Pasta
Delicious Pasta Recipes for Bangladeshi Home Kitchens
During this inflation, homemade food saves money. Cooking pasta at home allows you to explore various flavours and create delicious dishes that suit your taste buds. Whether you prefer something rich and cheesy or spicy and tangy, pasta is a versatile dish that can be transformed into a wide range of mouthwatering recipes. Here are some delightful pasta recipes you can easily prepare in your home kitchen.
7 Mouthwatering Homemade Pasta Recipes for Bangladeshi Kitchens
Cheesy Pasta
Ingredients
450 grams uncooked pasta, ¼ cup butter, ½ cup milk, ½ cup cubed Gouda cheese, ½ cup cubed sharp Cheddar cheese, ¼ cup grated Parmesan cheese, ¼ cup blue cheese dressing, 1 clove garlic (crushed), paprika to taste, salt and pepper to taste.
Instructions
First, boil a large pot of lightly salted water and cook the pasta for 8 to 10 minutes, until it reaches an al dente texture. Drain the pasta and place it back into the pot.
Then, add the butter, garlic, Cheddar cheese, Gouda cheese, and Parmesan cheese in the same pot. Cook and stir over low heat. Do not use too much heat to prevent the cheese become stringy. Next, gradually stir in the blue cheese dressing and milk, continuing to cook until the pasta is evenly coated. Season with paprika, salt, and pepper. This recipe is ideal for those who love a comforting and cheesy meal.
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Spicy Chicken Pasta
Ingredients
250 grams of uncooked pasta, 2 chicken breasts, 1 teaspoon garlic powder, 1 teaspoon onion powder, 1 teaspoon smoked paprika, 1/8 teaspoon cayenne pepper (to taste), salt and pepper to taste, 2 tablespoons olive oil, 2 cloves garlic minced, ½ cup chicken broth, 400 grams crushed tomatoes, ½ teaspoon crushed red pepper flakes (to taste), 1 pinch of sugar (optional, to taste), 2 cups fresh baby spinach, 1/4 cup fresh basil (chopped), and freshly grated parmesan cheese (optional, for serving).
3 months ago
Iconic Italian dish Pasta Carbonara an American invention?
The same day (March 23, 2023) that Italy submitted pasta carbonara for inclusion on Unesco’s list of Intangible Cultural Heritage, the Financial Times published an article in which Italian culinary expert Alberto Grandi claimed that carbonara was developed by Americans residing in Italy shortly after WWII.
The claim sparked outrage throughout Italy. “A surrealist attack!” – said the agriculture organisation Coldiretti, as heated social media discussion ensued nationwide, according to a BBC article.
So who really created the original carbonara?
Italian food author Eleonora Cozzella says, “It was a combination of Italian genius and American resources.” Cozzella spent six years covering National Carbonara Day on April 6, and eventually wrote The Perfect Carbonara, which earned a Gourmand World Cookbook Award in 2020, says the BBC.
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She interviewed the descendants of innkeepers who fed American soldiers in the neighborhood of Trastevere, just over the Tiber river in Rome, in the late 1940s. US soldiers apparently asked for “spaghetti breakfast” that should have eggs and bacon. Even during the desperate times, Italians could acquire military rations in the black market, including bacon from Americans and egg powder from the British.
In 1952, the first recipe for pasta carbonara was published in the United States. Author Patricia Bronté mentioned the Italian restaurant Armando’s, run by chefs Pietro Lencioni and Armando Lorenzini, among her favorite spots in her book “Vittles and Vice: An Incredible Guide to What’s Cooking on Chicago’s Near North Side”. She included recipe of the restaurant’s famous dish, carbonara.
“No one has a trademark on the recipe,” Alessandro Pipero, chef of the Michelin-starred restaurant Pipero in Rome and one of the “carbonara kings” told BBC. “Honestly, I don’t care who invented it,” he said.
The first Italian recipe for carbonara was published in August 1954 in La Cucina Italiana magazine. “And it is a strange one,” Cozzella said in the BBC report. “It has parsley and even gruyere as cheese!”
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“This debate is ridiculous and dangerous,” said Michele Fino, a law professor at Pollenzo's University of Gastronomic Sciences, calling it “old news”. According to Fino, the discussion is harmful because a toxic type of nationalism may be lurking between the pecorino and a piece of guanciale, or maybe deep inside the tubular rigatoni. “It is a sort of banal nationalism that runs through food,” he told BBC. “People consider it unimportant, but it creates a certain climate – we shouldn’t ignore it.”
1 year ago