My Culinate

Register | Login

Friday-Night Spaghetti with Tuna and Black Olives

From the book The Italian Country Table by Lynne Rossetto Kasper
Serves 4

Introduction

Tuna never tasted so good. Tossed with spaghetti in a sauce of crunchy onion, black olives, garlic, and parsley, canned tuna is the essence of sound home cooking. In the hands of country cooks from Sicily to the Veneto, these few ingredients from the cupboard turn into a magical meatless sauce for pasta in almost no time — a Friday-night dinner or quick supper after a movie.

Ingredients

2 large cloves garlic
2 Tbsp. fresh Italian parsley leaves, tightly packed
tsp. salt, plus more to taste
1 lb. spaghetti
6 qt. boiling salted water
2 Tbsp. extra-virgin olive oil
1 medium red onion, cut into ¼-inch dice
2 oil-packed anchovy fillets, rinsed and chopped
1 Tbsp. tomato paste
1 (6 oz.) can tuna packed in olive oil, lightly drained
~ Freshly ground black pepper
cup oil-cured black olives, pitted and coarsely chopped
1 Tbsp. vinegar-packed capers, drained

Steps

  1. Chop the garlic and parsley with the salt in a food processor. Or mound the salt in a small pile near the edge of a cutting board. Crush the garlic into it with the side of a knife blade. Add the parsley and chop everything fine.
  2. Drop the spaghetti into fiercely boiling water and cook until it’s a little firmer than you’d like it. Quickly measure out about 1¼ cups of the pasta water and set aside. Drain the spaghetti in a colander.
  3. As the pasta cooks, heat the oil in a 12-inch sauté pan over medium-high heat. Stir in the garlic-parsley mixture and half the onion. Sauté until the onion is beginning to soften, about 3 minutes. Don’t brown the garlic. Blend in ¼ cup of the reserved pasta water and cook to nothing. Stir in the anchovies and tomato paste, along with about ⅓ cup more of the reserved pasta water. Continue stirring over medium heat 1 minute. Blend in the tuna, seasoning with salt and pepper to taste. Cook another minute, adding a little pasta water if there’s no moisture in the pan. Remove from the heat.
  4. If the sauce has dried up, stir in enough pasta water to moisten the bottom of the pan. Toss in the drained pasta, the remaining red onion, the olives, and the capers. Toss over medium heat a few minutes to thoroughly cloak the spaghetti with sauce. Taste for seasoning and serve hot. No cheese is needed for this dish.

Notes

A generous amount of pasta water plays three roles in this sauce. A little added to the garlic sauté helps to finish cooking the garlic while protecting it from burning. A little more added later dilutes the tomato paste and anchovy mixture, actually turning the sauté into a sauce. Finally, once the tuna is in the pan, a few more tablespoons of pasta water assure that the sauce will cloak the spaghetti, not remain dried up on the bottom of the sauté pan.

This content is from the book The Italian Country Table by Lynne Rossetto Kasper.

Subscribe
Advertisement
Comments
There is 1 comment on this item
Add a comment
1. by carrie on Apr 11, 2008 at 10:17 AM PDT

I added a pinch of red pepper flakes to the mix and used whole wheat spaghetti—it was delicious. Next time I’m thinking a third cup of chopped sun-dried tomatoes would add a nice tang (and a little color) to the dish, too.

Add a comment

Think before you type

Culinate welcomes comments that are on-topic, clean, and courteous. For the benefit of the community we reserve the right to delete comments that contain advertising, personal attacks, profanity, or which are thinly disguised attempts to promote another website.

Please enter your comment

Format: Bare URLs are automatically linked; use this style: [http://www.example.com "link text"] for prettier links. You may specify *bold* or _italic_ text. No HTML please.

Please identify yourself

Not a member? Sign up!

Please prove that you’re not a computer


Slow Food

Politics and food

The two are intertwined

The politics of pizza.

Subscribe