Pasta

  4.4 – 7 reviews  • Pasta Recipes
Level: Easy
Total: 1 hr 55 min
Prep: 40 min
Inactive: 1 hr 10 min
Cook: 5 min
Yield: 4 to 6 servings
Level: Easy
Total: 1 hr 55 min
Prep: 40 min
Inactive: 1 hr 10 min
Cook: 5 min
Yield: 4 to 6 servings

Ingredients

  1. 2 cups pasta or Italian 00 flour
  2. Fat pinch salt
  3. 4 eggs
  4. Meatballs, recipe follows
  5. Tomato Sauce, recipe follows
  6. 9 ounces ground pork
  7. 9 ounces ground beef
  8. 1 egg
  9. 2 tablespoon freshly grated Parmesan
  10. 1 garlic clove, minced
  11. 1 teaspoon dried oregano
  12. 3 tablespoons fine bread crumbs or semolina
  13. Good grind black pepper
  14. 1 teaspoon salt
  15. 1 onion
  16. 2 cloves garlic
  17. 1 teaspoon dried oregano
  18. 1 tablespoon unsalted butter
  19. 1 tablespoon olive oil (not extra-virgin)
  20. 24 ounces canned tomatoes, in puree
  21. 3/4 cup water
  22. Pinch sugar
  23. Salt
  24. Freshly ground black pepper
  25. 1/3 cup plus 1 tablespoon whole milk

Instructions

  1. Either put the flour (with the salt) in a bowl and crack the eggs into it, or make a mound of flour on a worktop and add the eggs to that. I don’t bother to beat them before adding them to the flour, but if you prefer to, do. Just find the way that you prefer. All you do is mix the flour and eggs together, and then knead the mixture until it comes together in a satiny mass. Kneading involves no more than pushing the mixture away from you with the heels of your hands and then bringing it back toward you. If you’ve got an electric mixer with a dough hook, then use that, though for some reason I don’t find it makes the pasta cohere any sooner. And you don’t get the relaxing satisfaction of making it by hand.
  2. When the pasta is silky smooth, form it into a ball, cover with a cloth and leave for 30 minutes to 1 hour. Then get out your pasta machine, read the instructions and away you go. Two tips first: cut each slice you want to feed through the pasta machine, read the instructions and away you go. Put through the no. 1 press quite a few times, folding the strip in 1/2 and pushing it through again after each time. When the pasta dough’s been fed a few times through the no. 1 slot, pass it through the remaining numbers on the gauge before pushing it through the tagliatelle-cutters. And I find that pasta strips cut into tagliatelle is better if you leave them hanging over the table or wherever to dry a little first (10 minutes is enough).
  3. When you cook the pasta, make sure you’ve got plenty of boiling, salted water and start tasting as soon as the water comes back to the boil after you’ve put the pasta in. Use about 1/3 of the Meatballs in their sauce to toss with the cooked, drained pasta and then pour the rest of them over the scantly sauced ribbons in the bowl. This is ambrosia: food to get you through the winter happily.
  4. Just put everything in a large bowl and then, using your hands, mix to combine before shaping into small balls. Place the meatballs on baking sheets or plates that you have lined with plastic wrap, and put in the refrigerator as you finish them.
  5. Put the onion, garlic and oregano into the processor and blitz to a pulp. Heat the butter and oil in a deep, wide pan, then scrape the onion-garlic mix into it and cook over low to medium heat for about 10 minutes. Don’t let the mixture stick, just let it become soft. Add the tomatoes and then add about 3/4 cup cold water to the pan with a pinch of sugar and some salt and pepper, and cook for about 10 minutes. The tomato sauce may appear thin at this stage, but don’t worry, as it will thicken a little later. Stir in the milk, and then drop the meatballs in 1 at a time. Don’t stir the pan until the meatballs have turned from pink to brown, as you don’t want to break them up. Cook everything for about 20 minutes, with the lid only partially covering it. At the end of cooking time, check the seasoning, as you may want more salt and a grind or 2 more of pepper.

Nutrition Facts

Serving Size 1 of 6 servings
Calories 530
Total Fat 27 g
Saturated Fat 10 g
Carbohydrates 43 g
Dietary Fiber 4 g
Sugar 5 g
Protein 27 g
Cholesterol 203 mg
Sodium 832 mg
Serving Size 1 of 6 servings
Calories 530
Total Fat 27 g
Saturated Fat 10 g
Carbohydrates 43 g
Dietary Fiber 4 g
Sugar 5 g
Protein 27 g
Cholesterol 203 mg
Sodium 832 mg

Reviews

Russell Carson
GREAT NOTHING MISSING
Rachel Zuniga
I used top of the range Pasta and made the meatballs and sauce. It worked as comfort food.
Amber Pena
Nice
Marisa Moore
I didn’t make the pasta, but the sauce and meatballs were excellent. I normally fry meatballs for a couple of minutes on each side before letting them cook for a couple of hours in the sauce. I wanted to see if this was a good option for a quicker spaghetti and meatballs dinner, and I’m happy to say it was! The sauce was fantastic. Not acidic at all. The butter gives it such a rich taste. Olive oil only can’t get that flavor. It got rave reviews here. I made the meatballs in advance and refrigerated them, so when it came time to cook, I had very little to do.
Danielle Bishop
I have made Moroccan and Hungarian style meatballs but wanted a good Italian style to make for my granddaughter. I have Nigella Bites and thought there was a mistake in the recipe when there was no pre-cooking of the meatballs before putting them in the sauce so I sought advice from the internet!

As there is no frying or baking of the meatballs first in this recipe I decided the book must be correct and decided to give it a go and they’re delicious! I’ll not be frying meatballs again, it’ll be straight into the sauce raw in future. The recipe in the book is slightly different in that it uses passata but I’ll definitely be making them again.

Kenneth Coffey
00 Italian Pasta Flour available on web and Worth buying to make this pasta and then complete dish~so Soul Satisfying…
Brian Collins
I have to admit–I didn’t make the pasta because I prefer whole grain pasta (although I may make it in the future with my nieces–it looks lovely!). However, I DID make the meatballs–and they were SO easy and so good! I highly recommend taking the time to make them as small as she did; and also to make the sauce in a deep saucepan to keep the meatballs from sticking to the bottom. It literally takes minutes to cook them and they are fastastic–not fried, but cooked in the sauce itself!

 

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