Think of this as your classic New York/Italian classic pasta alla vodka with extra kick: celery seeds, a healthy dash of Worcestershire sauce and as much hot sauce as you can take.
There are some pastas born entirely out of a combination of profound hunger and happy accident. This is one such pasta. A craving for something deeply, lip-smackingly savoury with a bit of a kick; tomato-y but not especially saucy; a little creamy without being heavy; a pasta dish that sits somewhere between sexy and ordinary. Sometimes when I’m really hungry, I find I go into a kind of trance while I cook, picking up bottles and jars without much of a game plan, shaking in a bit of this, a bit of that, tasting as I go. It’s at times like these that the most delicious dinners seem to emerge. This is one of them. I call her Bloody. Mary. Rigatoni.
She follows a similar set of principles to the New York/Italian classic pasta alla vodka, but with a few notable additions: celery seeds, a healthy dash of Worcestershire sauce and as much hot sauce as you can take. At her core she’s just a pretty simple tomato sauce, the kind you’ve made a thousand times. But then she has the audacity to go and have all the umami, peppery thwack of a really good, hangover-beating Bloody Mary. She’s a happy accident of a dinner that quickly became a fail-safe that I’ve returned to again and again.
I favour a fruity hot sauce for this, so using something like a bottle of Frank’s would be perfect. You could, of course, use fresh or dried chillies, though I find the slightly sweet, vinegary tang of a bottled chilli sauce adds something. I use rigatoni because it will really catch the sauce. Serve the pasta under a cloud of parmesan and black pepper.
INGREDIENTS
METHOD
Serves 1
This is an edited extract from The Art of Friday Night Dinner by Eleanor Steafel, published by Bloomsbury, RRP $52.00 hardback. Photography: Sophie Davidson. Buy now
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