Orecchiette With Grated Squash, Walnuts and Ricotta Salata

- Total Time
- About 45 minutes
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
- 1pound butternut squash (about half of a large squash)
- 2tablespoons extra virgin olive oil
- Salt to taste
- 2garlic cloves, minced
- 2ounces walnut pieces (about ½ cup), coarsely chopped
- 3tablespoons chopped fresh marjoram, or 2 tablespoons chopped fresh sage
- Lots of freshly ground pepper
- 1pound orecchiette
- 2ounces ricotta salata, grated (about ½ cup)
Preparation
- Step 1
Begin heating a large pot of water. When it comes to a boil, add a generous amount of salt and keep at a simmer.
- Step 2
Meanwhile, peel the squash (I use a vegetable peeler for this), cut it into chunks that will fit your food processor tube fitted with the grater blade, and grate. Alternately, grate with the large holes of a box grater.
- Step 3
Heat the olive oil over medium-high heat in a large, heavy skillet and add the grated squash and salt to taste. Cook, stirring often, for 8 to 10 minutes, until the squash has softened. Add the garlic, walnuts and half the marjoram or all of the sage and cook, stirring, for another minute. Turn the heat down to medium.
- Step 4
Add ½ cup of the water for the pasta and cook for another couple of minutes, until it has been absorbed and evaporated from the pan. Add another ½ cup water and continue to cook for another 3 minutes, or until the squash mixture is tender and moist. Taste, adjust salt, and add a generous amount of pepper. Keep warm while you cook the pasta.
- Step 5
Bring the pot of water back to a rolling boil and add the orecchiette. Cook al dente, usually 10 to 11 minutes. Add ½ cup of the cooking water to the squash mixture before draining, then drain the pasta and toss with the squash, along with the remaining marjoram and the ricotta salata. Serve hot.
- Advance preparation: You can make this through Step 4 several hours ahead. You will have to moisten the squash with more hot water when you reheat in the pan.
Private Notes
Comments
Nice, but the recipe calls for way too much pasta. I used the entire recipe of sauce with half a pound of pasta and that seemed like a good ratio. That yielded two large or perhaps three medium servings. White, rather than black pepper might be a good choice here.
Tasty!
• I used a 2:1 squash:pasta ratio and could've happily gone still heavier on the squash.
• I tend to be generous about salting my pasta water—a palmful never seems too much—but since one adds a fair amount of the pasta water to the squash in this recipe, one risks an over-salted sauce. I'll boil a kettle of plain water just for use in the squash next time.
• Lastly, stir the orecchiette often while it cooks! They'll tend to nest and stick together otherwise.
Caton's note helped me avoid a disaster. The recipe calls for adding 1.5 cups of heavily salted water to the squash mixture at three points throughout the recipe. It also calls for you to taste and adjust the salt in between those additions! I only used 1/4 cup of the pasta water, just at the end to add moisture and starch, and used fresh water for the other additions, and it was too salty once I added the ricotta salata. There are many opportunities to oversalt this dish, use a light hand
I love this recipe and I think the order of operations is especially well thought out and cooks up quickly. Some notes on seasoning: to suit my own tastes (which prefer the more strongly spiced) I’ve added cayenne any time I’ve cooked this. I don’t want it “spicy,” but rather sparkly kinda, or warm! Finally, as I was taking a deep sniff of that sautéing squash tonight I decided to try a nice big pinch (1/4 tsp maybe?) of ground fenugreek into the mix—something you want to let cook in the mix from as early as you can to let the flavors develop. Was so great, maple-y without the sweet, the slightest bit bitter. It really set things off.
grating winter squash by hand is too time consuming. I wouldn't recommend.
Used an entire large squash, some extra oil, 1 cup walnuts, 5 cloves garlic and 1 cup cotija cheese. Next time maybe add an onion? Or use parm? Or more oil? It was fine- but boring.
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