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Anything's Pastable: 81 Inventive Pasta Recipes for Saucy People

(Hardback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

Anything's Pastable: 81 Inventive Pasta Recipes for Saucy People

Contributors:

By (Author) Dan Pashman

ISBN:

9780063291126

Publisher:

HarperCollins Publishers Inc

Imprint:

William Morrow Cookbooks

Publication Date:

17th September 2024

Country:

United States

Classifications

Readership:

General

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Other Subjects:

National and regional cuisine
Cookery / food by ingredient: pasta and noodles
Cookery dishes and courses: sauces
Humour collections and anthologies

Dewey:

641.822

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Hardback

Number of Pages:

288

Dimensions:

Width 203mm, Height 229mm

Weight:

989g

Description


The innovative James Beard Awardwinning podcaster who changed the way you think about pasta shapes with his invention of the viral sensation cascatelli now does the same for pasta sauces in this fun and charmingly obsessive cookbook, which includes a foreword from bestselling author J. Kenji Lpez-Alt.

When Sporkful podcast host Dan Pashman launched cascatelli, a new pasta shape he invented that he designed to hold tons of sauce, stay on the fork, and be incredibly satisfying to bite into, it went viral and was named one of TIME Magazines Best Inventions of the Year. VICE called him "a modern pasta legend."

But as Dan was flooded with pictures of what people were making with his pasta, he was disappointed to see how limited the dishes were: tomato sauce, meat sauce, mac and cheese, over and over. A few party animals made pesto.

So Dan set out to revolutionize peoples conceptions of pasta sauces, just as he did with pasta shapes. He traveled across Italy and worked with an all-star team of recipe developers in the US to create a new kind of pasta sauce cookbook for people bored with the old standbys. Thats why theres no 3-hour marinara recipe or fresh pasta made from scratch in this book. No photos of nonnas caked in flour or the hills of Tuscany. Instead its time to show the worldAnythings Pastable.

Here youll enjoy dishes inspired by a range of ingredients and cuisines:

  • Kimchi Carbonara
  • Cacio e Pepe e Chili Crisp
  • Keema Bolognese
  • Mapo Tofu Cascatelli
  • Shakshuka and Shells
  • Smoked Cheddar and Chicken Manicotti Enchiladas
  • Linguine with Miso Clam Sauce
  • Shrimp and Andouille Mac and Cheese

Lesser-known Italian pasta dishes with a twist:

  • Spaghetti allAssassina (spicy pasta pan fried until charred and crispy crunchy)
  • Ciceri e Tria (chewy fresh pasta with crispy fried pasta in a light chickpea broth)
  • Cavatelli with Roasted Artichokes and Preserved Lemon
  • Creste di Gallo with Fava Beans and Dandelion Greens
  • Pasta Frittata

Fun and delicious concoctions that mayor may notbe how they do it in Italy:

  • Spinach Artichoke Dip Lasagna Pinwheels
  • Pasta Pizza (the crust is fettucine fused together)
  • Roman Cafeteria Hot Dog Pasta Salad with Canned Veggies

With an incredible array of recipes, Dan showcases the limitless pastabilities when you really know how to use your noodle.


Reviews

If youve eaten your share of classiccarbonara and lasagna Bolognese and want to level up your pasta game and unlock the full potential of your pantry, pick up this book and let Dan guide your mouth into whole new worlds of deliciousness. J. Kenji Lpez-Alt, from the foreword A Most Exciting New Spring Cookbook for 2024.This collection of nontraditional pasta dishes will delight anyone who craves spaghetti (or fettuccine, or rigatoni)and anyone who is looking for new twists on their dinner routine. . . . The collection of crispy breadcrumb toppings for your plate is worth the price of admission. Epicurious Food writer and podcaster Dan Pashman made the unusual step a few years ago of creating an entirely new shape of pasta. The obvious next step Writing a cookbook to highlight it. . . . [he]got to work creating mind-bending pasta dishes, from Tortellini in Kimchi Parmesan Brodo to Gnocchi with Bacon and Sauerkraut. . . The book is a clever mix of possibilities. Associated Press An ingenious collection of recipes that celebrate and elevate pasta dishes. . . . Pashman writes with a zesty, addictive sense of wit. . . . If Willy Wonka and Alton Brown collaborated on a pasta cookbook, the end result might be something like thisrevolutionary in all the right ways. Library Journal(starred review) The recipes . . . aim to encourage a spirit of adventure in pasta lovers. [They] are organized into loose categories: flavor bombs include kimchi carbonara, while baked options include a noodle kugel with persimmon relish. Pashman doesnt shy away from store-bought shortcuts, encouraging readers to use packaged gnocchi and tortellini and even offering a flow chart for how to improve on jarred tomato sauce depending on taste and how much time one has. . . . Purists will balk, butadventurous home cooks will be glad they tuned in. Publishers Weekly [Pashman] may just be readers' long-lost foodie soulmate. . . . [the] recipes are detailed but easy to read and follow, most clocking in at under 45 minutes. . . . With just a handful of ingredients and some creativity, Pashman proves that anything truly is pastable. Booklist Pashman is one of the most entertaining culinary figures in the game todaya modern pasta legend. VICE, on Dan Pashman

Author Bio

Dan Pashman is the creator and host of the two-time James Beard and Webby Awardwinning podcast The Sporkful, which he says is not for foodies, its for eaters. Hes also the creator and host of Cooking Channels Youre Eating It Wrong. In 2021 Dan launched the new pasta shape cascatelli, a viral sensation that TIME Magazine named one of the Best Inventions of the Year. The story of Dans three-year quest to create cascatelli was told in The Sporkful podcasts Mission: ImPASTAble series, which the New York Times named one of the 10 Best Podcasts of 2021. Cascatelli is now in more than 3000 stores across America. In early 2023 Dan received international media attention when he launched two more pastasobscure Italian shapes called vesuvio and quattrotinithat he produces with the artisanal pasta company Sfoglini, who also make the original version of cascatelli.

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