Pamela Sherrid's Summer Pasta

Pamela Sherrid's Summer Pasta
Michael Kraus for The New York Times
Total Time
15 minutes, plus at least 8 hours' storing
Rating
4(605)
Comments
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Pamela Sherrid’s summer pasta, which The Times ran a recipe for in 1996, is a quintessential crossover dish: part tomatoes and warm pasta, part pasta salad and the best of both. It includes ripe summer tomatoes, garlic, olive oil, basil and cubes of fresh mozzarella. Ms. Sherrid’s recipe relies on prudent technique and a slacker’s sense of pace. First you combine the garlic, basil and oil and let the mixture macerate. A few hours later you add tomatoes and let it sit some more. Next, you pour the cooked rigatoni over the tomatoes, and cubes of mozzarella over the rigatoni. Then you gently mix the cheese into the pasta, coating it with a buttery veil of fat, before tossing it with the tomatoes at the bottom. If you have great tomatoes and mozzarella and you don’t overcook the pasta, it is a remarkably good dish. A puddle of sweet and salty tomato broth will form at the bottom of your bowl, so make sure you have some bread on hand to soak it up.

Featured in: Recipe Redux; 1996: Pamela Sherrid's Summer Pasta

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Ingredients

Yield:6 servings
  • 5large cloves garlic, finely chopped
  • ½ to 1cup of your favorite olive oil
  • 12basil leaves
  • 7large ripe tomatoes
  • Salt
  • 1pound dried rigatoni
  • 1pound fresh, lightly salted mozzarella
  • Country bread
Ingredient Substitution Guide
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Preparation

  1. Step 1

    Take out your largest bowl. Add the garlic. Pour in ½ cup olive oil. With scissors, snip the basil leaves into shreds over the garlic mixture. Let sit all day.

  2. Step 2

    About 2 hours before serving, chop the tomatoes and add them to the bowl.

  3. Step 3

    When you're ready to eat, bring a large pot of generously salted water to a boil. Add the pasta and cook until al dente. Meanwhile, cut the mozzarella into small cubes.

  4. Step 4

    Drain the pasta and pour it on top of the tomato mixture. Do not stir. Spread the mozzarella on top of the pasta and toss only the pasta and cheese; the cheese will soften slightly, and the pasta will get coated with fat. Then stir up from the bottom, incorporating the tomato mixture. Season with salt and add the remaining olive oil, if desired. Serve with bread.

Ratings

4 out of 5
605 user ratings
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Comments

I love this recipe, but since I don't like a lot of garlic, I use only 2 cloves. My secret ingredient is the juice of a fresh lemon--wouldn't make it without it.

Have made this every summer since it was printed. Cant wait for tomatoes to ripe. Have tweaked the recipe over the years: added more garlic, used mix of large and cherry tomatoes, added chili pepper flakes, added chopped rosemary, reduced amount of cheese. It never gets old. I like to tear up toasted levain into croutons and place in pasta bowl before adding pasta.

Or, if you don't have great mozarella (or if you prefer punchier flavors regardless), use (about half as much) good feta instead.

Ricotta salata was much better on this than the mozzarella when I made it the second time. Also salted the tomatoes to help them break down a bit and doubled the basil.

Agree with other commenters: hot pepper flakes added to oil/garlic mixture and fresh corn kernels, and salt in the tomatoes are great additions. I used half the pasta with the same amount of sauce. Serving extra olive oil was key…so everyone had enough sauce for the fresh baguettes. Great recipe with lots of opportunity for flexibility.

My dad introduced this to me years ago, maybe a decade after it was published, and I would always ask him to make it when I visited. Now my daughter and I call it “Grandpa Pasta” and she asks me to make it every time she’s home!

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