Pasta With Leeks and Parsley

"Adapted from Mark Bittman's recipe for Pasta with Leeks and Parsley, which I found in the Epicure section of 'The Age', a Melbourne newspaper, but which apparently first appeared in the 'New York Times'. Such is our global village! I'm posting this as an Australian recipe, since it appeared in an Australian newspaper, for the 2005 Zaar World Tour. Mark Bittman's comments on this recipe are "Pre-cooking the garlic and chillies in olive oil is a classic Roman treatment. What you want is to brown, not burn, the garlic, so that it and the chillies heavily flavour the oil. Once that's done, so is most of the work; just cook the leeks until soft, and when they're about halfway there, start cooking the pasta. I add red capsicum or tomato, mostly for colour; although neither is really necessary. Finally, reserve a little of the pasta cooking liquid in case the sauce is too dry. That, plus a handful of parsley, completes the dish." When I made this, I omitted the chillies (personal taste preference), and I increased the garlic, added handful of baby spinach leaves and added cumin and pine nuts. Like most pasta recipes, this is one you can play around with a lot."
 
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Ready In:
30mins
Ingredients:
12
Serves:
4
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ingredients

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directions

  • Dry roast the pine nuts and set aside.
  • Trim the root end of the leeks, then cut off the hard green leaves, leaving a bit of green where they meet the white part. Split the leeks down the middle, discard the outer white leaves (the ones that don't cut easily), then chop the leeks (or cut them with kitchen scissors into one inch or 2.5cm pieces). Wash very well, and spin or shake dry.
  • Set a large pot of water to boil, and salt it.
  • Put half the butter or oil in a large pan, preferably non-stick, on medium-high heat.
  • Add the garlic and chillies, and cook, stirring occasionally, until the garlic browns. Remove the chillies (and garlic if you prefer).
  • Add the leeks and cook, stirring occasionally, until they wilt, about 10 minutes.
  • Add the capsicum or tomato and lower the heat; add the cumin and continue to cook, stirring once in a while, until the leeks begin to brown.
  • Cook the pasta until it is tender - al dente, and drain, reserving about half a cup of the cooking liquid.
  • Toss the pasta and the leeks, add the pine nuts, the baby spinach leaves (added at this stage, they will be just wilted but no more) together with the remaining butter or oil, freshly ground black pepper to taste and all but a little of the parsley, adding a bit of cooking liquid if the mixture seems dry.
  • Taste and adjust the seasoning, garnish with the remaining parsley and serve.

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Reviews

  1. This was a great way to clean out the fridge! I used 2 big leeks, a huge tomato, and added chopped asparagus about 10 minutes before the sauce was done. Then I added the spinach and let the sauce sit a while, so that the spinach would soften. I had to replace the chilis with chili flakes, and the garlic with garlic salt. I had to skip the pine nuts, as we were out of them, alas. I used way more cumin, and added black pepper and some other seasonings, as well as a cup of pasta cooking water to make the sauce liquid-y enough to coat my whole wheat spaghettini. <br/><br/>So, yes, lots of changes, but that's the mark of a good recipe--it's adaptable!<br/><br/>PS: The sauce was enough for 2-3 servings of pasta.
     
  2. This made a pleasant change from the creamier cheesey or tomato sauces we usually have. Make this with olive oil for a tasty vegan meal.
     
  3. This pasta had a mild and delicate flavor. I used butter (1 tablespoon), tomato and dried chili pepper flakes (1/4 teaspoon) instead of the olive oil, capsicum and red chilies and added about 1/4 cup pine nuts instead of 1/2 cup (to reduce fat a bit further). Served it with parmesan cheese on the side. Overall a subtle but very pleasing taste. Thanks for posting!
     
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Tweaks

  1. This was a great way to clean out the fridge! I used 2 big leeks, a huge tomato, and added chopped asparagus about 10 minutes before the sauce was done. Then I added the spinach and let the sauce sit a while, so that the spinach would soften. I had to replace the chilis with chili flakes, and the garlic with garlic salt. I had to skip the pine nuts, as we were out of them, alas. I used way more cumin, and added black pepper and some other seasonings, as well as a cup of pasta cooking water to make the sauce liquid-y enough to coat my whole wheat spaghettini. <br/><br/>So, yes, lots of changes, but that's the mark of a good recipe--it's adaptable!<br/><br/>PS: The sauce was enough for 2-3 servings of pasta.
     

RECIPE SUBMITTED BY

July 2008 update: VERY happy to be back on Zaar after about a two year absence due to having had no internet connection at home, and having been too unwell for a time so that getting re-connected wasn't even a priority! <br> <br>And really looking forward to getting back into the Zaar world and connecting again with the many wonderful people I knew before, and new people, of course!
 
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