The recipe calls for penne noodles, arugula, parmesan cheese, toasted pine nuts, grape tomatoes, half of a lemon and its zest, capers, salt, pepper, and olive oil.
The sauce is made from the olive oil, lemon juice, lemon zest, salt, and pepper. One thing Giada has you do is save about a cup of your pasta water (instead of pouring it down the drain when you're done) to use in part of your sauce. The starch in the pasta water helps take your sauce from homemade quality to restaurant quality. That's my own thought process, but I can't remember what she said about the starch in the pasta water and why it's important, but it's something I didn't know about before.
Looking at it in the pan, I wasn't sure how it would taste. It looked pretty but also looked like just a bunch of noodles with some salad and cheese mixed in.
However, it was amaze-balls! Ken inhaled his. Before I met Giada and we became BFF's, getting Ken to come near my food was difficult. I can understand why. If he didn't know what "saute" meant on the back of a 11-minute meal box, I might not want to come near his food either. If I found part of the box in my 11-minute meal, I would probably run the other way, too. Just saying. But, but, but - I have come a looong way since those days, and have a couple of great meals under my belt now. This just happens to be one of those two meals.
The other recipe of Giada's that I highly recommend is her Fusilli with Pecorino Romano and Black Pepper. It is to die for. You can find it here. The one I made in this post can be found here. Simple, easy recipes for inexperienced cooks like me to dabble in, call their own, and take all the credit! Thanks, Giada! BFF's for life!
2 comments:
Looks yummy! However I'm confused. In your world, is it really Tuesday and not Monday as it is in my world? Think about it.
Don't you know I'm always one step ahead of everyone? Even Anonymous isn't seeming to catch on to the flower hair accessory...it's the next big thing!
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