Recipe adapted from "Kitchen" by Nigella Lawson
picture courtesy of dinnerdujour.org
First I have to ask--have you ever seen one of Nigella's shows on Food Network? She just makes everything look so satisfying. Well, this dish is exactly that. So many flavors and textures, you just feel satisfied. And it's not hard to make. But, it does include a couple of pricier ingredients (ie: pine nuts and good blue cheese), so depending on your budget maybe this would have to be a special occasion dish, not a weeknight dinner! Although, I think it's okay to sometimes splurge on a really good weeknight dinner. Especially when it is delicious and hot and it's 12 degrees outside . . .
Pasta with Butternut Squash and Blue Cheese
1 large butternut squash (2-3 lbs)
1 medium-large onion (I used white, but I think any kind would be fine)
2 T olive oil
3/4 tsp paprika
1 T unsalted butter
3 T chicken broth or stock
1/2 c water
salt, to taste
2/3 c pine nuts (I may have used less, the store I went to only sold them in these little jars about the size of a spice jar, but it still seemed enough)
1 pound pasta, Nigella calls for Papperdelle but I couldn't find it so I just used bowtie and it was fine. She just says use a "robust" pasta
6 fresh sage leaves
5 ounces soft blue cheese, such as Saint Agur (I was able to find Saint Agur, but those of you who don't have a Wegmans may need to substitute. Saint Agur is just a nice creamy, fairly mild blue cheese)
1. Peel and seed the squash, cut into roughly 1" cubes.
2. Peel and finely chop onion and fry in olive oil in a large heavy-based saucepan (make sure it's big enough to add the pasta to later). When the onion starts to turn golden, add the paprika.
3. Add the squash cubes and butter, stirring until everything the squash is well-covered with the butter and oil. Add the broth/stock and water, then let the pan come to a boil. Reduce the heat, put the lid on, and simmer about 20 minutes or until tender. *Check the squash before the 20 minutes, you don't want mush!
4. Meanwhile, put a large pot of water on to boil for the pasta. Toast the pinenuts (*watch them closely--they are too expensive to burn!) in a small hot, dry frying pan until dark gold, then tip them into a bowl or plate to cool.
5. Once the water boils, add some salt (1 T per pound is recommended, but whatever you like), then the pasta and cook according to package directions. Check the squash and if it is tender, take the pan off the heat. Chop the sage leaves and crumble the blue cheese. Sprinkle the sage over the butternut sauce once it's done.
6. Before draining pasta, lower a cup or mug into the pan and collect a little pasta water to reserve for sauce if needed. Drain the pasta and pour into squash pan. Gently turn pasta into sauce to combine, adding pasta water if needed to loosen the sauce. Drop in crumbled blue cheese, stir gently, and serve.
*A tip for those with kids--I actually pulled out some of the pasta and sauce before I added the blue cheese, thinking they wouldn't like the blue cheese. Turns out one of my kids did like the blue cheese, and one didn't. So, do whatever works for your family!
Enjoy!
picture courtesy of dinnerdujour.org
First I have to ask--have you ever seen one of Nigella's shows on Food Network? She just makes everything look so satisfying. Well, this dish is exactly that. So many flavors and textures, you just feel satisfied. And it's not hard to make. But, it does include a couple of pricier ingredients (ie: pine nuts and good blue cheese), so depending on your budget maybe this would have to be a special occasion dish, not a weeknight dinner! Although, I think it's okay to sometimes splurge on a really good weeknight dinner. Especially when it is delicious and hot and it's 12 degrees outside . . .
Pasta with Butternut Squash and Blue Cheese
1 large butternut squash (2-3 lbs)
1 medium-large onion (I used white, but I think any kind would be fine)
2 T olive oil
3/4 tsp paprika
1 T unsalted butter
3 T chicken broth or stock
1/2 c water
salt, to taste
2/3 c pine nuts (I may have used less, the store I went to only sold them in these little jars about the size of a spice jar, but it still seemed enough)
1 pound pasta, Nigella calls for Papperdelle but I couldn't find it so I just used bowtie and it was fine. She just says use a "robust" pasta
6 fresh sage leaves
5 ounces soft blue cheese, such as Saint Agur (I was able to find Saint Agur, but those of you who don't have a Wegmans may need to substitute. Saint Agur is just a nice creamy, fairly mild blue cheese)
1. Peel and seed the squash, cut into roughly 1" cubes.
2. Peel and finely chop onion and fry in olive oil in a large heavy-based saucepan (make sure it's big enough to add the pasta to later). When the onion starts to turn golden, add the paprika.
3. Add the squash cubes and butter, stirring until everything the squash is well-covered with the butter and oil. Add the broth/stock and water, then let the pan come to a boil. Reduce the heat, put the lid on, and simmer about 20 minutes or until tender. *Check the squash before the 20 minutes, you don't want mush!
4. Meanwhile, put a large pot of water on to boil for the pasta. Toast the pinenuts (*watch them closely--they are too expensive to burn!) in a small hot, dry frying pan until dark gold, then tip them into a bowl or plate to cool.
5. Once the water boils, add some salt (1 T per pound is recommended, but whatever you like), then the pasta and cook according to package directions. Check the squash and if it is tender, take the pan off the heat. Chop the sage leaves and crumble the blue cheese. Sprinkle the sage over the butternut sauce once it's done.
6. Before draining pasta, lower a cup or mug into the pan and collect a little pasta water to reserve for sauce if needed. Drain the pasta and pour into squash pan. Gently turn pasta into sauce to combine, adding pasta water if needed to loosen the sauce. Drop in crumbled blue cheese, stir gently, and serve.
*A tip for those with kids--I actually pulled out some of the pasta and sauce before I added the blue cheese, thinking they wouldn't like the blue cheese. Turns out one of my kids did like the blue cheese, and one didn't. So, do whatever works for your family!
Enjoy!
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