The Day

TikTok’s viral baked feta pasta is worth the hype

- By AARON HUTCHERSON

My initial sentiment toward viral food moments tends to fall between immense skepticism (the tortilla “hack”) and downright disdain (mermaid toast). The latest trend to hit the social media airwaves, baked feta pasta, is an outlier in that I was a believer from the jump. It’s a low-effort recipe for pasta with tomatoes and cheese — what’s not to love?

Though Tiiu Piret posted a version of the dish on her blog in February 2018, fellow Finnish blogger Jenni Hayrinen is credited with making uunifetapa­sta (Finnish for “oven-baked feta pasta”) go viral in her country after posting her simplified version a year later. “The stores actually ran out of feta cheese here,” Hayrinen told Today.

The baked feta pasta phenomenon came stateside once MacKenzie Smith, the blogger behind Grilled Cheese Social, posted a video to her TikTok of yet another rendition at the end of January (though she posted it to her blog in June 2019). Smith’s single video has now gained nearly 3 million views as of the writing of this article, with the #bakedfetap­asta hashtag collective­ly amassing 52 million views and counting on TikTok.

The premise is simple: Toss a block of feta, tomatoes and a bunch of olive oil together in a pan, and throw it in the oven until softened, before mixing it all together with pasta and fresh basil. There are minor difference­s based on whose recipe you choose to follow. Hayrinen’s version calls for the inclusion of a fresh chile pepper, while Smith opts for more pantry-friendly crushed red pepper flakes. Other difference­s arise with the garlic (roasted in large chunks with the rest of the sauce ingredient­s or minced and added fresh at the end) and basil (stirred into the hot pasta and allowed to wilt or carefully placed on top of the pasta just before serving). Whichever path one chooses to take, the destinatio­n is bound to be delicious.

The one aspect of this dish that initially gave me pause was the tomatoes, given the time of year. On the one hand, I prefer fresh tomatoes during the summer when they’re at their peak, but on the other, I don’t think many people will notice much of a difference in the taste of this overall recipe given the assertiven­ess of the feta. (And only now am I realizing that I grabbed grape instead of the prescribed cherry tomatoes when testing this recipe. Some say cherry tomatoes are sweeter and juicier than their grape counter

parts, but I don’t think it makes much of a difference, especially when considerin­g one out-of-season, mass-produced variety versus another.)

Some critics of the recipe can’t get over the perceived grittiness and brokenness of the sauce. However, that’s solved by using the right cheese — Greek feta cheese, which is made from at least 70 percent sheep’s milk, has a creamier texture than feta-style cheese made from cow’s milk — and mixing in some of the pasta water at the end to help bind it all together.

While some written blog posts mention these details, many of the social videos I’ve seen do not, giving those prone to dismiss the dish altogether reason to do so. Don’t blame the baked feta pasta, blame the social media users who don’t — and sometimes can’t, given the constraint­s of the medium — include all of the specifics in a single TikTok video. TL;DR — the baked feta pasta is good. How good? My roommate made a version of this recipe (with zucchini noodles in lieu of wheat pasta) a few days ago before I even knew I would be covering the topic for The Washington Post and was utterly raving about how much she loved it. “It’s so easy even my 10-year-old nephew could make it,” she says. “I’ll definitely be making it again.”

 ?? WASHINGTON POST/AARON HUTCHERSON ?? A recipe for pasta with a baked feta and tomato sauce goes viral on social media.
WASHINGTON POST/AARON HUTCHERSON A recipe for pasta with a baked feta and tomato sauce goes viral on social media.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States