Hartford Courant

Meet your new favorite weeknight pasta

- By Amelia Rampe Thekitchn.com

Sugo all’amatrician­a (sauce Amatrician­a) is a classic Roman tomato-based sauce that includes guanciale (cured pork jowl) and Pecorino Romano cheese.

The guanciale is cooked until crisp, and the rendered fat helps create the delicious porky flavor base of the sauce. The salty Pecorino Romano cheese adds flavor and creaminess.

What sets this sauce apart from some other traditiona­l red sauces is that the tomatoes are very lightly cooked, which makes the tomato flavor lighter and fresher than a long-stewed tomato sauce.

In this recipe, I stay (mostly) true to the original by keeping both ingredient­s and cook time minimal.

I also reached out to senior contributi­ng food editor Sheela Prakash, our resident Mediterran­ean expert, for advice. She told me that she had a “killer Amatrician­a” at Evan Funke’s Felix Trattoria in Los Angeles.

She said his version was very pork-forward and served with rigatoni. I kept that in mind when developing this recipe.

I made the recipe a few times, each time with varying amounts of guanciale. For my taste buds, the version that reigned supreme was the one with the most guanciale. Not only was the sauce delicious, but it also had the exact right amount of guanciale pieces to chew on.

The best part about this sauce — besides the way it tastes — is how quickly the whole meal comes together. Big flavor in under 30 minutes? Count me in!

Amatrician­a gets its name from Amatrice, the town about a two-hour drive east of Rome where this sauce originated. Original iterations of the sauce, known as pasta alla gricia, didn’t include tomato.

This “white” version of Amatrician­a is said to get its name from the Italian word gricio, an early Roman word for bread-makers and sellers of other basic food staples. Pasta alla gricia is also considered to be the predecesso­r to what we know today as carbonara.

The Amatrice version of Amatrician­a is served with spaghetti. When the sauce made its way to Roma, bucatini was swapped in.

Amatrician­a essentials

The guanciale: You can’t have Amatrician­a without guanciale. The fat of the guanciale is the base of the sauce. Guanicale is cured with salt and spices, and some have more spices rubbed on the exterior than others.

If possible, choose a guanciale that has a lesser amount of spices. Any guanciale will do — just know that if you have a guanciale with more spices on the exterior, those spices will season the sauce.

If you can’t find guanciale, some recipes recommend swapping in pancetta. The dish will still be delicious, but know you won’t be making true Amatrician­a.

Trim the guanciale into lardons, and cook until the meat is crisp and the fat has rendered. The fat is whisked into the tomato sauce, which gives the sauce its signature porky flavor.

The tomatoes: I call for crushed or diced canned tomatoes in this recipe, but you can also use passata. Barely cook the sauce to keep the flavors fresh and light.

The pasta: Original iterations of the sauce used spaghetti. Bucatini came on to the scene after the sauce

made its way to Rome. If you travel to Rome today, you’ll likely find it served with bucatini. Nowadays, rigatoni is also frequently used.

The cheese: Pecorino Romano is a salty dry cheese used in this sauce. If you can’t find it, you can substitute for Parmesan — but, again, it won’t be true Amatrician­a.

A little something extra: True Amatrician­a doesn’t include garlic or oregano, but in this recipe, I add a couple cloves of crushed garlic and a large sprig of marjoram to add another layer of gentle flavor to the sauce. I crush, gently simmer and then remove the aromatics so they don’t overpower the sauce. You can sub the marjoram with oregano or you can omit the garlic and marjoram all together.

 ?? AMELIA RAMPE/THEKITCHN.COM ?? Crisp guanciale and just-cooked tomato sauce star in this classic Roman dish.
AMELIA RAMPE/THEKITCHN.COM Crisp guanciale and just-cooked tomato sauce star in this classic Roman dish.

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