Broccolette Ragout: a Vegetarian Dream

Ragout di Broccoletti Close Up

Having a pescatarian in the house forces you to become creative. Good thing I love cooking and experimenting with ingredients. The following is a simplified version of a fairly popular Italian recipe.

Ingredients:

1 bag of Broccolette from Costco (roughly 2 lbs.)

1 clove of garlic

salt

A non specified amount of extra virgin olive oil (as established in previous posts, I’m Italian)

To accompany the ragout you’ll need 1 bag of pasta, 450 grams, of your choice, cooked al dente.

How to prepare the ragout:

Pour in a pan as much extra virgin olive oil as you like—this is a safe place, we don’t judge. Cut the clove of garlic in small pieces and let it cook in the oil until golden brown, then add the broccolette and the salt. Let them cook on the stove at medium heat until they are soft. Purée the broccolette by smashing them with a fork. Put aside until the pasta is ready and then  combine the ragout with the pasta in a big bowl. Spicy it up with pepper flakes if you like or parmesan cheese.  Enjoy.

P.S.

Broccolette pasta is one of the few pasta dishes that can be served , reheated, the day after.

Broccolette Ragout: a Vegetarian Dream

Summer Vegetarian Ragout (and a small rant about garlic)

Ragout Vegetariano

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

It’s the end of summer, but Redmond is still warm enough and dry enough to ask for light cooking.

What I had in the pantry:

6 Small zucchini

2 Cups of cherry tomatoes

A handful of basil leaves (I have a big hand—just for reference)

A clove of garlic

Extra virgin olive oil (I won’t even try to measure this—I’m Italian)

habanero salt

Pasta*

How I made the vegetarian ragout:

I cut the clove of garlic in small pieces, very small pieces. Despite popular belief, Italians hate the very concept of a chunk of garlic swimming in plain sight in their food. We either euthanize the said smelly bulb of the lily family by chopping it to oblivion, or we removed it from the pan once it has aromatized the cooking oil. For this recipe, I golden-browned the pieces of garlic in several tablespoons of extra virgin olive oil—as I previously said in another post, don’t judge . I shredded the zucchini with a grater, huge waste of time doing it by hand—if you have a machine with the shredder blade, use it—and I added them to the garlic. Salted the vegetables with habanero salt and let it cook. Meanwhile, I cut the cherry tomatoes in two/three parts and I chopped the basil leaves. Once the zucchini were thoroughly cooked, I turned off the heat and added the tomatoes and basil. I cooked the pasta al dente, one or two minutes less than whatever the instructions on the box say, and immediately dressed the pasta with the sauce. I’m not ashamed to say at least another tablespoon of extra virgin olive oil, of the hot spiced variety, was poured over the vegetable ragout before I served the pasta on the table. Everybody loved it, even the carnivores.

*Gluten-free pasta can be used

Summer Vegetarian Ragout (and a small rant about garlic)