Capellini with Fresh Ricotta

30 March, 2010 (19:06) | Recipes | By: Laura

As a fan of the scientific method, I enjoy things that are, strictly or tangentially, food science related (Harold McGee, How to Read a French Fry, etc). So the Food Lab series on Serious Eats is right up my alley.

I also enjoy daydreaming about making my own dairy-based, especially after reading Milk. The Surprising Story of Milk Through the Ages by Ann Mendelson last year. That is the only book that has ever made me miss my bus stop on the way home, and it doesn’t really even have what you could call a plot.This book, and the fact that Minneapolis doesn’t recycle yogurt containers, inspired us (mostly Ian) to start making our own yogurt. The other good thing about library books is that they can only inspire modest heights of insanity with new dairy-based hobbies, because they have to go back to the library before things can get too crazy. Usually, the crazy wears off before I spend money on a book.

Anyway, I was interested to try making the ricotta recipe that is a key part of a larger Capellini with Fresh Ricotta meal idea, also from Serious Eats. A meal idea which I rounded out with caesar dressing, making for a yummy dinner and a Serious Eats grand slam. Weird.

The caesar dressing was more to my taste than my previous attempt, using smitten kitchen’s recipe. I think the key was the anchovies, which surprises me because I don’t think of myself as someone who likes anchovies, but apparently they are the secret to success. And I only used them because they were left over from making Bitty’s pasta puttanesca last week. So, anchovies=key.

It was a pretty fun science experiment to make ricotta (okay, “ricotta”) in the microwave. It really is amazingly easy. And I used the whey to make a smoothy the next day, so no wasted whey. Although I think it would be hard to use up the whey if I made vast quantities of this.

It was also novel to eat non-whole wheat pasta, since either they don’t make whole wheat capellini, or Ian chose not to buy the whole wheat stuff. Either way, the combination of white pasta and a basic sauce, and the super fresh cheese, made for a brightly flavored dinner that came together pretty quickly and easily. This also strikes me as the kind of meal that would work really well for a family with kids who are picky eaters. Not that I’d know from that, since we are a family with dogs who are notoriously unpicky eaters.

Comments

Comment from Ian
Time March 30, 2010 at 8:27 pm

If they make whole-wheat capellini, then Seward doesn’t stock it.

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