Parpadelle has become fairly ubiquitous now - I got mine in an Italian promotion at Marks & Spencer, and its in most supermarket pasta aisles, any Italian Deli worth its salt or very easy to track down online. If you don't have any, then Tagliatelle would be my next choice - or you can use cooked or fresh lasagne sheets and cut them into nice thick strips. But that is a bit of a faff - so any pasta will be fine - I'd try and get a long one out of preference.
Ingredients:
These amounts will serve about 4.
- Parpadelle - enough for the number of people you are feeding
- 3/4 cloves Garlic - crushed or very finely chopped
- Half a leek or 2/3 spring onions
- 2 tbsp Good Olive Oil - or a good slosh in the pan
- Selection of green vegetables, I used:
- handful of fine green beans, topped and tailed, and cut in half
- 6 Asparagus spears, cleaned and cut in to 2 inch chunks
- 1 cup frozen peas
- 2 big handfuls of kale - or a leafy green veg like spinach, rocket or chard
- 1/2 glass of dry white wine
- Salt and pepper
- Cream cheese - any kind except the chocolate one! I used Garlic and herb medium fat Philly.
- Fresh Thyme leaves - I used about half a pack of the ones you get in the supermarket
Option 1 - serve with the stuffed chicken thigh recipe
Option 2 - Pancetta/smoked bacon - cubed
Option 3 - Prosciutto - Parma/Serranno/Black Forest etc - finely sliced preserved ham from the country of your choice. Tear each slice into 2 or 3 pieces.
Method - for option 1. The others will be explained at the end.
- Drop the parpadelle into a big vat of boiling salted water, cook to just shy of the manufacturers instructions. You want it to finish off its cooking in the sauce.
- Take a large frying pan or saucepan (the bigger the surface area on the heat the better) and warm the olive oil over a low-medium heat (3 or 4 on my cooker). Add the garlic, a big teaspoon of fresh thyme leaves and the chopped leeks or spring onion and soften gently until translucent. You aren't frying these - you aren't looking for colour so if they start to turn golden or brown, turn down the heat.
- Turn up the heat to medium and add the asparagus and fine green beans to the garlic mixture, toss them in the oil and season with a good grind of salt and pepper. Cook for about two minutes - keep it moving to make sure the garlic doesn't catch.
- In a bowl - cover the peas in boiling water and set aside.
- Add the wine to the pan and turn up the heat so that it bubbles then add the leafy green vegetables and cover the pan. Obviously use a lid if it has one, other wise cover with foil - we want to trap the steam and use it to finish cooking the harder vegetables and wilt the leafy ones. You can turn down the heat if its all getting too excited under there.
- Allow too cook for another 2 or 3 minutes then take off the lid and see how its doing. The kale should be softened and have reduced in volume significantly. Reduce the heat and allow some of the liquid to boil off - but you don't want this dry, its the basis of your sauce.
- Drain the peas and stir into the veggie mix along with a couple of tablespoons of the cream cheese and another spoonful of the fresh thyme leaves. If you are making the chicken thighs too, then this is the time you'd add the juice from the parcels. Let the cream cheese melt and then taste for seasoning. It will small amazing at this point!
- Your pasta should be done by now, so lift it straight from its cooking water into the vegetable pan with a pasta spoon. Stir together well and continue cooking for another minute of so. The ribbons of pasta should be getting a nice lustrous sheen from the sauce. If it still looks a bit wet then keep it moving and let the liquid evaporate. If its looking a bit dry and the pasta isn't coated evenly, then loosen it with a ladle of the the pasta cooking water.
- Serve in a big bowl, with a grind of black pepper and a sprinkle more of the thyme leaves.
Option 2 - With Pancetta or smoked bacon.
Add the chopped pancetta or bacon to the pan right at the beginning before with half of the oil. Cook on a medium high heat to render the fat from the bacon pieces and give them some colour and texture. This should take about 5 minutes. Then turn down the heat, add the garlic, leek and thyme and carry on from step 2.
This will be a more robust flavoured dish and doesn't need the meaty accompaniment. Make sure you don't over season at steps 3 or 7 as you will be carrying a lot more salt from your bacon.
Option 3 - With Prosciutto
This is a much more delicate version than option 2 and probably my favourite. As the only meat element is added right at the end, its very easy to separate some of the sauce if some of the people eating it are veggies or don't eat ham - so really flexible too.
Simply tear the fine slices of ham into 2 or 3 pieces and add to the sauce at the end of step 7, while you are letting the cream cheese melt. The subtle smoky tones of your ham will seep into the sauce and compliment the fresh green vegetables giving a more elegant result. The ham doesn't want to be on the heat too long a sit will go tough so make sure you re nearly ready to finish and serve it before you add the ham to the sauce.
Enjoy!
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