3. Sardinian Cuisine
Mom has a trace of Sardinian ancestry. Although at this point we’d be
guessing, it is a safe bet that this is form her maternal side—specifically her
maternal grandfather’s side of the family.
I half expected Corsicans, but Sardinians caught us both by surprise. Admittedly,
I know very little about Sardinia. The fact that there is a Catalan connection
is news to me, and I found the Wikipedia
entry fascinating and a gateway to all sorts of knowledge I did not possess
before and now I must have! Every hyperlink lead to another epic page of
fascinating facts—including an aside to the page about the giants of Mont’e
Prama who reminded me of The Iron
Giant.
From its ancient history to its beautiful architecture
to the beautiful beaches, Sardinia is immensely interesting. But, of course, it
is the food that we wanted to know more about…
It actually turns out that we already have a dish in our
repertoire that is very much the ringer for one of Sardinia’s national dishes.
According to Sardinia
Unlimited, a “typical [S]ardinian pasta” . . . fregola is made of semolina and rolled into balls, and one of the
most delicious ways to serve it is with seafood in a saffron broth. To me, the
Sardinian delicacy looks very much like my Mom’s seafood medley with pearl
couscous. The difference, apparently, is that fregola is toasted—but Mom actually toasts the pearl couscous
before cooking it, so I expect we’ve already achieved the taste profile for the
dish (toasting the pasta makes it taste a little nutty).
I am toying with making malloreddus (Sardinian gnocchi) with sausage. In one of the recipes
I consulted, it was suggested to substitute with cavatelli—though specialty shops will likely have malloreddus. There are two recipe
variations that I want to play with, in each you’ll cook the pasta to al dente
in salted boiling water to package instructions. Always reserve ½ cup of pasta
water to add to the sauce at the end of cooking.
Malloreddus
del Pastore (Sardinian Gnocchi with Sausage and
Ricotta)
½ lbs
whole milk Ricotta
¼ cup
freshly grated Pecorino (recipe calls for Sardinian Pecorino, but in a pinch
Romano will do)
Pinch of
freshly ground black pepper (to taste)
½ lbs
spicy pork sausage, casings removed
2-3
cloves of garlic, minced
1 TB extra-virgin olive oil
In a bowl, mix cheeses and pepper, and beat until smooth.
Heat oil in a pan over medium-high heat and cook sausage.
Crumble with the back of a spoon or spatula, and turn to make sure pork browns
and cooks through evenly (between 8-10 minutes). Add garlic and mix in for
about a minute. Fold in pasta, the pasta liquid, and the cheese mixture
stirring to coat pasta with sauce. Remove from heat and serve.
Note: there is no salt in the sausage mixture
because there’s enough salt content in the cheeses and the pasta. To serve
drizzle extra virgin olive oil over pasta.
Malloreddus
alla Campidanese (Sardinian Gnocchi with Sausage,
Tomatoes, and Saffron)
½-1 lbs
fresh tomatoes
½ cup
of grated Pecorino
½ tsp
saffron threads
½ cup
water
1
onion
2-3
garlic cloves
1 lbs pork
sausage
Extra-virgin
olive oil
Basil leaves
Salt and pepper to taste
Have a bowl of ice water on the side. Heat up water to a
boil. Score the bottom of tomatoes with a knife and add to boiling water for
about 30 seconds. Remove from pot and immediately add to ice water. Reserve ½ cup
of warm water, add saffron, and set aside.
Mince onion, garlic. Peel tomatoes (see note), chop into
small pieces and set aside.
Heat about 1 tablespoon of olive oil on medium-high
heat, sauté garlic and onion until onion is translucent. Add sausage, brown lightly
for 4-5 minutes and crumble. Add tomatoes and basil leaves, the saffron water,
and salt and pepper to taste (it’s safer to under-season and adjust at the
end). Stir and simmer on low heat for 30-45 minutes.
Note: peeling the tomatoes is not absolutely
necessary, and if you are skipping that step then do not boil or immerse in
iced water. To serve, fold in pasta and Pecorino, stir to coat pasta in sauce
and remove from heat. Drizzle with olive oil, garnish with fresh basil leaves
and additional cheese and freshly ground pepper.
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