Title: | How to Make them Goodies |
Notice: | Please Don't Start New Notes for Old Topics! Check 5.* |
Moderator: | FUTURE::DDESMAISONS ec.com::winalski |
Created: | Tue Feb 18 1986 |
Last Modified: | Thu Jun 05 1997 |
Last Successful Update: | Fri Jun 06 1997 |
Number of topics: | 4127 |
Total number of notes: | 31160 |
i have purchased some fresh angel hair pasta and was wondering what i could do with it. i was looking for something like a stir-fry and a wine sauce to place over it but didn't find anything in all my cook- books. does anyone have any ideas? thanks in advance. carlajeanne
T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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2479.1 | Shrimpt and Angel Hair Pasta | NATASH::ANDERSON | Mon Jun 25 1990 11:38 | 9 | |
Hi carlajeanne: I entered my recipe in note 2420.8 - it's so simple to make and I have given the recipe out many times. Hope you give it a try. Marilyn | |||||
2479.2 | a/k/a Capelli D'Angeli | PCOJCT::HUNZEKER | Mon Jun 25 1990 13:31 | 19 | |
James Beard, in *Beard On Pasta* has several recipes -- Angel Hair: o In Pasta Primavera o In Savory Tongue with Fine Noodles o With Spinach-Anchovy Sauce o With Golden Caviar o Souffle' Sunset's *Italian Cook Book* has one for "Angelhair Pasta with Crab" a/k/a "Capelli D'Angeli Con Granchio" These are substantively different from what you described you want, so I didn't transcribe, but can/will if there is interest. Bill | |||||
2479.4 | pesto | SSGBPM::BECKER | Mon Jun 25 1990 15:44 | 3 | |
I like to top it with pesto! Maureen | |||||
2479.5 | Two Requested Plus A Bonus | PCOJCT::HUNZEKER | Mon Jun 25 1990 18:34 | 101 | |
Per your request: From Sunset's Italian Cook Book: ------------------------------- Angel Hair Pasta With Crab Capelli D'Angeli Con Granchio The very names of some pasta are so irresistible that one gives in to them, untasted and unseen. Capelli d'angeli (angel hair) casts such a spell, and in this recipe -- with fresh crab, white wine, lemon, and tomato -- the initial enthusiasm is completely justified. What's more, this lunch or supper dish is quick to cook. 8 ounces packaged capelli d'angeli or capellini Salted water 2 tablespoons butter or margarine 1/4 cup olive or salad oil 1/2 cup sliced green onions 1 clove garlic, minced or pressed 2 medium-sized ripe tomatoes, peeled, seeded, and chopped 1/4 cup dry white wine 1 tablespoon lemon juice 1/2 pound cooked crab, flaked 1/4 cup chopped fresh parsley Salt and pepper Cook pasta in a large kettle of boiling salted water until al dente (1 to 2 minutes for fresh pasta or follow package directions). Drain well and place on a warm platter. Keep warm. Meanwhile, in a wide frying pan over medium heat, place butter and oil. When butter is melted, add green onions, garlic, tomatoes, and wine. Cook, stirring, until mixture boils. Adjust heat so mixture boils gently, and cook for two minutes. Mix in lemon juice, crab, and parsley. Cook, stirring, just until crab is heated through. Season to taste with salt and pepper. Spoon sauce over pasta. Lift and mix pasta gently, then serve. Makes 4 servings. From James Beard's, Beard On Pasta: ---------------------------------- Pasta Primavera In Italian, 'primavera' means 'spring,' and a primavera sauce should be made with the first, tiny vegetables that pop out in the spring. In the winter, of course, you would use the freshest vegetables you could get at that time, such as broccoli, red peppers, and zucchini, but I've suggested a springtime combination that would be just delicious. Just don't be formal about it. Use what you have in the garden or in the refrigerator. You can even cut up a couple of stalks of celery and add them for the bite. 1/2 cup fresh peas 1/2 cup tiny, new beans 1/2 cup sliced stalks thin asparagus 1/2 cup sliced mushrooms 4 tablespoons unsalted butter 1 cup light cream, warmed Lots of freshly ground black pepper 1 pound angel hair, linguine, or even orzo Grated Parmesan cheese [ 4 - 6 servings ] Lightly cook the peas, beans, asparagus, and mushrooms in the butter until everything is crisply tender. Add the cream and pepper and cook down briefly. Cook the pasta, drain it, and toss with the sauce. Sprinkle with lots of grated Parmesan cheese. [ Although you didn't ask for this, I've added it anyway. This loses its 'fish egg taste' upon cooking and is really good. It's quick, also. I've made it with red and black caviars -- whatever I've had on hand when the urge struck -- and never cease to enjoy it! Suggest you give it a try! Bill ] Angel Hair with Golden Caviar This is one of the most elegant dishes in the book, and yet it's made in moments. The golden American caviar has tiny eggs, costs far less than other varieties, and can even be stored in the freezer. It's abso- lutely delicious, and a stunning appetizer. 1/2 pound angel hair pasta 3/4 pound unsalted butter, at room temperature 7 ounces golden caviar 4 thin lemon wedges [ four servings ] Cook and drain the pasta. Put the freshly cooked noodles into a warmed bowl with the butter. Toss well, until all the noodles are coated with butter, and then put a serving of pasta on each plate. Top each with a heaping tablespoon of caviar and a lemon wedge. Each person should squeeze lemon juice over the noodles before he mixes in the caviar. Champagne or iced vodka accompany this admirable. Don't stint on the caviar if possible! | |||||
2479.6 | 2 things we've played with | MAJORS::MANDALINCI | Tue Jun 26 1990 07:53 | 22 | |
I've done 2 favorite things with angle hair pasta. The first being shrimp scampi made with lots of butter and garlic over cooked pasta. The second being a recipe from Spinnazola's "Seafood as We like It". It's seafood over angle hair nests. It starts with lots of heavy cream simmered with onions and then you add raw scallops, simmer until almost cooked then add cooked lobster, cooked shrimp, some cooked crab and steamed julienned carrots, celery and leeks. Serve over the cooked pasta. I've done this a couple times but I haven't perfected it yet. The sauce is extremely light and almost tasteless - the object to let you taste the seafood. I've experimented with adding garlic, grated paremsan both sprinkled on top and also "melted" into the cream. I'm going to keep working on it. Next step is to try altering the veggies in it. Maybe it needs some stronger flavored veggies (but you have to be carefull not to use veggies with a high water content because it will only thin the sauce). By the time I finish with this recipe, it will end up being a seafood primivera!! Andrea | |||||
2479.7 | If you don't like it - change it! | BPOV02::BOOTHROYD | Tue Jun 26 1990 13:27 | 22 | |
try using a shallot instead with a light white wine. for such seafood dishes you might try adding approx. a 1/4 cup of a delicate white wine (remember, one that you would drink not one that you don't care for. it'll ruin the flavor). add freshly ground white pepper to it as well - not pre-ground! i'd stay away from a garlic (shallot is a hybrid of garlic/onion) and onions. i wouldn't add precooked seafood to anything!!! add raw to the dish and make sure that you simmer the dish; not boil it. the flavor is very delicate and you want to keep on that balance. adding romano cheese is too overpowering for that - i'd try a type of flavorful, delicate swiss (i know i keep messing up on this spelling - guyere swiss cheese). add it at the end, while on the plate. in that dish you are trying to compliment the seafood, not the seafood complimenting the vegetables. lightly saute the shallots in butter and maybe a light dash of olive oil before adding the cream. there are alot of ways of changing this dish to fit your specifications!!! /gail | |||||
2479.8 | OOps!!! | BPOV02::BOOTHROYD | Tue Jun 26 1990 13:39 | 5 | |
Oops .... i meant romano AND parmesan. sorry about that! /g. | |||||
2479.9 | Seperate to keep water content low | MAJORS::MANDALINCI | Fri Jun 29 1990 07:58 | 13 | |
The whole point to adding precooked seafood (meaning I caught the lobsters and crabs myself - it does pay to scuba dive and have a lobster license - and steamed them prior to putting them into the pan) is primarily that you cannot get the meat out of the shells raw (or it is extremely difficult) and adding raw seafood, especially this volume and type, will increase the water content in the sauce and make it runny. Since scallops need a "soft" environment to cook in, the sauce is the ideal medium and believe me the sauce even thins quite a bit from that. You don't want the sauce to end up tasting like seafood bisque - which usually becomes the by-product of cooking the lobster and crabs seperately. Andrea | |||||
2479.10 | Italian Vinegrette with Fresh Tomatoes | NAC::WALTER | Thu Jul 27 1995 12:59 | 16 | |
Great summer dish: 4 Tomatoes cut into small cubes 4 cloves garlic, minced or sliced small 1 hot pepper, cut small 1/3 cup extra virgin olive oil 1/4 cup rice vinegar 1 t brown mustard 1 t sugar Wisk together until well melted and thickened, then add tomatoes. Pour over fresh angel hair pasta that is well drained. Mix well, top with fresh grated parm cheese. | |||||
2479.11 | how about this quick dish | SUBSYS::MSOUCY | Thu Aug 10 1995 09:45 | 36 | |
How about this one? 1 Lb bonless chicken tenders - remove ligament 1 ea. Red/Yellow Bell Pepper 2-4 cloves garlic minced 1 medium onion (vidalia goes well here) 12 oz Angel Hair pasta olive oil (for sauteing, use as needed) Cut peppers into strips about 1/4" wide (up to you really), slice the onion any which-way (ie rings or slices), mince garlic into this mixture and add to medium to large frying pan or wok and saute till almost done. Remove from heat into a bowl. In large pan heat water for pasta, in same frying pan/wok put chicken into pan to start cooking it. The key here (at least for me) is to time it so that the chicken is almost done when the pasta is ready, strain pasta, add olive oil to large pan which is put back onto low heat, the amount of olive oil is per taste really, add pasta back into pan and mix olive oil into it. In the meantime add veggie mix back into chicken mixture and heat it back up. When you are ready put pasta into medium to large bowl, add chicken and veggie mixture to the top (sort of like a garnish!), time to eat! Sprinkle with romano/parmesan cheese to desired taste(s)! I whipped this up one night for something different. You can add fresh mushrooms if you like also. I like the mix of red/yellow pepper flavor along with the garlic/onion mixes. I don't know about fat content, but it shouldn't be too bad, as long as you don't overdo(sp) the olive oil. Enjoy! | |||||
2479.12 | last night's dinner | NAC::WALTER | Tue Mar 12 1996 13:54 | 23 | |
1 medium onion, diced fairly small 4 cloves garlic, sliced thin 2 T butter Saute until translucent add: 2T flour and mix well, turn heat to low mix: 1 cup 2% milk 1/2 t nutmeg 1 t pepper 1/3 cup freshly grated romano cheese mix until mixture has thickened add: 1 cup chopped ham 1 1/2 cup peas (do not cook, just defrost) heat until mixture is hot. serve over fresh angel hair pasta with herb honey wheat bread sticks and enjoy cj< |