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Pasta with Smothered Broccoli Rabe and Olives

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Many Mediterranean cooks use clay pots to cook foods without added liquid. In Sicily, the method is called affogato and the pot is an earthenware tegame. In Paula Wolfert’s adaptation of a specialty she enjoyed many years ago at the Ristorante Circolo Uliveto, in the Sicilian town of Trecastagni, she substitutes an easier-to-find cazuela for the tegame. She uses it to cook coarsely chopped broccoli rabe (ideally the young, leafy kind) with grated pecorino cheese, briny olives and meaty anchovies, then folds the mixture into boiled pasta and bakes it.

Pairing Suggestion

The bitterness of broccoli rabe (and similar vegetables) can make tannic red wines taste harsh, so pour a fresh white with this earthy pasta dish. Sauvignon Blanc is a good choice, particularly a wine from the Sancerre region in France’s Loire Valley or from northeastern Italy. Try the lightly herbal 2008 Pascal Jolivet Sancerre or the minerally 2007 Russiz Superiore Collio Sauvignon.

Pasta with Smothered Broccoli Rabe and Olives

(60 people have added this recipe to their favorites.)
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Pasta with Smothered Broccoli Rabe and Olives

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Pasta with Smothered Broccoli Rabe and Olives

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