Tagliatelle With Caramelized Oranges and Almonds

"I just heard the making of this recipe on NPR's "The Splendid Table". It sounds amazing! Pasta with an orange caramel sauce. "Serves 10 to 12 as dessert or as a side dish with Christmas capon At 16th-century banquets this pasta accompanied poultry and meats. Try the combination with Christmas Capon for an important dinner. The sweet pasta makes an unexpected and very good dessert.""
 
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Ready In:
15mins
Ingredients:
11
Serves:
10-12
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ingredients

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directions

  • Working Ahead: The sauce can be made several hours ahead, covered and set aside at room temperature. Reheat to bubbling before adding the pasta.
  • Making the Sauce: Melt the butter in a large skillet over medium heat.
  • Use a wooden spatula to stir in about l/4 cup of the orange juice and the 2/3 cup of sugar.
  • Melt sugar in the butter over medium heat, stirring in spoonfuls of orange juice frequently to keep the sauce from crystallizing (reserve about l/3 cup orange juice for finishing the sauce).
  • Once sugar is dissolved, heat can be turned up to medium high or high.
  • Stir occasionally as the mixture bubbles and slowly turns amber.
  • When mixture becomes deep golden amber, stir in the pepper and two-thirds of the orange zest. Cook only a second or two to protect rind from burning.
  • Then step back from the skillet and pour in the last 1/3 cup of orange juice at arm's length. It will bubble up and possibly spatter, then it will thin the sauce to ideal consistency. Turn off the heat. If making ahead, remove the pan from the heat, cool and cover.
  • Cooking the Pasta: Have a large platter and dinner or dessert dishes warming in a low oven. If serving with the capon, have it ready to serve.
  • Make sure pasta water is at a fierce boil. Drop in the pasta and cook until tender but still resistant to the bite.
  • Drain in a colander.
  • Reheat the sauce to a lively bubble.
  • Add the pasta to the skillet and toss to coat thoroughly.
  • Turn onto the heated platter, and sprinkle with the remaining sugar, cinnamon, cheese, almonds, and lastly, the remaining orange rind.
  • If serving pasta as a dessert, mound small portions on heated dessert plates and serve hot.
  • *For a 16th century Christmas dinner: Place the capon atop the pasta and serve. Carve the bird at the table. Spoon a small mound of pasta onto each dinner plate and top it with slices of capon.

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Reviews

  1. I couldn't find tagliatelle pasta but used an imported flat egg noodle instead. I found the sauce to have a weird aftertaste. My husband thought it was ok. I will not make again as it required a good bit of work and was not worth the time/ effort.
     
  2. I very diffrent take on a pasta dish. The orange sauce is SO good, I would serve it on any sweet treat. I just used regular angel hair pasta since thats all I had on hand. Not so sure if I would make this again since it was kinda hard to eat pasta as dessert/sweet dish. But if you are looking for a diffrent treat you have to try this!
     
  3. I actually had this for dinner as a side and loved it. I did cut not add the extra sugar since i was not eating it as desser and added extra cheese.
     
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Tweaks

  1. I couldn't find tagliatelle pasta but used an imported flat egg noodle instead. I found the sauce to have a weird aftertaste. My husband thought it was ok. I will not make again as it required a good bit of work and was not worth the time/ effort.
     

RECIPE SUBMITTED BY

I'm not as active here anymore, but you can find me playing at the new recipezazz.com. I'm not a great photographer, but I love to take food photos with Freddy Cat to bring a smile to people's day. I love to cook and share good food with other people. I have a very large collection of cookbooks. I used to enjoy being able to look up recipes on Zaar by ingredients I had on hand. I miss the Zaar tag game community. Everyone was so nice, and it was super fun. Ah, the good ol' days.
 
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