Posted on 10/03/2017 1:45:42 PM PDT by nickcarraway
Besides fettuccine Alfredo, is there a dish reviled by pasta snobs as much as penne alla vodka? The other day, one of these detractors summed up the recipe for us as follows: Bring a large pot of water to a roiling boil, add salt, toss in penne, and cook until al dente. Meanwhile, in a small pot, heat up a can of cream-of-tomato soup. Drain pasta. Dump soup over pasta. Mangia!
Although the pasta snob was just being extra snooty and probably secretly craves the stuff, he wasnt so far off the mark. The problem with vodka sauce is the inherent simplicity of the recipe: just onions and garlic, a little chile heat, tomatoes, and heavy cream. And the trouble with simple recipes, as everyone knows, is that theyre the most difficult to get right. Which might be why it seems that lousy penne alla vodkas (soupy, bland) outnumber outstanding versions (tangy, balanced) by such a wide margin. (Though wed argue that like pizza and mashed potatoes, penne alla vodka belongs to that superb group of comfort foods that fall under the heading Good Even When Bad.)
Maybe penne alla vodkas standing in the pasta hierarchy wouldnt be so low if it had a more inspiring origin story. Some say it was invented at Dante restaurant in Bologna in the 80s; others say it was Orsinis in New York at about the same time. But the chef and Italian-food guru Cesare Casella remembers wolfing plates of midnight penne alla vodka at the clubs and discos on the Versilia coast in Tuscany in the late 70s, attributing its presence to vodka-company marketing schemes. A story like that could make any pasta doubt its authenticity and cause it to develop an inferiority complex. Which is why we think critics shouldnt be so hard on the dish.
The good news is that pasta alla vodka and vodka sauce itself are enjoying some degree of hipster celebrity with todays reclamation of all things retro at restaurants like Carbone, where a $26 plate of spicy rigatoni vodka has become one of those signature dishes whose removal from the menu would provoke a pitchfork-and-torches-level revolt by the restaurants regulars. Vodka sauce a.k.a. pink sauce, which in truth ranges in color from pale salmon to sunset orange is a mainstay of the citys enduring red-sauce joints, but you can also find it at fast-casual-pasta newcomers Aunt Jakes and the Sosta, and as a pizza topping everywhere from Staten Islands venerable Joe & Pats, which spawns an East Village outpost this winter, to Old Rose, the new restaurant at the Jane Hotel, where chef Joey Scalabrino uses legendary pizza man Chris Biancos proprietary canned tomatoes for his vodka-sauce-and-Stracchino-cheese pie.
Of course, this newfound popularity doesnt come without some degree of controversy. Italians can get testy and weird when the subject of combining tomatoes and cream (or dairy in general) is brought up for debate. Youre blending the two worlds of Italian cuisine in a pan: The southern Italians with their tomatoes and the northern Italians with their cream, explains Carbones Mario Carbone. Neither one of them wants to be associated with the other and it just pisses them off. Hes right. Neapolitans, for instance, obsess over pizza Margherita (super-creamy blobs of buffalo mozzarella dotting a tomato-sauced dough), but the idea of adulterating their prized pomodori with acid-muffling butter or cream is loathsome to them. Asking a Neapolitan to add cream to tomato sauce is like asking a Scotch whisky aficionado to cut a 20-year-old single malt with a splash of Mountain Dew. Id never heard of penne alla vodka until I came to this country, says Rosario Procino, the Naples-born co-owner of the downtown pizza restaurant Ribalta. And when I did hear about it, I refused to try it.
Tuscans seem to be less fussy about mixing tomato with cream: Pino Luongo had an early hit with his rigatoni alla buttera, a dish hell bring to the latest version of his Coco Pazzo restaurant when it opens in Soho this fall; and the rigatoni Pitti and pappardelle alla Fiesolana are two of the best sellers at Giovanni Tognozzis Bar Pitti.
But therein lies the rub: None of those dishes are called alla vodka or even contain the spirit. And neither prepare yourself for a shocker does Carbones, despite what they call it on the menu. I tried the recipe with varying amounts of vodka in it and it didnt do anything, says the chef. Indeed, the recipes success, says Carbone, can be attributed to flavor builders and texture boosters like onion soubise, good tomatoes, chewy housemade pasta, and high-octane Calabrian chile paste. Why then call it spicy rigatoni vodka instead of, say, pasta a pomodori e panna? Because thats how people have come to know the dish.
Not everyone shares Carbones opinion. In his assiduously researched The Food Lab, J. Kenji López-Alt, citing Harold McGee on the effect of reactive molecules in alcohol on food and other beach-read theories, claims that vodka, though not compulsory, does contribute to the dishs fragrance and flavor, concluding that vodka sauce wouldnt be, well, vodka sauce without it. Except of course when it is.
Vodka or no, Italian or Italian-American, the bastard child of mismatched regional cuisines or the misbegotten fruit of a liquor ad: The one incontrovertible truth about pasta alla vodka is that when done well, its soul-soothingly delicious, with a tangy lushness and just enough of a chile-pepper pop to make you want to keep eating it. As the song says: if loving vodka sauce is wrong, we dont want to be right.
I’ve made alfredo, some serious fans here. One adores alfredo with truffle shavings or even the oil. It is much better freshly made.
I’m not sure about vodka sauce...I’ve never been sure about it. I do like to drink vodka though!
One of my signature dishes is Alfredo w/ shrimp and asparagus over linguine. Yummy.
Never used nutmeg though.
I’ve often wondered about that too...my guess is they used olive oil, spices,...pesto, etc.,....before the advent of that new world fruit called the tomato.
Give me southern Italian cuisine with it’s garlicy tomato sauces over northern Italian and it’s cremes any day of the week.
You had to do that? It’s not dinner time here yet!
You understand my disappointment with butterscotch. It contains neither butter or scotch.
Heh....cute.
I love Carbone's cheffy touches...adding the classic
French "Sauce Soubise" (caramelized onions mixed w/ a rich Béchamel).
And of course the fantastic Calabrian chili paste for heat.
My Vodka Sauce:
1/2 Cup Butter
1 diced onion
1 cup vodka
2 28oz cans GREAT VALUE crushed tomatoes
16 oz heavy cream
Salt to taste
In a skillet over medium heat, saute onion in butter until slightly soft. Pour in vodka and let simmer for 5 minutes. Stir in crushed tomatoes and cook for 20 minutes. Pour in heavy cream and simmer for another 20 minutes.
*I use Great Value crushed tomatoes from Walmart because every other brand of “crushed tomatoes” looks like tomato sauce. If I wanted tomato sauce that’s what I’d buy.
bkmk
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