Mezzelune Pasta With Peas and Shiitake Mushrooms

- Total Time
- 1½ hours
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
- ½pound spinach, pea shoots or nettles, tough stems removed
- 2cups fresh ricotta
- ½cup grated Parmesan, plus more for garnish
- Salt and pepper
- 1teaspoon lemon zest
- Pinch of grated nutmeg
- 1tablespoon chopped mint
- Fresh egg pasta dough (see recipe)
- Semolina or rice flour, for dusting
- 3tablespoons butter or extra-virgin olive oil
- 6ounces thinly sliced shiitake mushrooms
- 1cup shucked fresh peas
- ½cup finely chopped scallions
Preparation
- Step 1
Bring a saucepan of generously salted water to a boil. Blanch spinach briefly, about 15 seconds, then plunge into an ice bath. Drain, squeeze dry, and chop finely.
- Step 2
Put ricotta in a mixing bowl and add Parmesan, chopped spinach, lemon zest, nutmeg and mint. Season with salt and pepper and mix well. Taste and adjust seasoning.
- Step 3
Roll pasta dough into thin sheets. Using a sharp cookie cutter, punch out 3-inch rounds; you should have about 36 pieces. Dust lightly with semolina flour, then cover with a clean, damp kitchen towel to keep them from drying out. Line a baking sheet with parchment paper and sprinkle with semolina.
- Step 4
Working in batches, fill 6 pasta rounds at a time: Lay pasta flat on a work surface and place about a tablespoon of filling in the center of each round. With a pastry brush or finger, moisten outer edge sparingly with water and fold over to make a half-moon, pressing to seal. Transfer to baking sheet. Continue until all rounds are filled. Dust tops lightly with semolina and store, uncovered in the refrigerator, until ready to cook.
- Step 5
Bring a large pot of generously salted water to a boil for pasta.
- Step 6
Put a large skillet over medium-high heat. Add 1 tablespoon butter and the shiitakes. Season with salt and sauté quickly until lightly browned, about 2 minutes. Remove mushrooms from pan and set aside. Add 2 more tablespoons butter to pan. When it sizzles, add peas and scallions and a little salt and pepper. Add ½ cup water and cook uncovered for about 3 minutes. Return mushrooms to pan and turn off heat.
- Step 7
Meanwhile, cook the pasta: Drop mezzelune in boiling water and cook for 2 to 3 minutes, or until they float to the surface. Remove with a spider or slotted spoon and transfer to a warm platter. Reheat peas and mushrooms and pour over the pasta. Garnish with chives.
Private Notes
Comments
Excellent.
One note: the amount of filling recommended here will make way more mezzalune than one recipe of egg pasta (as linked to here) will make.
My grandmother made mezzalune and she'd crimp the edges lightly with a fork. This lets the pasta hold sauce better, though it changes the mouth feel. I like it both ways!
Yes Chris, crimping with a fork is the way Italian's have done it. Now I have a small rotary cutter that has a semblance of 'teeth' at one side, for lack of a better word, it is actually a pastry wheel, and when crimping little marks appear on the edges of anything it cuts and seals in the filling very well.
Well, I had never made fresh pasta before today... after over 50 years as a home cook. I think I will read Marcella Hazan before doing this again. No offense. Just need to get the hang of it. Sauce is delicious. I had way too much filling and will use it in Tannis' Summer Pasta w. zucch. & basil, which I have made before and liked. The mint is wonderful in the ricotta mixture and should set off the zucch. pasta nicely. Lots to love in the two recipes. Thanks!
Yes! Fantastic with Rana spinach ricotta ravioli
Making pasta dough from scratch is above my functional set (a disabled cook with balance problems due to MS) I opted to use top quality spinach - ricotta filled fresh ravioli made by an Italian couple and sold at Farmer's Market as starting point. Then continued recipe as written for ingredients and steps 5 - 7. I did add a little lemon zest to the pan with the veg / sauce since the ravioli didn't contain it. Delicious, even with purchased ravioli replacing the mezzelune.
Cheat: buy packaged fresh wonton wrappers at grocery and use those instead of making pasta. No Michelin stars for my kitchen, but once you add the sauce, none of my diners know. Use a small biscuit cutter to cut them in round shapes. Easy, breezy.
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