, and the addition of feta and cheddar enriches it even further. But what really enhances the dish is a cilantro lemon pesto spiked with — you

guessed it — za’atar. The spice mix does a heroic job of balancing the richness of the pasta.

Murad, who is half-English and half-Middle Eastern, says there is always room for classic mac and cheese. But the Middle Eastern flair delivered by the za’atar, feta, cumin and fried onions that garnish the dish are, for her, “what mac and cheese was missing all along”. —

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