Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Check out the recipe for tomato sauce three ways on this episode of Best Bites! Ingredients: 5 cups cherry tomatoes. 1/4 cup olive oil. 1/2 tsp onion powder. 1/2 tsp garlic powder. 2 tsp fresh or ...
This pasta recipe keeps things light with a no-cook marinated tomato sauce and delicate angel hair noodles. Just swap the grape tomatoes for cherries and top it with lots of fresh herbs. Get the ...
Genovese sauce – Meat-based Italian pasta sauce; Marinara sauce – Tomato sauce with herbs [47] Neapolitan sauce – Tomato-based sauce derived from Italian cuisine; Pearà – Traditional Veronese sauce; Pesto alla Genovese – Sauce made from basil, pine nuts, Parmesan, garlic, and olive oil
Cut the tops off of each tomato and hollow out the inside using a small, sharp knife. Cut each mozzarella cheese ball in half and place a half inside each tomato. Chop the fresh basil and add a little to each tomato and place on a serving dish. When ready to serve, sprinkle the top with salt and pepper, then drizzle on the vinegar and olive oil.
A dish from the Amalfi coast, made of scialatielli pasta (a type of thick and short fettuccine or linguine-like pasta featuring a rectangular cross-section), with a seafood sauce, existing in two variants: red (with tomato in the sauce, usually fresh cherry tomatoes) and white (without tomato). The sauce is made with shellfish (clams and ...
Yields: 1-4. Total Time: 30 mins. Ingredients. 10 oz. whole-wheat spaghetti. 3. 4.4-oz cans boneless mackerel fillets in olive oil. 12 oz. mixed-color cherry tomatoes, halved (or quartered if large)
The broth used for spaghetti all'assassina typically consists of a 1:1 to 2:1 ratio of water and tomato sauce; less water is required if the tomato sauce is obtained by blending fresh tomatoes in a food processor. Unlike other pasta risottata dishes, the spaghetti is allowed to directly touch the surface of the pan before additional doses of ...
Penne pasta served with tomato sauce. Tomato sauce in Italian cuisine is first mentioned in Antonio Latini's cookbook Lo scalco alla moderna (Naples, 1692). [12] Latini was chef to the Spanish viceroy of Naples, and one of his tomato recipes is for sauce "in the Spanish style" (Italian: alla spagnuola).