Usually bucatini are served "all'amatriciana", which is a roman tomato based sauce with guanciale or pancetta tesa. Definition of Bucatini from Wikipedia: "Bucatini is a thick spaghetti-like pasta with a hole running through the center. The name comes from buco, meaning 'hole' in Italian, while bucato means 'pierced'. Bucatini is common throughout Lazio, particularly Rome".
In lack of the real thing, I made a tomato sauce with the following:
- Fresh tomatoes
- Shallots
- Streaky Bacon
- Minced Pork
- Broccoli
- Basil
- Meat stock (use a robust one such as veal, beef or lamb)
- Parmesan
- Burrata
- Half a glass of red wine
This dish is all about the combination of the rustic ingredients and rich tomato sauce with this rough cut of pasta and the fresh burrata to finish.
Put some oil on a frying pan and fry the bacon, add the minced pork and when all the juices have dried out pour the red wine and let evaporate quickly. Add the stock and reduce to taste (depending on the intensity of the stock), together with the broccoli shredded into small pieces. Finally, add the tomato sauce and basil, salt as necessary and cook for a further 5 minutes or so.
4 comments:
Stumbled across your blog, and you're on my list of bookmarks. This recipe sounds delish. I must try. Keep eating and blogging!
Thanks, Sharon. They are still selling the bucatini at Mediya, and the burrata at Quattro Stagioni (in front). Good luck!
Hi, would you know where the italian grocer is located now after they closed their store at orchard central?
Thanks - Val
Sorry, I really have no idea, but let us know if you manage to find out!
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