Mhays wrote:I finally found my worn-out copy of Joy of Cooking that has been relegated to the basement since I bought a newer edition (which I like much less) It contains the following recipe that I made using Tonno:
I have not one, not two, but three editions of JoC on my cookbook shelves. But I'm a nut for cookbooks.
Here is the recipe I use Tonno tuna for. The tuna is so central it's important to use good tuna. It is adapted from Diane Seed's
The Top One Hundred Pasta Sauces. It's also a great quick weeknight recipe:
Spaghetti al Tonno e Limone
1 lb. pasta (Seed calls for spaghetti--hence the recipe's name--but I like to use farfalle)
2 tablespoons evoo
1 clove garlic, minced
1/4 cup chopped Italian (flatleaf) parsley
1 can (6 oz.) tuna, preferably Italian tuna packed in olive oil
juice of 1 lemon
3/4 cup grated parmesan
2 tablespoons unsalted butter, cut into small pieces
salt and lots of fresh pepper
While water heats for pasta and it cooks, heat the olive oil and saute garlic and parsley over low heat. Gradually add the drained and flaked tuna and heat. Don't let the mixture brown.
Drain the pasta and put into serving bowl. Add tuna mixture and stir. Add the lemon juice, cheese, butter pieces, and salt and pepper to taste and stir well. Serve immediately.
This is a very forgiving recipe. More garlic, less parsley, more or less cheese, it still works. Just use decent tuna and don't skimp on the butter. (Don't skimp on the butter should probably be my motto.)