Saturday, August 6, 2011

Venezia per i locali – My first homemade Spaghetti Vongole

Part of living like local Venetians obviously means cooking your own food. And that is really easy if you go to Rialto fish market in the morning, buy the freshes vongole you can get (just 9 EUR for a huge bag of vongole which are enough for 6 people), grab Jamie’s recipe for spaghetti vongole and cook up a storm.

I adapted the recipe a bit, because I didn’t want the herbs and spices to overpower the delicate taste of the vongole. So here is my version of Jamie’s recipe
You need:
o   2kg vongole
o   Half a bunch of fresh flat-leaf parsley
o   2 cloves of garlic
o   10 cherry tomatoes
o   250ml white wine
o   400g spaghetti
o   salt and pepper
o   olive oil
I found the described cooking action quite stressful, since everything seems to happen at the same time. Therefore I tried to spread out the actions a bit. Not the most time-efficient way of doing it, I admit, but hey you are on holiday and should be able to drink a glass of white while you are in the kitchen. Or at least that is my cooking philosophy ;-) So my method of cooking follows Jamie’s recipe but not necessarily in the given order.
You do:
o   Clams were, and still are, available in Venice by the boatload. So much so that they’re even considered peasant food. Although this recipe originates from Venice, it’s so delicious that it’s now become a classic Italian dish. People can be picky about whether or not it should be made with or without tomatoes, but personally I like the subtle colour and sweetness they add to the dish. The most important thing about it is timing everything so you get perfectly steamed clams and al dente pasta. Once you’ve made it a couple of times your intuition will kick in and you’ll be able to make it quickly and perfectly every time.Put a pan of water on to boil. While that’s happening, sort through your cleaned clams and if there are any that aren’t tightly closed, give them a sharp tap. If they don’t close, throw them away. Put a large pan with a lid on a high heat and let it heat up. Finely slice the parsley stalks, then put them to one side and roughly chop the leaves. Peel and chop the garlic, quarter the tomatoes and get your wine ready.Add the pasta to the boiling water with a good pinch of salt and cook according to packet instructions until al dente. About 5 minutes before your pasta is ready, get ready to start cooking – you'll have to be quick about this, so no mucking about! Put 4 generous lugs of extra virgin olive oil into the hot pan and add the garlic, parsley stalks and a good pinch of salt and pepper. Crumble in the dried chilli and add the chopped tomatoes. Stir everything around constantly and just as the garlic starts to colour, tip in the clams and pour in the wine. It will splutter and steam, so give everything a good shake and put the lid on the pan. After about 3 or 4 minutes the clams will start to open, so keep shuffling the pan around until all of them have opened. Take the pan off the heat. Get rid of any clams that haven't opened.By now your pasta should be just about perfect. Drain and add to the pan of clams along with the parsley leaves and an extra drizzle of extra virgin olive oil. Stir or toss for a further minute or two to let the beautiful seashore juices from the clams be absorbed into the pasta. Serve right away. No sane Italian would eat this dish without some fresh hunks of bread to mop up the juices. Beautiful!P.S. The first time you make this it will be good, but you might find things don't come together exactly at the right time. But don't worry, this dish is all about confidence and the more you make this, the more you'll find the pasta and clams are ready and perfect at the same time. And then it will be great!• from Jamie does... SSSSort through your cleaned clams and if there are any that aren’t tightly closed, give them a sharp tap. If they don’t close, throw them away.
o   Finely slice the parsley stalks, then put them to one side and roughly chop the leaves. Peel and chop the garlic, quarter the tomatoes and get your wine ready.
o   Put a pan of water on to boil.
o   Put a large pan with a lid on a high heat and let it heat up.
o   Add the pasta to the boiling water with a good pinch of salt and cook according to packet instructions until al dente. About 5 minutes before your pasta is ready, get ready to start cooking!
o   Put 4 generous lugs of extra virgin olive oil into the hot pan and add the garlic, parsley stalks and a good pinch of salt and pepper. Crumble in the dried chilli and add the chopped tomatoes. Stir everything around constantly and just as the garlic starts to colour, tip in the clams and pour in the wine. It will splutter and steam, so give everything a good shake and put the lid on the pan. After about 3 or 4 minutes the clams will start to open, so keep shuffling the pan around until all of them have opened. Take the pan off the heat. Get rid of any clams that haven't opened.
o   By now your pasta should be just about perfect. Drain and add to the pan of clams along with the parsley leaves and an extra drizzle of extra virgin olive oil. Stir or toss for a further minute or two to let the beautiful seashore juices from the clams be absorbed into the pasta. Serve right away.

It gets a bit hectic at times, but I promise, you won’t regret it!

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Dear, those vongole's ain't fresh any longer! ;-) :-)

Translation: how and where are you?
Even the bavarian wedding should be over by now.

Curious readers missing you and about to soon implode due to this - please come to the rescue and say something to us

Lots of love,
Gerlinde

Christiane said...

Hatte gerade den gleichen Gedanken wie Gerlinde - mal sehen was Ninotschka macht :-)
Ich hoffe die Muscheln waren nicht schlecht und Du bist nur von dem alltäglichen Wahnsinn abgelenkt!
LG,
Christiane