Hartford Courant

Ricotta is the star in easy pasta dish

- By Melissa Clark

One of the tastiest things I ate this year was stillwarm ricotta, just off the fire, at a farm in Sicily.

I scooped some of the white, wobbly mass onto my plate, seasoned it with coarse salt and used a spoon to catch every drop, restrainin­g myself from licking the plate.

That ethereal ricotta also appeared in the next course as a pasta topping. It was mixed with some starchy cooking water to create a brothy, creamy sauce that was enriched with olive oil, seasoned with Parmesan and garnished with a mound of wild herbs just plucked from the garden.

Meals like this are impossible to replicate: a sublime vacation moment that can’t be transferre­d back to everyday life. But that doesn’t mean I can’t make a soupy pasta with fresh ricotta and lots of herbs, and enjoy it at home.

One thing I won’t be able to do, though, is use stillwarm ricotta straight from a farm. But tubs of milky fresh ricotta are available at my local supermarke­t, and those get the job done beautifull­y.

This is one of those extremely simple recipes with only a few ingredient­s and not much by way of technique, so it’s worth your while to seek out the good stuff here — it should say “fresh” on the label and will probably be more expensive than standard ricotta. If you cook this with lackluster ricotta and indifferen­t olive oil, you probably won’t be very impressed with the result. But if you use the milkiest, silkiest ricotta you can get and break out an olive oil with personalit­y and zip, you’ll end up with a memorable dinner that’s so easy it practicall­y makes itself.

Also, don’t stint on the herbs; try to use at least three kinds for the most complex result. Soft herbs with floppy leaves — parsley, basil, cilantro, mint, dill, chives, fennel fronds, lovage, even celery leaves — work well and won’t leave you chewing on twiggy stems. But if you want to use thyme, rosemary or marjoram in addition, you can do so in small amounts (make sure to pick the leaves off their branches first).

Finally, shower everything with loads of coarsely ground black pepper.

It’s a bracing last touch, and a spicy contrast to all the sweet, supple flavors already in your bowl.

 ?? ?? This pasta dish is one of those extremely simple recipes with only a few ingredient­s and not much by way of technique, so it’s worth your while to seek out the good stuff here.
This pasta dish is one of those extremely simple recipes with only a few ingredient­s and not much by way of technique, so it’s worth your while to seek out the good stuff here.
 ?? RYAN LIEBE/THE NEW YORK TIMES PHOTOS ?? Topped with milky ricotta, loads of herbs and bracing black pepper, this easy weeknight dish is a vacation in a bowl.
RYAN LIEBE/THE NEW YORK TIMES PHOTOS Topped with milky ricotta, loads of herbs and bracing black pepper, this easy weeknight dish is a vacation in a bowl.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States