What happens when you find yourself waking up, night after night, still dreaming of the chewy, homemade pasta and briny, freshly-caught seafood you had on your dream vacation to the Amalfi Coast?
You re-create! :D
Foodbuzz’s Project Food Blog Challenge #2 was to whip up another culture’s classic dish that would take you outside your culinary comfort zone to make. Always willing to take on a challenge, I scoured the city yesterday afternoon, hunting for the freshest seafood I could get my paws on.
My mission? To recreate my favorite dish from our entire Italian vacation. The dish that’s on every restaurant and household menu in the tiny, Mediterranean coastal town of Praiano, Italy, where we stayed. The dish that makes my mouth water and my taste buds sing – Pasta allo Scoglio. Seafood pasta, baby!
FYI, I live in the Midwest where we grow corn so sweet they turn it into ice cream and pork’s so abundant they practically give it away. What we DON’T have, you see, is readily available, super-fresh seafood. Ie, my experience cooking with exotic seafood is zip. Zilch. Nada!
Wanting to try and make the dish as authentic as possible, and take myself even further outside my comfort zone, I did what every Italian woman would do – I made my own pasta. You guys – it is SO much easier than I ever thought. Seriously! Check it out…
Homemade Pasta
Yield: 6 servings of 1/4 inch wide noodles.
Ingredients:
2 cups all-purpose flour
3 eggs
2 Tablespoons extra virgin olive oil
pinch of salt
Directions:
1. Place flour into a large bowl and make a well in the center.
2. Add eggs, extra virgin olive oil and salt into the well.
3. Stir with a wooden spoon, gradually adding more and more flour, until the mixture is too thick to stir anymore.
4. With clean hands, knead the dough until it comes together into a rough ball, then turn it out onto a flat, floured surface.
5. Continue to knead the dough for 8-10 minutes, or until it turns into a smooth, elastic ball. Add more flour to the board when necessary, to prevent sticking.
Remember to have fun! ;)
6. Cut the dough into thirds, then lightly flour the cutting board and a rolling pin.
7. Roll the dough out, adding more flour when necessary, until it’s 1/8 inch thick.
8. Smooth a tiny bit of flour over each side of the dough and roll up into a cigar shape.
9. With a sharp knife, cut dough into desired noodle thickness.
10. Roll noodles out and lay flat. Cook immediately in salted boiling water until the noodles rise to the top, ~1-2 minutes, or store in a tupperware container in the fridge for up to 3 days.
You can freeze any leftover noodles, too!
Ok. Pasta? Check! Now for the seafood portion of the program. (Insert “eek!” here…)
I was lucky enough to find the most of the same delicacies that were in my Pasta allo Scoglio in Italy, here in town. We’ve got sea scallops,
little neck clams,
squid tubes (aka calamari,)
fresh shrimp,
and mussels!
Can I just tell you incredibly odd it is to hold something in your hand knowing that it’s alive, and you’re about to cook it?! Ie, cleaning the mussels and clams was seriously. freaky!
I pushed all thoughts aside, laid out my seafood, heated up the stove, and got to work…
Pasta allo Scoglio
Based on a recipe from Bacco Ristorante. Yield: 1 serving.
Ingredients:
1 Tablespoon extra virgin olive oil
2 cloves garlic, minced
2 sea scallops
2 large, peeled & deveined shrimp
4 little neck clams, scrubbed
4 mussels, scrubbed
1 squid tube, cut into rings
1/3 cup white wine
1/3 cup marinara sauce
Directions:
1. Heat olive oil in a large skillet over medium heat. Add minced garlic and cook, stirring constantly, until lightly browned. About 30 seconds.
2. Turn the heat up to medium-high and add scallops to the pan. Sear on one side until golden brown. Flip and add the rest of the seafood.
3. Cook seafood for 30 seconds, then add white wine and marinara sauce. Continue to cook for another 2-3 minutes, until the clams & mussels have opened. NOTE: Do not try to pry open and eat the clams or mussels that do not open. They are inedible.
4. Push the seafood to one side of the pan and add a serving of homemade pasta, cooked until it’s a little underdone, to the empty side of the pan. Allow the pasta to continue cooking in the sauce until it’s cooked through.
5. Serve immediately, topped with chopped parsley.
Omg, it freaking worked!!
The scallops tasted ocean-fresh, the squid was tender, the pasta actually tasted like real pasta, and the mussels opened!! Ok…the clams didn’t. You can’t win ’em all, I guess. ;)
The sauce was so complimentary too. Really light and definitely not overpowering the taste of the fresh seafood.
The wonderful thing about Italian cooking is that, while it may seem intimidating, the ingredients are fresh and uncomplicated. The whole thing, not counting making the pasta, took me less than 10 minutes to create. Score!
Comfort zone = re-zoned. Mission = accomplished! :mrgreen:
Have a great night you guys!
~~~~~
What foods are you intimidated to cook with?
Joanna 12.29.2014
You seriously made making pasta look easy, and now I am going to try it! thank you for your photo journey through the process… those picture details are just what I needed to get over this fear and conquer the homemade pasta in my home. Cheers to the new year!
Dan Cash 12.06.2011
Your Amalfi Coast trip to Italia sounded so much like a trip (tour) we took to Italy a few years back: The wine, the pasta, the gelato, the coffee, the pizza, the lunch culture, and the wonderful multi-course dinners in beautifully quaint hidden-away dining sites–EVERYTHING!–almost as though your were on the same trip, except we visited different areas, starting in the north (Verona) and points south thru Florence to Rome. Enjoyed reading all about your trip.
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themilkmanswife 09.29.2010
Beautiful! As a fellow Iowa girl, I hear ya on being intimidated about cooking with fresh seafood! This looks so wonderful, you’ve inspired me to try it soon. And you’ve got my vote. :)
Peggy 09.29.2010
You’re quite brave to do an Italian dish for this challenge! Good luck!
Amy 09.28.2010
Originally born in Iowa, I came across your site the other day. I am very proud of you for attempting to cook fresh seafood in Iowa, given that you’re halfway between both coasts. The meal looks absolutely fabulous and amazing! Thankfully, I live in San Francisco where we get lots of lots of yummy seafood. This week I made fresh halibut and last week I made fresh snapper papillottes(?) with fresh cherry tomatoes and lemon zest. A little bit of lemon zest can completely make any seafood dish spectacular!
@lickmyspoon 09.28.2010
The Mediterranean is responsible for such great cuisines, and you’ve re-created it perfectly. Can’t wait to see what’s in store, you’ve got my vote! Also, sweet corn ice cream is amazing.
Lick My Spoon