| Serves | 4 |
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.
| 2 | large cloves garlic | |
| 2 | Tbsp. fresh Italian parsley leaves, tightly packed | |
| ⅛ | 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 | |
| ⅓ | cup oil-cured black olives, pitted and coarsely chopped | |
| 1 | Tbsp. vinegar-packed capers, drained |
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.
Related article: Lynne Rossetto Kasper
This content is from the book The Italian Country Table by Lynne Rossetto Kasper.
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1. by Carrie Floyd 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.
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