At the end of last week, we were all very worried and frightened in Sicily because a Medicane (a blend of the English words "Mediterranean" and "hurricane") was coming in. In Modica it just passed us by and we were fortunate but the effects were devastating in Catania and the Province of Siracusa, as many of you will have seen in the news. We were told to stay at home on Thursday evening and all day on Friday, if possible and the silence in the streets brought back uneasy memories of lockdown for many of us. The early hours of Thursday were particularly scary.
I did venture to my local greengrocer's late on Thursday afternoon, thinking I might be at home until Sunday, and on Friday evening it was my intention to make an amatriciana, one of my favourite pasta dishes. Then I discovered I had forgotten to buy tomatoes and I didn't have a tin of them to improvise with. I did, however, have pancetta, if not the guanciale (pork cheek) you should really use with an amatriciana. (I remember a Masterchef Italia judge groaning because a contestant was using pancetta cubes, but they weren't in an imminent hurricane situation!) I also had passata and - a favourite store cupboard ingredient of mine - a tin of grilled peppers. Therefore it was with these that I created a comforting pasta dish and I named it "Hurricane pasta":
Hurricane pasta
These quantities will serve two people very generously:
200 gr spaghetti or spaghettoni (which are a bit thicker)
2 tablesp olive oil
100 gr smoked pancetta cubes
1 white onion, chopped
200 gr small mushrooms, sliced
330 ml bottle passata
380 gr tin or jar grilled peppers in oil, drained
seasalt and freshly ground black pepper
chilli flakes to taste
fresh basil leaves if liked
First, get the pasta water on with a little coarse salt in it and, while it is coming to the boil, heat the oil in a wide pan.
Add the pancetta and, as soon as the fat begins to release, add the onion and cook, stirring until softened but not browned.
Add the mushrooms and stir.
Add the passata and stir, lowering the heat.
Add the drained peppers, having cut any very large pieces in half.
By this time, the pasta water should be boiling, so add the pasta to it and cook for the time stated on the pack (probably 10 - 12 mins.)
Add the seasoning and chilli flakes to the pepper mixture and, at this stage, if liked, you can add a few torn fresh basil leaves.
Drain the pasta once it is al dente and add it to the pan containing the sauce. Stir on low heat for just a few minutes.
Serve and enjoy your "hurricane pasta", hopefully in better weather than we had in Sicily last week!
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