Thursday, December 01, 2005

Ricotta Creme on Anything

The perfect weeknight meal. A detox from holiday Americana, but being a bourgie, still luxurious and never ascetic. Pennete pasta with pesto and petite green beans, and the crowning adornment, Ricotta Creme. Aahhh.

During the week, if you are anything like me, sometimes the most you can do is boil some water for a light pasta dinner. But you can enrich a typical pasta meal by the addition of a sumptuous Ricotta Creme with just a few ingredients. Lighten up the ricotta by starting out with a few tablespoons of whipped cream, beaten to stiff peaks. Add the ricotta, and a handful of freshly grated parmesan cheese. Blended until well mixed, with a little salt and pepper to liven up the mix, and now you have an accoutrement to make even the most bourgie proud.

This ricotta creme is light yet luscious, and need not only be saved for a pesto pasta meal. This shock of white creme may be used instead of the traditional parmesan on any plain style pasta: marinara, a la vodka, etc. If the pasta that you serve it on is piping hot, the creme will begin to languish over the pasta, melting soothingly into the main dish. It may not be the most traditionally Italian, but it is wonderful. One try of this creme on pasta, and you'll be wondering what else you can put this delightful mixture on.

6 Comments:

Blogger ilva said...

It sounds really nice, I'll try it when I'm alone next week and my Italian husband is away because Italians can be quite dogmatic about their pasta...

1:30 PM  
Anonymous vanessa said...

Now I know what to do with the straggling ricotta hanging out in the fridge. Thanks for hte suggestion. And GORGEOUS photos!

12:33 AM  
Anonymous Valerie said...

I make the same thing with blue cheese. Drop a big chunk of blue and a little cream in the blender at low speed for a couple minutes (food processor works too) and the result is a buttery blue cheese cream that can be used for just about anything: top a steak, melt over broccoli, or just *shame* eat straight out of the bowl with a spoon.

9:44 AM  
Blogger cookiecrumb said...

OMG. That's brilliant. I'm so there.
(Ilva: You can have some... Oh, no. Swedes don't do lutefisk. Good.)

11:45 PM  
Blogger Kalyn said...

Fantastic photo, and I really love this idea.

8:35 AM  
Anonymous Ashley said...

Thanks for the great tip. It's ironic that I only discover Nosheteria after leaving my hometown of San Francisco and UC Berkeley for Beijing, China. But thanks for being here as I anticipate my return to SF for a week's holiday by planning out all the beautiful things I'm going to cook/eat while in a place where Western food is readily available.

4:46 AM  

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