Pasta & Noodles
1283 recipes found

Fettuccine in Cream Sauce

Cheese Fettuccine, With Wild Mushrooms

Linguine With Spring Vegetables

Pasta With Clams and Jalapeño
Jalapeño adds a welcome kick to this otherwise simple clam pasta. Ready in less than 30 minutes, it's a perfect weeknight meal for the height of summer, paired with a crisp, dry white.

French Fish Chowder

Spaghetti With Turkey And Tomato Sauce

Spicy Ginger Pork Noodles With Bok Choy
Spicy, brawny and full of ginger and garlic, these pork noodles are a play on dumplings, but easier to make at home. If you don’t have the black vinegar to sprinkle on top of the sliced ginger, you can simply leave it out. Or try substituting balsamic, which is a bit sweeter, but has similar caramel notes to play off the ginger’s pungency.

Dan Dan Noodles

Goat Ragù

Pasta With Venison and Porcini
Back around the time the earth cooled, there was a restaurant, Giordano’s, on West 39th Street near the entrance to the Lincoln Tunnel. Craig Claiborne gave it three stars in his 1968 “New York Times Guide to Dining Out in New York.”Among the specialties was sautéed beef tenderloin, unusual because its sauce depended on white wine, not red. When I asked the chef about it, he said it was lighter that way.I had not made it in many years but as we tasted the 2004 Barolos and everyone’s appetite was whetted for pasta with a beef ragù and truffles, I thought of it. I decided to try it with venison and porcini to serve with fresh pasta. You’ll need some last-minute stove work before you can put it on the table and pour that Barolo.

Pasta With Smoked Trout And Golden Caviar

Warm Orzo and Black Bean Salad With Smoked Turkey

Fettuccine With Tomato And Lovage Sauce

Beef meatballs with marjoram

Peanut and Cilantro Noodle Salad

Fresh Pasta and Seafood Salad
ALTHOUGH pasta has existed for years in French cuisine - 16th- century French cookbooks offer recipes for ravioli - its importance in the French diet evolved only recently. Today fresh pasta can be found at many cheese shops and charcuteries, while pasta appears on menus all over the country, in many cases replacing the potato as a side dish. In the kitchens at Tour d'Argent pasta is prepared fresh daily, while such restaurants as Rostang and Jamin include ravioli or pasta on the menu throughout the year. At Jules Verne, in the Eiffel Tower, the menu features a warm salad combining fresh fettuccine and sole in a light, creamy dressing, while at La Cantine des Gourmets goat cheese-filled ravioli floats in a rich duck stock, surrounded by slices of rosy duck and chunks of fresh artichoke hearts. This recipe comes from Colette Dejean of Chez Toutone, a small Left Bank restaurant.

Noodles with Chicken Livers (Nouilles Strasbourgeoise)

Spaghetti Caruso

Creamy Chicken Liver Pasta With Wild Morels
Fresh wild mushrooms are the most delicious indulgence, whether it’s gray-brown morels in the springtime, golden chanterelles in the summer, or russet-colored porcini in the fall. True, they are expensive (unless you know how to pick your own), but a mere half-pound is all you need for this creamy pasta — and chicken livers are cheap. Serve the pasta in small portions; it is undeniably a bit on the rich side. If you can’t find wild mushrooms, use an assortment of cultivated mushrooms, like cremini, oyster mushrooms, King trumpets or shiitake. To give them more wild mushroom flavor, soak just a few a few dried morels or porcini in warm water. When softened, chop them very fine and stir into the sauce.

Fettuccine With Sausage And Fried Sage Leaves

Asparagus and Prosciutto Gratin of Fettuccine

Roasted Vegetable Fagioli Soup With Winter Pesto

Pasta With Bread Crumbs and Anchovies, Sicilian Style
Here's a delightfully simple yet deeply flavorful Sicilian-style pasta sauce from Paula Wolfert, the prolific Mediterranean cookbook author. As you wait for your pasta to cook, sauté a garlic clove in a good bit of olive oil, then discard the clove. Toss in two cans of anchovy fillets and mash them with the back of your spoon until they dissolve into a fragrant sauce. Drain the pasta, then combine it with the anchovy sauce and serve. Sprinkle with chopped fresh parsley for color and toasted bread crumbs for crunch. If you're serving this as a main course, double the recipe, for four generous servings.
