The Capital

A FAMILY FAVORITE

Weeknight pesto pasta with white beans finds freedom in the familiar

- By Yotam Ottolenghi

“What’s for dinner?”

It’s a question we ask ourselves (or is asked of us) every day. The intonation varies. Some days, it’s energized anticipati­on: “What’s for dinner?! The world is our oyster: Where shall we go?”

Other days, it’s a bit less of an exclamatio­n, and more a case of standing in front of the fridge and wondering, “What on earth is for dinner?”

For all the ways we could go with every meal (and for all the cookbooks encouragin­g us to experiment), it’s very easy to get stuck in a kitchen rut. Everyone’s rut — or routine — looks different. For my part, there are 10 meals in fairly constant rotation at home. New meals are tried, of course, but we as a family largely default to the dishes that can be made with half an eye on something else and that, crucially, get everyone happily and effectivel­y fed.

There’s a tendency to be a bit down on ourselves for this approach to cooking and eating. My thinking, though, is the opposite. I’ve always been a huge believer in the paradoxica­l freedom that results from imposing structure. Rather than seeing it as a limitation, I think there’s a huge release in having this routine, this template — this “rut” — as a firm starting point.

And so it is with our time-honored classic: the tried-and-tested-and-much-loved pesto pasta. It is precisely because dried pasta is such a kitchen staple we can cook pretty much blindfolde­d that we should have the confidence to play around.

We know the pasta is going to be robust enough to handle, say, a can of white beans added to the pot. We know that white beans love thyme, so this hardy herb can follow in without anything going wrong. Have a can of anchovies or some cubes of pancetta you want to add? Go for it! As for cheese, so long as it is firm enough to grate, you can experiment with all sorts other than Parmesan without the whole thing falling apart.

So, too, with the pesto we’ve made so many times. The longer we’ve been in the so-called rut, the more confidence we should have to know that so many things can be used in place of the basil. Arugula leaves and parsley, as here; kale or watercress both work well. Almonds or other nuts work in place of the pine nuts. And so on.

Instead of seeing the dishes in your repertoire as limitation­s, see them as freedoms: They’re the ones you can improvise on without judgment, the ones you can play around with without having to try too hard. That, my friends, is what’s for dinner.

 ?? ?? Arugula stars in this pesto, but kale or watercress could also step in.
Arugula stars in this pesto, but kale or watercress could also step in.
 ?? CHRISTOPHE­R SIMPSON /THE NEW YORK TIMES PHOTOS ??
CHRISTOPHE­R SIMPSON /THE NEW YORK TIMES PHOTOS

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