Spaghetti all'assassina (fried pasta, kinda)

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  • Опубликовано: 20 апр 2022
  • Thanks to Fetch Rewards for sponsoring today's video! Download the Fetch Rewards app now: fetch.thld.co/ragusea_0422 and use code RAGUSEA to get 3,000 points on your first receipt!
    **RECIPE, SERVES TWO**
    10 oz (283g) fresh grape or cherry tomatoes
    1/2 lb (227g) dry spaghetti (ideally NOT bronze-cut)
    2 jalapeños (or other large, mild chili)
    5-6 cloves of garlic
    white wine (optional)
    tomato paste
    olive oil
    fresh basil for garnish
    salt
    For the optional pickled chili garnish
    A couple serrano chilies (or any small, mild chili)
    sugar
    salt
    vinegar
    If you're making the pickled chilies, put a big pinch of sugar and a little pinch of salt into a small bowl and dissolve it in enough vinegar to cover the chilies. Hold the chilies with heat-safe tongs and blister them in fire until almost blackened then put them immediately into the vinegar. Let sit while you cook everything else, or put them in the fridge where they'll last at least a week.
    For the pasta, slice the jalapeños into thick rounds. If you want to lessen the heat, pop the white pith and seeds out of some or all of the rounds and discard. Peel and roughly chop the garlic.
    Purée the tomatoes and dilute with a roughly equal quantity of water. Season with a big pinch of salt - it should taste as salty as soup.
    Heat a thick film of olive oil in a nonstick or well-seasoned cast iron pan (I think the teflon pan gives much better results), put in the peppers and garlic and cook for a minute. Stir in a big squeeze of tomato paste. Pour in about 1/4 of the tomato broth. (It might spit on you if the oil is really hot, so be careful.)
    Lay in the dry spaghetti (break it in half if necessary to fit it in the bottom of the pan). Nudge the strands a little so the nestle down in the liquid. Cook until most of the water evaporates or absorbs and the bottom layer of pasta fries and browns. Stir in another 1/4 of the tomato broth and the repeat the whole evaporation/browning process until you've put in all the tomato broth and/or the pasta is al dente.
    If you run out of broth, just finish it with water, or a splash of white wine. You also might want to taste the pasta for seasoning toward the end of the process and maybe add some salt. Stir in some basil leaves right before plating. Garnish with the pickled chilies, if you're into that.
    I just realized this recipe is incidentally vegan. I probably should have pointed that out in the video. I suppose the vegans will notice anyway.
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Комментарии • 2,3 тыс.

  • @aragusea
    @aragusea  2 года назад +289

    Thanks to Fetch Rewards for sponsoring today's video! Download the Fetch Rewards app now: fetch.thld.co/ragusea_0422 and use code RAGUSEA to get 3,000 points on your first receipt!

    • @scottibass
      @scottibass 2 года назад +4

      I love how you always integrate your sponsors nicely in your video, I don't even have to skip because it is entertaining and flows with the video. If I was a company I would like my product placement in RUclips to be done just like that, the Ragusea way!

    • @F.a.b.i.
      @F.a.b.i. 2 года назад +38

      "It (fetch) will scan your email inbox for anything eligible" Do people actually use this stuff? F me, but who tf would allow any company to read through their mails?

    • @mikehindley3
      @mikehindley3 2 года назад +4

      It would be cool if you could mention if sponsors are only available in the US or whatever. I spent a while looking at Fetch and concluded after some time that they don't operate in the UK (where I live). But they don't really mention this anywhere.

    • @JW-452
      @JW-452 2 года назад +1

      what the heck did you buy that it gave 1.5k. i usually get like 25, maybe 30 if its feeling spicy

    • @maskedbadass6802
      @maskedbadass6802 2 года назад

      4:55 Oh dip! Fellow Papa John's fans whaddup! :)

  • @beppo9307
    @beppo9307 2 года назад +4816

    I am from Bari myself and I would have never expected to find spaghetti all'assassina outside Italy, since even in Italy but outside Bari it used to be an unknown recipe until a few years ago. Impressive!

    • @anegativecoconut4940
      @anegativecoconut4940 2 года назад +121

      A parte le belle cose, io la polizia della pasta, per quando ha rotto gli spaghetti, l'ho chiamata davvero. 😡

    • @beppo9307
      @beppo9307 2 года назад +81

      Vabbe dai, per la sola assassina si concede l'attenuante che senno non entra proprio. Per gli altri casi 41 bis senza processo!

    • @rose5464
      @rose5464 2 года назад +42

      @@anegativecoconut4940 he is Italian himself, he can do what he wants😒

    • @filipposciarra9541
      @filipposciarra9541 2 года назад +292

      @@rose5464 wait, Adam is not Italian. His grandfather was, but that doesn't make him Italian.

    • @mzilber1
      @mzilber1 2 года назад +12

      @@filipposciarra9541 wgaf !

  • @joelcolyer2240
    @joelcolyer2240 2 года назад +1067

    White wine report:
    White wine was seen at 7:25
    This was the white wine report

    • @Oscar-vs5yw
      @Oscar-vs5yw 2 года назад +44

      White wine spotted at 7:47

    • @chuck430
      @chuck430 2 года назад +16

      @@Oscar-vs5yw 747? de plane de plane

    • @SanskarWagley
      @SanskarWagley 2 года назад +6

      Bless

    • @DARK-ln7py
      @DARK-ln7py 2 года назад +8

      The white wine reporter strikes again

    • @rezamotori5709
      @rezamotori5709 2 года назад

      bet it was vodka!

  • @Astronopolis
    @Astronopolis Год назад +783

    As a kid my mom would reheat spaghetti leftovers in the frying pan sauce and all, and it would get this nice Maillard reaction on the noodles, it was my favorite! It’s fun to know that she was making a version of an obscure traditional Italian dish.

    • @Theupgradeguy
      @Theupgradeguy Год назад +21

      Yes, we fried the leftovers in butter!

    • @JohnnyFD
      @JohnnyFD Год назад +12

      I'd do the same and usually fry an egg on top of it. I love it that way.

    • @michealfigueroa6325
      @michealfigueroa6325 Год назад +9

      Fried left over spaghetti is a farovite for breakfast here in my part of the far west. next time i'll add diced hot green chilis

    • @Gianni119
      @Gianni119 8 месяцев назад

      @@Theupgradeguy same here!

    • @francescogreco9826
      @francescogreco9826 8 месяцев назад +10

      Some in Italy would say that used to be the original recipe, which then evolved in what it is now. Many recipes, not only in Italy, starts from leftovers

  • @girafarig7859
    @girafarig7859 Год назад +814

    "Because that's where I want it, tradition be damned" is some of the best home cooking advice I've ever heard I love it

    • @thegaelicgladiator665
      @thegaelicgladiator665 Год назад +53

      Exactly
      I'm sick of idiots screaming at people like Adam for not following "tradition"
      But tradition came from people doing the same thing

    • @giangle9234
      @giangle9234 4 месяца назад +5

      Why do you think we have spaghetti and pizza here in the States so different that some Italians make a fuss over us calling them spaghetti and pizza? Because generations of Italians immigrants came here and do the exact same damn thing.

    • @revimfadli4666
      @revimfadli4666 3 месяца назад +4

      If anything, it's preserving the tradition of innovation, where authentic recipes came from to begin with

  • @chriscook509
    @chriscook509 2 года назад +1613

    This reminds me a bit of my mom's "Fried Spaghetti". When she was a kid, pre-microwave, she left a pan of spaghetti and sauce on the burner. Came back an hour later to find that the bottom had browned. Today we do this, but keep cooking until ALL of the spaghetti has browned, and taken on that toothy nature. it is an hour or so long process. So good.

    • @LunaBeth97
      @LunaBeth97 2 года назад +196

      And this comment reminded me of my dad's "tuna a la daddy" which he made for me as a kid which was tuna mayo with bits of bread mixed in. It was a particular delicacy that was literally the only edible thing he could make for me. Turns out he fucked up while making me a tuna sandwich and improvised😂

    • @rogerclarke7407
      @rogerclarke7407 2 года назад +45

      My father in law used to fry leftover spaghetti with the sauce and a big wad of butter. Much better then microwaved.

    • @shoespeak
      @shoespeak 2 года назад +46

      @@rogerclarke7407 knees weak arms are heavy

    • @pepesilvia429
      @pepesilvia429 2 года назад +15

      @@LunaBeth97 my mom used to make something similar, canned tuna with crackers and spices and mustard mixed in. It was a way to make a meal from the pantry when we were out of food and couldn't do groceries.

    • @feraldynasty
      @feraldynasty 2 года назад +4

      Our Fried Spaghetti was leftover noodles with Velveeta, it browned up really nicely and ended up tasting so much better than the sum of its parts

  • @grishhung2828
    @grishhung2828 2 года назад +1011

    In Cantonese cuisine (and many other cuisines too, I'm sure), we have a thin noodle dish where the noodles are fried similarly. Parts are crunchy, parts are soft, and it's super good.

    • @SandyAndy90245
      @SandyAndy90245 2 года назад +9

      What is the name of this dish? I'd love to look it up and potentially make it!

    • @DillonChan
      @DillonChan 2 года назад +41

      Not the OP and definitely not a great source for authentic Chinese cooking, but this recipe reminded me of "hong Kong style chow mein" or "crispy chow mein" which aren't really stir fried, but rather is like pan frying noodles giving it a hard sear, and topping it with a thick sauce that slowly softens the fried brick of noodles. I'd say the way it's cooked isn't all that similar to this pasta dish though, so now I too am eagerly awaiting the dish(es) the op hand in mind :)

    • @derrickma2740
      @derrickma2740 2 года назад +49

      @@SandyAndy90245 the name in cantonese is liang mien huang, or two faced pan fried noodles. You take cooked noodles and then slowly crisp them on a low heat so that the outside is crispy but the inside is still moist. Then you add stir fried beef, pork, or seafood with a thick sauce on top to contrast with the crispiness of the noodles.

    • @DavidChong
      @DavidChong 2 года назад +2

      @@derrickma2740 there's also a version of it (i think chiu chow in origin?) where it's just the noodles with red vinegar & sugar

    • @precoixousold521
      @precoixousold521 2 года назад +3

      @@derrickma2740 liang is PTH, Canto is soeng/seung

  • @Alshebani_
    @Alshebani_ 2 года назад +39

    As a history student… your comment section is my heaven. Everyone sharing an interesting aspect of their culture n how they view it. How different a culture can be within its own people.
    FOOD IS INCREDIBLE 🥂

    • @andrewwebb917
      @andrewwebb917 Месяц назад

      You sound like you'd prefer to be an anthropologist

  • @chrisc3867
    @chrisc3867 2 года назад +111

    Amazing! My son just made this for dinner and we are so happily full! We're 3 for 3 with your vegetable soup, tomato soup and now this pasta dish. Keep on cookin'!!

  • @davidbaptist96
    @davidbaptist96 2 года назад +703

    00:05 Small linguistic puntualisation: even though it is in its feminine form, "alla assassina" doesn't refer to actual female assassins, it's just a fixed form to say that something is done how the assassins do it, so "spaghetti all'assassina" would be translated as " spaghetti the assassin's way". This is very common in italian food names: "spaghetti alla carbonara", "pasta alla amatriciana", "cotoletta alla milanese" (a type of cutlet from Milan), pesto alla genovese (a pasta sauce from Genoa) and so on.

    • @poahnfiap
      @poahnfiap 2 года назад +46

      I'd translate it as "assassin style"

    • @victorpapillon1487
      @victorpapillon1487 Год назад +19

      Adam isn't very bright

    • @mAcCoLo666
      @mAcCoLo666 Год назад +8

      @@victorpapillon1487 Poor Adam 😂

    • @hidayakamo
      @hidayakamo Год назад

      @@poahnfiap nobody translate alla puttanesca... XD

    • @haharmageddontv6581
      @haharmageddontv6581 Год назад +9

      @@victorpapillon1487 bruh and he's literally italian smh

  • @brunoianigro61
    @brunoianigro61 2 года назад +818

    About the burning thing: yeah you actually do want to burn the spaghetti, not all of them but in the good places some pasta is intentionally burnt because it's nice

    • @Great_Olaf5
      @Great_Olaf5 2 года назад +36

      Regardless, I think I'd be sticking to his version, Werth my own modifications due ingredient availability. I'm hypersensitive to bitterness, I've found only a handful of very specific contexts where I can tolerate obviously bitter notes.

    • @brunoianigro61
      @brunoianigro61 2 года назад +1

      @@Great_Olaf5 oh yeah, I just wrote this because he thought it was a translation error, you do you, although, personally, you could like try to burn a couple and see if you like them and never burn them again if you don't

    • @iota-09
      @iota-09 2 года назад +4

      @@Great_Olaf5 same here, my mother also does something similar with leftover minced meat sauce pasta(can't really call it ragù)
      We add a tiny bit of olive oil and cook it in a dried pan until the pasta either gets a strong oil taste or gets that slightly burnt feel to it.
      In the latter case: the more you can cook it without it getting black, the better.

    • @nahrafe
      @nahrafe 2 года назад +3

      I could picture Adam saying "heterogeneity"

    • @Droid6689
      @Droid6689 Год назад

      You shouldn't eat burned things, especially not as a staple in your diet. The act of burning creates carcinogens

  • @pandaexpresso
    @pandaexpresso 2 года назад +217

    This has changed my stir fry noodle game forever. This has opened a gateway into so many variations, especially with Asian flavors and my Thai chili addiction.

    • @rnaodmsomething
      @rnaodmsomething 7 месяцев назад +1

      Home cooking FTW!

    • @borby4584
      @borby4584 4 месяца назад

      Can I ask what a few of your favorite or go to variations are, or what you generally replace the tomatoes with?
      My first instinct would be a mixture of soy sauce, oyster sauce, and black pepper (watered down), but what other options are there? 😊

  • @j3ryl33
    @j3ryl33 Год назад +131

    I've tried it here on the Philippines, and it was really good in fact I've fallen in love with it, as I have never thought "spicy spaghetti" was a thing and would generally taste good!

    • @Jopplk
      @Jopplk Год назад +1

      Where and what was it called there?

    • @j3ryl33
      @j3ryl33 Год назад +13

      @@Jopplk Happy new year; I forgot the name of the restaurant but it is/was located inside SM seaside here on Cebu (outside section near the park/playground), and yes it was called spaghetti all'assassina and the discription of it is literally "Spicy authentic Italian pasta".

    • @shady8934
      @shady8934 Год назад +2

      Really? I use Chili flakes in most of my pasta, makes it so much better

    • @protokevinleversee975
      @protokevinleversee975 Год назад

      saan pre?

    • @protokevinleversee975
      @protokevinleversee975 Год назад

      @@shady8934 agree

  • @zhalosupercell9518
    @zhalosupercell9518 2 года назад +117

    Adam!!!!!!!! In Iran our rice dishes have this crispy layer of rice/potatoes/bread on the bottom called tahdig (which means bottom of the pot) and it is beyond delicious. I'm only mentioning this because my favorite type of tahdig is by far the most non traditional and just a hilarious cultural mishmash, spaghetti tahdig :) Whenever my mom would make spaghetti she would treat it like a rice dish and let the bottom layer just get golden and cripsy and it was delicious! I just wanted to share this I got really excited lol

    • @asher3311
      @asher3311 5 месяцев назад +2

      im dominican and we call that concon, havent heard it used to refer to the burnt bottom with anything besides rice though. cool to see that other cultures have words for it as well though

  • @vonschuhart
    @vonschuhart 2 года назад +1138

    If Adam ever gets a chance to travel to Italy I would love to him exploring his ancestral homeland. I double dog dare him to show his onion soup pizza to an old school Italian cook

    • @corycasey
      @corycasey 2 года назад +152

      Most of these ingredients aren't from Italy so old school Italian cooks should relax and thank the new world for those tomatoes and peppers.

    • @cheaptricked3148
      @cheaptricked3148 2 года назад +99

      Italy has had tomatoes and peppers for over 500 years now. It's part of their culture now, regardless of where the ingredients originally came from.

    • @ziyad1809
      @ziyad1809 2 года назад +167

      @@cheaptricked3148 way to be obtuse lol
      The point is that 500 years ago, there were probably two people. One group going "omg don't use those ingredients it's not authentic" and the other going "lol, don't care, cope and seethe, L + ratio"

    • @cheaptricked3148
      @cheaptricked3148 2 года назад +84

      @@ziyad1809 Not being obtuse. Saying something is a classic recipe and then having a response basically akin to 'it can't be a classic recipe since the ingredients didn't come from there!' is petulant and, frankly, stupid.
      It'd be like saying spaghetti isn't an Italian recipe since it first came from China, and that old school Italian cooks should instead be thanking ancient China instead of, I don't know, a grandmother who taught them.

    • @ziyad1809
      @ziyad1809 2 года назад

      @@cheaptricked3148 you are being obtuse because the point he was making isn't "it's not a classic dish", it's "striving for authenticity is stupid and being critical of deviating from norms is silly when the dishes themselves originate from deviation from norms"
      Although, maybe you weren't being obtuse and are actually just really dumb lol

  • @cojo9656
    @cojo9656 Год назад +46

    I made a spin on this for my partner and myself tonight, and he went back for thirds - normally my cooking doesn't even get him going back for seconds! Thanks for this killer recipe, this has already earned a place as a staple meal in my household after one time!

  • @ivythay4259
    @ivythay4259 Год назад +23

    It's because of this video that I regularly fry my pasta in the pan instead of the more traditional way. I use fewer tomatoes, just chopping cherry/grape tomatoes in half and sauteeing them in the pan before putting the pasta in, adding in a couple small chunks of feta. I also regularly deglaze this pasta with orange juice, thanks to your bread pizza video. It turns out really good!

  • @MaryaHach
    @MaryaHach 2 года назад +95

    Hello from Bari! I confirm we don't burn it black, it's definitely a translation issue.
    The peppers are an interesting take. Usually, we don't add any toppings, but some restaurants serve it with stracciatella cheese (not to be confused with the soup with the same name) to create a contrast, the hot pasta VS the fresh, creamy stracciatella.
    I'm on the no-toppings team, but I'll give the peppers a try.

    • @timseguine2
      @timseguine2 2 года назад

      Is stracciatella that stuff that they fill burrata with?

    • @MaryaHach
      @MaryaHach 2 года назад +1

      @@timseguine2 yep, that's it

    • @vigilantcosmicpenguin8721
      @vigilantcosmicpenguin8721 2 года назад +8

      Wait, there's a soup and a cheese called stracciatella? Here I was, thinking it was a flavor of gelato.

    • @idek7438
      @idek7438 2 года назад +10

      @@vigilantcosmicpenguin8721 The soup is basically broth with egg scrambled into it and the cheese is a sort of very creamy mozzarella.
      The reason there are so many things called stracciatella is that in Italian this word vaguely refers to something that is shredded and fragmented, so it applies to a lot of different things lol

    • @MaryaHach
      @MaryaHach 2 года назад +9

      @@vigilantcosmicpenguin8721 That too xD And they have nothing to do with each other. They were all from different regions of Italy (the soup in Rome, the cheese in Apulia, the ice cream in Bergamo), I suspect the original creators never even knew there was another food with the same name in another part of Italy.

  • @vitriolicAmaranth
    @vitriolicAmaranth 2 года назад +414

    "They'll probably want to garrote me back in Bari when they see how I've alterred their traditional recipe" is something I'd interpret as a joke if I hadn't seen the way italians react to seasoning carbonara with garlic or making neapolitan pizza except perfectly round.

    • @ThreadBomb
      @ThreadBomb 2 года назад +6

      I.e. most of them don't care?

    • @idek7438
      @idek7438 2 года назад +40

      Why would you put garlic in carbonara? Do you hate yourself?

    • @dyfx9788
      @dyfx9788 2 года назад +157

      @@idek7438 no, i just like garlic

    • @chelseet11
      @chelseet11 2 года назад +147

      @@idek7438 it’s comments like this that prove OPs point lol

    • @voskresenie-
      @voskresenie- 2 года назад +15

      @@dyfx9788 Well, yeh, and I like raspberries, but I don't put them on my steak. Garlic just doesn't fit with the flavors of carbonara

  • @hydrasent563
    @hydrasent563 9 месяцев назад +15

    I made this, and not only was it good, but the smell of caramelized tomato while it was cooking was incredible.

  • @themusicgaragetmg2330
    @themusicgaragetmg2330 9 месяцев назад +3

    Looks like the "Mee Goreng" we make in Asia, humanity is really amazing. So many parallels yet from different cultures with little direct connections. Diversity is Beautiful, isn't it?

    • @christophekennis3599
      @christophekennis3599 2 месяца назад

      Story goes that the spaghetti originates from Asia.

    • @themusicgaragetmg2330
      @themusicgaragetmg2330 2 месяца назад +1

      @@christophekennis3599 Inspired probably coz europe and asia have been trading for centuries before contemporary history claims I think. The Greeks were trading with India, China with India, and so were the Arabs. We've actually always been inspiring each other over generations. But because cultures are different for various reasons, it's all unique yet so similar.

    • @christophekennis3599
      @christophekennis3599 2 месяца назад

      @@themusicgaragetmg2330 Yes, inspired on the Mee. Changing ideas makes it more interesting.
      An older American guy once told me about his ancestors house in Germany and he was wondering why they had an advertising board with an Arab painted on it. I asked what they did before and he said they were glassworkers. I replied that the Arabs invented glass and that it could have been a tribute to the origin of their ancient craft.

  • @drygrapejce8020
    @drygrapejce8020 2 года назад +133

    These little joke edits are getting advanced, I could not stop laughing at the little "bye" next to the spilled Vinegar.

    • @legendarygary2744
      @legendarygary2744 2 года назад +4

      Always find myself watching for those little touches. Always cracks me up when I spot them.

    • @trollinape2697
      @trollinape2697 2 года назад +1

      I personally dont find it funny

    • @drygrapejce8020
      @drygrapejce8020 2 года назад +4

      @@trollinape2697 cool.

    • @trollinape2697
      @trollinape2697 2 года назад +3

      @UC-tlc1xYD67RP_bRFBKi6IA kinda sad that these bots are now invading adam regusea's comment section aswell

    • @nurphurecarnium
      @nurphurecarnium 2 года назад +7

      @@trollinape2697 ratio

  • @BrotherTree1
    @BrotherTree1 2 года назад +278

    Love burnt spaghetti... bloody delicious. Because of the spice in the sauce which is also heavily caramelised with the pasta, I'd say it's next level up from the Lasagna crispy burnt edges even though that's insanely good too.

  • @akshinagupta342
    @akshinagupta342 2 года назад +19

    I recently made this and it was absolutely delicious. I love spicy food so I started with an arrabiata sauce (just from the store but with extra spices/seasoning added) instead of the fresh tomato sauce. I think the arrabiata sauce paired really really well with the all'assassina preparation. The spiciness combined with the incredible (almost caramelized) richness you get out of the pasta sauce was to die for.

  • @ludwigziffer6895
    @ludwigziffer6895 2 года назад +20

    Tried this out the other day. You weren't kidding. No matter how tart the tomatoes you use for this the sauce ends up very sweet, so the final glug of white wine is pretty important to balance the sweetness out. Will definitely be making this again, it was great. Pretty damn fast, too.

  • @bug_god
    @bug_god 2 года назад +178

    the joy i felt when i saw the tip of that bottle of white wine was incredible. Adam, you have trained me like a pavlovian dog.

  • @eelvis1674
    @eelvis1674 2 года назад +71

    This is the exact kind of recipe I could see one of those 'Italian reacts to X' people, being outraged over, not realising it's a traditional Italian thing. As Adam has said before, people too readily assume they are experts and that if they haven't heard of something before it must be wrong.

    • @anegativecoconut4940
      @anegativecoconut4940 2 года назад +5

      Praticamente tutti in Italia sanno cos'è la pasta alla assassina. Quindi saresti sorpreso.

    • @eelvis1674
      @eelvis1674 2 года назад +19

      @@anegativecoconut4940 I didn't mean this dish specifically, just this kind of thing that people tend to get angry at.

    • @vicic2779
      @vicic2779 2 года назад +1

      @@eelvis1674 i haven't find a single angry italian, what are you talking about?

    • @eelvis1674
      @eelvis1674 2 года назад +5

      @@vicic2779 I'm talking about the general phenomena. You're right though, the most protective people over food authenticity are the Spanish

    • @telmoth
      @telmoth 2 года назад +3

      @@eelvis1674 I'm biased because I'm a Spaniard, but I think Italians kinda get more aggresive about their food because it has become super mainstream, and as more people enjoy their food, the more it strays away from what their food originally was,
      we Spaniards also get angry about food tho lmao

  • @noname-vp6vf
    @noname-vp6vf Год назад +91

    I've made this dish 3 times. The first time i was not confident with letting the pasta brown cause i'm afraid that the garlic and chillies would burn at the bottom, so it doesn't have a lot of browning (but still very good)
    The second time i tried letting the bottom brown and it ended up with a lot of brown pasta and some clumps you mentioned (which is actually pretty nice.
    The third time i decided to try burning the pasta just like the traditional recipe and it came out perfect with just the right amount of burned clumps of pasta (this version is my favorite)
    This is an interesting way to cook spaghetti and as you said, it definitely have a different texture and mouthfeel which is really nice. (and your tip with using a non-stick pan is pretty crucial cause the first time i was using a regular pan and a lot of the brown stuff stuck at the bottom of the pan)

    • @noname-vp6vf
      @noname-vp6vf Год назад +3

      @@lololollo8994 i've seen other italian versions too. I don't see how this video is a terrible recipe. I used birds-eye chili peppers for mine for the heat and i've tried using tomato paste and sauce like the original recipe and Adam's cherry tomato juice. Both versions taste a bit different, the tomato paste + sauce gives a more saucier texture while Adam's method gives a more dryer noodle texture like chinese noodles. I personally like both of them.

    • @noname-vp6vf
      @noname-vp6vf Год назад +11

      @@lololollo8994 What is so specific about spaghetti, tomato paste, tomato sauce, garlic, peppers, and oil? This is cooking pasta not molecular synthesis.

    • @noname-vp6vf
      @noname-vp6vf Год назад +4

      @@lololollo8994 I'm pretty sure the burned and brown bits is telling enough. Besides it's not that different. Just because one ingredient in a dish is altered doesn't mean it becomes a completely unique dish from the original. People can still tell Adam's version is still emulating the original recipe, i agree that it is not a 100% true to tradition way of making it but i to say it is a completely different dish is incorrect.

    • @noname-vp6vf
      @noname-vp6vf Год назад +4

      @@lololollo8994 You know what fine, if you think it's not all'assassina and a completely new dish never before seen by humankind, believe that all you want. I will still call it all'assassina and i don't care what people tell me. Good day Sir/Madam.

    • @EJN64
      @EJN64 Год назад +3

      or instead of fighting over which recipe is best, we can acknowledge the differences between them, and then based upon our individual preferences, alter the recipe to our liking. Silently. 😊

  • @HomestarJr
    @HomestarJr 2 года назад +3

    I’ve made this 3 times now, pretty awesome. Works well with canned or fresh tomatoes, works well with pickled or fresh jalapeños. Didn’t notice too much of a difference when I didn’t use tomato paste. Thanks for posting up this video!

  • @infin1ty850
    @infin1ty850 2 года назад +210

    In regards to tomatoes, when they are out of season, the smaller the better since they ship better and don't need to be artificially ripened like larger tomatoes. I think everyone agrees that if you have access to fresh in season tomatoes though, definitely go with them.

    • @SDck5940
      @SDck5940 2 года назад

      They're always in season somewhere.

  • @connor9024
    @connor9024 2 года назад +123

    This method is very niche very good find for you Adam.
    Disregarding the burning aspect, this cooking method makes for unbelievably velvety Mac n cheese.
    2 parts stock 1 part whole milk, add you’re cheese when you’re 85% done with cooking for some stringiness, take off heat 95% cooked, add cheese but don’t stir and let melt as it finishes cooking from the residual

    • @strawbebbiejam
      @strawbebbiejam 2 года назад +3

      that sounds amazinggg

    • @Ketsu112
      @Ketsu112 2 года назад +1

      really wanna try this now

    • @UglyNTRBastard
      @UglyNTRBastard 2 года назад +2

      I want him to see and try this, cause he's said before he's had trouble making a good mac and cheese without emulsifying salts.

    • @Kyle-Marxluxia
      @Kyle-Marxluxia 2 года назад +1

      Reckon you could do a video tutorial on it? I'm incredibly curious

    • @connor9024
      @connor9024 2 года назад +1

      @@Kyle-Marxluxia I would love to if I had all the tools and skills making RUclips videos that are up to the standards this market demands.
      I started playing with this technique in culinary school maybe 6 years ago but the absolute legend, CookinginFinland posted a video that goes over the same method, but I can’t seem to find the video anymore. If I could I would link it.

  • @festerofest4374
    @festerofest4374 2 года назад +11

    Tonight is the 2nd time I've made this. Usually it takes me a 2nd or 3rd try to get a "feel" for a recipe but this one was so intuitive the first time came out amazing.
    I've now made this version super-simple and quick. I didn't roast chilies over the flame and I didn't puree the little cherry tomatoes to make the tomato sauce. I just used a can of crushed tomatoes and diluted with some water.
    It very much is a "risotto-style" preparation. And I added a lot of fresh garlic, onion and sliced bell peppers. But as Adam said, it's all about the browning/crust on the pasta. I wish we could post photos here in the replies because I'm pretty sure mine would pass muster. Thank-you, Adam, for inspiring me to add a new dish/technique to my repertoire.

  • @DJHarrison74
    @DJHarrison74 2 года назад +25

    I made this tonight and really enjoyed it. Relatively easy and quick to make, smells and tastes delicious. I didn't get it too burnt, was in a bit of a hurry, will let it crisp a bit more next time. I only had one ripe tomato, so I chopped that one and threw it in, then used a can of tomato puree for the sauce. Also added some Italian peppers and a bit of Italian seasoning. Thanks Adam!

    • @jameshaws9986
      @jameshaws9986 Год назад +1

      You should definitely buy individual seasonings. Italian seasoning has a bunch of seasonings like marjoram, rosemary, and thyme that don't compliment a lot of dishes.

  • @malehvor
    @malehvor 2 года назад +307

    At least in Mexico, and likely in several other Latin cultures, we have a dish called Fideo Seco, or Tacos de Fideo. The main difference is the noodles, which are very thin, like capellini, and are usually 2-3cm or less than an inch long. The process is basically the same: frying some aromatics, then the noodles a bit, then adding tomato puree and a blended mix re-hydrated dried chiles (usually Ancho, Cascabel or Morita) and water, and letting it evaporate out until you get a nice clumpy dish with a browned crunchy bottom. It's also traditionally made in a cast iron, and usually garnished with cilantro and Cotija, Panela or goat cheese. You can make it spicy by adding Chile de Arbol to the blend, or you can add salsa later. It's also generally served with tortillas to make tacos as an appetizer or side dish. To make it easier, you can skip the chile blend and render out and cook some soft Mexican chorizo (which is seasoned with that blend) to get your oil/fat base, and a bit more bite to the dish. It's really good.

    • @xdeaddarkness
      @xdeaddarkness Год назад +3

      Yep, this reminds me of fideo!

    • @woegarden
      @woegarden Год назад +4

      thank you gabriel, gonna be trying this soon !

    • @parracytixx4048
      @parracytixx4048 Год назад

      Bueno , me gusta guajillo y morita .

    • @ericthedictator2151
      @ericthedictator2151 Год назад

      Took the words out of my mouth, thank you.

    • @Mister0men
      @Mister0men Год назад +1

      pasta is pasta. noodles are ramen. ramen is noodles.
      pasta is not noodles.

  • @willdbeast1523
    @willdbeast1523 2 года назад +78

    i love how 50% of this recipe is "you can [...] but i wouldnt bother"
    now i can be lazy without the guilt!

    • @timseguine2
      @timseguine2 2 года назад +9

      90% of real cooking is "you can, but I wouldn't bother"

    • @vigilantcosmicpenguin8721
      @vigilantcosmicpenguin8721 2 года назад +1

      The mark of a good cook is when you know what you're doing even if you don't feel like doing it.

    • @willdbeast1523
      @willdbeast1523 2 года назад +3

      @@vigilantcosmicpenguin8721 I can cook a perfect Michelin star quality beef wellington, but I simply choose not to bother

  • @wot_hog
    @wot_hog 2 года назад +13

    The magic in this recipe is not the ingredients but the method. What Adam taught us here was not only useful for handling peppers but magical in how to prep a perfect plate of pasta when you are on a caravanserai with little water to waste. I sautéed and caramelized onions, added a pinch of garlic powder, tossed in the splash of tomato broth made by watering down an excellent San Marzano sauce, and tossed in my spaghettini. At the end, I had sweet, creamy yet crunchy pasta and topped it with two butter-fried eggs over medium. A perfect brunch and bar none the best plate of pasta I've ever had. Thank you Adam Ragusea!!

    • @kdotwilly7935
      @kdotwilly7935 Год назад

      awesomeness!

    • @creamyhorror
      @creamyhorror Год назад

      First time I've seen the word "caravanserai" deployed in everyday writing. Topical, but nonetheless striking.

    • @wot_hog
      @wot_hog Год назад

      @@creamyhorror Must admit, was listening to Santana at the time...

    • @logical1510
      @logical1510 3 месяца назад

      What I would suggest as I (personally) think are improvements:
      -Use Spaghettoni instead of Spaghetti or Spaghettini. Spaghettoni is a bit thicker and allows you to fry and cook them for a longer period of time so you get a better crunch and flavor.
      -Before adding the broth, fry your dry pasta in just olive oil and whatever you want to add (i.e. chili flakes, fresh chili, garlic, etc.). You'll end up with an extra crunch to the pasta, even after they're cooked to your liking.
      -Use a marina or basic tomato sauce (tomatoes, garlic, olive oil, basil, brown sugar, pepper, salt) instead of making a broth and use that to start cooking the dry pasta. Simply add water as the sauce boils down, cooking it similar to a risotto, until you get the desired pasta doneness, then start reducing until there's almost no liquid and you get that nice char.

    • @wot_hog
      @wot_hog 3 месяца назад

      @@logical1510 That sounds like an excellent approach to try, and I will!

  • @frankinglima3889
    @frankinglima3889 Год назад +21

    We’ve made a version of this countless times in my family, but always with leftover pasta. In Chicago, we have giardiniera all the time. I save the giardiniera oil and fry my leftover pasta with that to get the spiciness. Often look forward to that dish just as much (maybe more!) as the “cooked fresh” pasta the day before!

  • @abrilbedoya9274
    @abrilbedoya9274 2 года назад +66

    Funny, my mom taught me a recipe for angels hair pasta. She would directly fry the little pasta nests in oil and get them golden, with some burnt spots. Then she would make a very thin sauce with tomato paste and milk and throw the field nests in there to let them fully cook. It is absolutely delicious

  • @sammurphy1103
    @sammurphy1103 2 года назад +50

    This is the best food channel by far guys.

    • @azuregiant9258
      @azuregiant9258 2 года назад +2

      Yes! Homely and laidback, yet methodical and scientific.

    • @sammurphy1103
      @sammurphy1103 2 года назад

      @@azuregiant9258 his nyc pizza video is literally my favourite video on RUclips

    • @charlescastle4533
      @charlescastle4533 2 года назад

      So true

    • @unarmedduck
      @unarmedduck 2 года назад

      @@azuregiant9258 plus an absence of pretentiousness

    • @RealDJB
      @RealDJB 2 года назад

      @@sammurphy1103 I made his pizza quite a few times, it is SO DAMN GOOD. You made a good choice following Adam, he's a great guy :)

  • @madabouthollyoaks411
    @madabouthollyoaks411 2 года назад +4

    I made this the day you dropped it, with some already cooked tomato sauce that I’d been experimenting with. It was AMAZING !! The sauce wasn’t great before but after cooking it this way it took on such depth omd I’ve made it 3 more times since, I’m obsessed

  • @Xzqwerty2324zX
    @Xzqwerty2324zX Год назад +2

    This was such an interesting recipe, would love to see you include more recipes that use different types of cooking methods. Never would’ve thought to cook the pasta like that. Looks delicious!

  • @arealhuman3677
    @arealhuman3677 2 года назад +82

    In Iran, we par boil the noodles and cook it the rest of the way in a pot and the underside gets crusty like that. So I’m glad other cultures share the same love for that as we do
    Also we do that with rice and put potatoes at the bottom of the pot, really good

    • @udihakim3252
      @udihakim3252 2 года назад +5

      We do the same with potatoes and rice in Israel, it is called "Tadig" if I am not mistaken.

    • @dupf
      @dupf 2 года назад +7

      @@udihakim3252 that's also Persian 😂

    • @Gilamath.
      @Gilamath. 2 года назад +10

      ​@@udihakim3252 Tahdig is from Iran. Quite a bit of Israeli food tradition involves dishes absorbed from other Middle Eastern cultures. Tahdig is perhaps one of the tastiest examples. A lot of families are eating it for Ramadan right now. Yum!

    • @jamescanjuggle
      @jamescanjuggle 2 года назад

      that sounds really good, i might try it sometime

    • @sarahwatts7152
      @sarahwatts7152 2 года назад

      Any of you have a recipe for this that you like?

  • @cloudstrife2613
    @cloudstrife2613 2 года назад +36

    Much love from Italy Adam. If you are interested in more fried pasta styles, you should try ''frittata di spaghetti'' (spaghetti crunchy omelette):
    Cook spaghetti in salted water ( bland cooked spaghetti from the day before works even better), cool the spaghetti down, mix the spaghetti in a bowl with eggs and parmesan enough to pour in a skillet/non-stick pan {there should be more spaghetti filling in the pan compared to the coating of eggs and parmesan} (you can add some herbs/black pepper and/or small bits of sausages/parboiled eggs if you want, or even tomato paste if you want some color but make sure not to burn it), cook at medium temperature and with enough olive oil to coat the skillet/pan ( be sure the spaghetti are uniform to the entire skillet/non-stick pan). once brown on the bottom, flip once until brown again. Let it rest and cut like a cake for serving.
    PS: the omelette should only be as thick as your skillet/pan, don't go over 2/3 fingers in height otherwise it won't cook enough inside.
    Also PS: fried tortellini are the actual BOMB! you don't know what you are missing.

    • @mrsb3172
      @mrsb3172 Год назад +1

      Ooh, fried tortellini, are they pan fried, air fried or deep fried? My kids love any type of stuffed pasta, tortellini and agnolotti being the favourites, are on high rotation for dinners here. trying something new with it sounds fun!

  • @suehowell8829
    @suehowell8829 Год назад +7

    My Mom's version of fried spaghetti was leftover spaghetti fried in butter and then scramble a few eggs with it. I think we enjoyed that more than the original meal! Can't wait to try this. Thank you!

    • @tokulix
      @tokulix Год назад +1

      My grandma used to make probably the simplest version of all - just leftover spaghetti fried in butter with some salt to taste. I loved it. When I make it now, I add some freshly ground pepper too - super quick and tasty.

    • @joshoaaquinoterrado105
      @joshoaaquinoterrado105 6 месяцев назад

      Balibali m......

  • @JakDivinci
    @JakDivinci 7 месяцев назад +2

    Just made it myself using leftover sauce from the other night. It's cardiac inducing hedonism.
    I fully recommend it.

  • @davidmarsham
    @davidmarsham 2 года назад +84

    Interesting! We always fried spaghetti the day after making fresh sauce for dinner. My great grandma was from northern Italy but I didn’t realize there was actually an authentic Italian pasta dish fried dish like that. Her version was a bit more simple: day old pasta and sauce fried in a skillet with butter. We actually liked for some of it to be pretty good and burnt too…

    • @andrek6920
      @andrek6920 2 года назад +6

      I only recently learned that this isnt something everyone does to eat the leftover pasta when I was asked if you can really do that. Although for us its even more basic than that, just fry the pasta with maybe some oil or butter, add sauce separately.

    • @Kinsmyname
      @Kinsmyname 2 года назад +3

      My grandmother came from Trieste (also northern italy) and always done this with leftover pasta. Interesting to see that it wasn't just an individual thing.

    • @gedatsu95
      @gedatsu95 2 года назад +4

      I am from Sardegna, and in my family we've always done it, too. Day old pasta (or even risotto...) "revived" again in the pan with a bit of butter or just olive oil. So good! I definitely do not think it's a "traditional" dish, in the sense that it was invented on purpose to be consumed that way. It's more of a quick fix to limit food waste.

    • @andrek6920
      @andrek6920 2 года назад

      @@gedatsu95 Yea I doubt anyone is intentionally making pasta like that. It is pretty cool though that a way to limit food waste actually leads to a better food though, atleast in my opinion.

    • @maxsnts
      @maxsnts 2 года назад +2

      @@gedatsu95 i think every country must have a version of this. Food used to be expensive, no waste was allowed, people had to get creative. Now its so common to trash the unused food that this feels new again.
      Even pets are not "allowed" to eat our remains anymore... got to buy that pet food!!

  • @Joe-io2yj
    @Joe-io2yj 2 года назад +72

    I accidentally stumbled upon a favorite lunch a bit like this. Microwaved some spaghetti and it went a bit tough a crisp in texture. Then chopped it into small pieces and mixed it in with some rocket, spinach, and small pieces of lettuce. Tasted great

    • @nlm2nd
      @nlm2nd 2 года назад +8

      Today I learned another name for arugula.

    • @RealWolfmanDan
      @RealWolfmanDan 2 года назад +1

      Rocket?

    • @drdough7982
      @drdough7982 2 года назад +1

      @@RealWolfmanDan arugula apparently

    • @oxybrightdark8765
      @oxybrightdark8765 2 года назад +3

      Rocket is the British name for arugula

    • @RVFFICA
      @RVFFICA 2 года назад +1

      @@oxybrightdark8765 hate that with all my might 😂 too strong for any way you mix it in, it just overpowers everything much like coriander/cilantro

  • @Unelith
    @Unelith 16 дней назад +1

    I like how thoroughly you explain how everything works and *why*

  • @akisadiamond
    @akisadiamond Год назад

    It's so good, thank you for showing me this recipe

  • @axiom413
    @axiom413 2 года назад +102

    This is similar to a Spanish dish called fideo, which has been a favorite in my family for generations. And yes, we do intentionally burn a little of the noodles, it's a great bitter/char note.

    • @NanoMan737400
      @NanoMan737400 2 года назад +6

      Fideo in Spanish means just "noodle". Maybe in Spain they'd call it something like "fideos fritos".

    • @darknarax
      @darknarax 2 года назад +7

      @@NanoMan737400 Maybe its called "Fideo a la Asesina". *Thonk*

    • @adamdejesus4017
      @adamdejesus4017 2 года назад +8

      @@NanoMan737400 Fideua is the name for paella made with fideos instead of arborio.

    • @NanoMan737400
      @NanoMan737400 2 года назад

      @@adamdejesus4017 wow, nice one! Thanks a lot for that

    • @VaultDwellerGal
      @VaultDwellerGal 2 года назад +2

      Same here, been eating it my whole life, and I’m in the US. We make it with vermicelli most of the time, spaghetti noodles other times. Same thing though. It’s delicious!

  • @arturobarreda596
    @arturobarreda596 2 года назад +91

    This video reminds me of Sopa Seca (Dry Soup), an exquisite dish from Peru! For the sauce we use onions, ají panca (a type of red peruvian chilli), basil and achiote, among a few other ingredients. It would be awesome to see some peruvian dishes on this channel and I highly recommend everybody to check out peruvian cuisine. Great video and saludos desde Perú!!

    • @adamchurvis1
      @adamchurvis1 2 года назад +5

      Arturo, if you have access to a good supply of Aji peppers, dry them in the sun until raisiny, then stem, rib, and seed them. Now dehydrate the rest of the way using a dehydrator until they snap like potato chips. Finally, grind them in a commercial grinder (36,000 rpm), sieve through a fine-mesh sieve, and hermetically seal in a dark glass jar and store in a cool place.
      Aji chili powder is unique in its flavor and aroma, and I cannot even come CLOSE to it using any other chili or blend of chilies. Of all the chilies I keep, it is my most prized.

    • @muzammiljafari9158
      @muzammiljafari9158 2 года назад

      AMONG US

    • @after-arts4708
      @after-arts4708 Год назад

      Omg yes, Peruvian food is fantastic!

  • @seckelomatic
    @seckelomatic 2 года назад

    That recipe was really nice to cook and really tasty. I really enjoy your cooking videos Adam, thank you so much for your explanations and ideas while cooking.

  • @Wizard_Level_1
    @Wizard_Level_1 2 года назад +7

    I made this and it was a real hit at my house. My experience was a bit different of course.
    I sauteed about half a pound of thinly sliced chicken chunks in the pan with salt, pepper, a bay leaf and a tablespoon of garlic paste, then set it aside to add back later. I only used half a pound (a large chicken breast) because I didn't want to turn it into a meat dish, I just wanted to add a bit of complexity.
    I didn't blend the tomatoes until they were pureed but got it to almost puree consistency (teeny tiny chunks), and they cooked down quite nicely through the process. I left the chicken fat and chicken juices in the pan with the olive oil. I added some frozen diced onions to my tomato/water mixture, and they cooked down very nicely in this dish. No wine, not becuase we dont like it just because we don't have it. I was scared about burning the pasta, but I tried to listen to the advice of not being scared and really leaned into after getting used to the process so I was sure to get a few really nice dark brown patches during the cooking but that was near the end, I might try to make sure I do that earlier to infuse the pasta a bit more with that rich caramelized starch. I mixed the chicken back in a few min before taking the dish off the burner.
    For garnish I reserved about 6 whole grape tomatoes. I seared them in a very hot sizzling pan, getting at least two sides almost black, and put them in whole right before serving. They were nice and soft with an excellent flavor from searing.
    In future I'll lean into the browning process earlier on in. It wasn't until about halfway through that I built up the confidence to do it and I think doing it earlier would be nice.
    A note about the pan: I did this in a cast iron skillet, and I would have to agree with you that it's not ideal. While I avoid Teflon in general, cast iron really holds this mixture on the bottom especially when you're trying finishing it up; all those starches stick and scraping becomes very difficult. It will loosen up after taking it off the burner and letting it sit for a few minutes, still I'd rather the fine control Teflon would give to the process of caramelization and release.
    Thanks for this recommendation, it was a nice experience and yummy.

  • @jamesstevenson1766
    @jamesstevenson1766 2 года назад +79

    I've been cooking pasta this way for years! My impatient experiments with cooking pasta in less water eventually led to the almost-no-water method, which gave toasty browned pasta.

    • @gabbonoo
      @gabbonoo 2 года назад +5

      hope not too brown. the small amount of carcinogens add up. another unhealthy tradition is re-using oil in china, at high temp

    • @beaustrom923
      @beaustrom923 2 года назад +1

      haven't seen OOTS in a while

    • @bongjovi4928
      @bongjovi4928 Год назад +6

      @@gabbonoo no one asked

    • @mauz791
      @mauz791 Год назад +4

      @@gabbonoo but browning tastes awesome, and eating vitamin C and D and exercise has sufficient cancer-killing properties to offset it 👍

    • @gabbonoo
      @gabbonoo Год назад

      @@mauz791 reducing water concentrates some flavors, releases glutamate, and crispifies. brown is better :3. i wonder if it's possible to get the nonenzymatic reaction without heat... as for offsetting the cancer risk. i dont think it's worth actively measuring. if quality of life suffers long-term, the cancer avoidance that isnt habitual is worth forgetting imo.

  • @C0urne
    @C0urne 2 года назад +39

    The tension of "will there be white wine" was almost too much for me.

  • @chloegargiulo5289
    @chloegargiulo5289 2 года назад +1

    Just made this after watching the video and realizing it was simple enough I had all the ingredients. I used jarred sauce, a habanero instead of a jalapeno, and did the white wine at the end. It came out wonderful. Love the texture; it's cooked more thoroughly than al dente, but more gently, so it's chewy the whole way through rather than just the center being raw. Highly recommend!

  • @Ned-Ryerson
    @Ned-Ryerson Год назад

    Thanks for the inspiration. This worked a treat.
    I like the fact that it only needs one pan rather than two, and no colander is needed. Less cleaning equals basically a life hack for spaghetti with tomato sauce.

  • @Currer471
    @Currer471 2 года назад +17

    I just made this tonight after watching this vid a few hours ago. It was absolutely amazing. Thanks, Adam!

  • @emiliawalkiewicz9627
    @emiliawalkiewicz9627 5 месяцев назад

    I did for my mum and myself and she absolutely loved it!
    Thanks for the recipe

  • @jackiemasek8302
    @jackiemasek8302 2 года назад +1

    I made this other night and it was amazingly good! This is definitely being added to the dinner rotation.

  • @symphonicoctet
    @symphonicoctet 2 года назад +8

    Iranians cook their spaghetti like their rice and create a browned, crispy bottom on the dish and this reminds me a lot of that

    • @fish3977
      @fish3977 2 года назад +1

      I might have to try that out myself
      Not exactly an expensive experience

  • @FlareonOW
    @FlareonOW 2 года назад +6

    "It doesn't have to be precise"- italian cooking in a nutshell♥
    My mom makes something similar- when we have Popetta we usually do this with the leftovers the next day- "frying" it in oil the next day in a pan, it's SO good.

  • @after-arts4708
    @after-arts4708 Год назад +5

    I made this for dinner tonight! In preparation, to be honest, I also checked out a competitors recipe, (somewhat more traditional) and used ideas from both. For the “broth”, I used 1 cup of Rao’s marinara sauce, diluted with 2 cups of water. I only had one jalapeño, but that worked out fine. I also diced up a Roma 🍅 for that “fresh veggie” effect. I started the pasta off with about half a cup of marinara in the pan along with the oil, tomato garlic and pepper, adding about half a cup of broth at a time. I might not have had the heat up high enough, because it took a surprisingly long time for the pasta to brown. In all, this dish took about an hour to prepare. I added the splash of white wine at the end, and of course the fresh basil. We sprinkled freshly grated Romano cheese on top. The fresh tomato caramelized into sun-dried tomato-like bits that added even more wonderful depth and texture to this remarkable dish. So glad your video came across my feed!

  • @jessewyman3307
    @jessewyman3307 2 года назад

    Just made this for a quick lunch. It's really good and so simple. Definitely going on my favorite quick and easy list

  • @DarkCarraVEVO
    @DarkCarraVEVO 2 года назад +24

    I'm sorry but someone has to be that guy: "assassina", while also the feminine form of assassin, in this case means "in the way of the assassin, as the assassin would do" much like how "amatriciana" means "made in the way of the city of Amatrice". Generally if you see "alla" (with or without the final 'a') before the word in question it means "in the way of", otherwise it's the feminine form of that word.

  • @Zetraxes
    @Zetraxes 2 года назад +33

    I notice from experience when you wanna fry any noodle you gotta make it the night before and put them in the fridge overnight.
    It's kinda like fried rice.
    The flavour of the sauce will have seeped into the noodles and the moisture will be sucked out by the cold so it will be more crispy

    • @shesh2265
      @shesh2265 2 года назад +1

      @Tommy Gaming 🅥 finally!!!!

    • @abyssbloodgazer6801
      @abyssbloodgazer6801 2 года назад +17

      Dang, now they have a team of bots for these things

    • @ntlespino
      @ntlespino 2 года назад +4

      @@abyssbloodgazer6801 oh God they've pack bonded

    • @codename495
      @codename495 2 года назад +3

      Except that is in no way how the recipe goes. He isn’t making fried rice, he is making a specific method of pasta making.

    • @federicoclaps5099
      @federicoclaps5099 2 года назад

      This is not really fried pasta, since you only want it to be crispy here and there while still being able to eat it like regular spaghetti. As Adam says... Heterogeneity!

  • @thefareplayer2254
    @thefareplayer2254 Год назад

    I gotta say, Adan’s trick of blending grape tomatoes is absolutely genius, and I’ve used it to delicious and time-saving effect. Thank you, Adam!

  • @nat5276
    @nat5276 Год назад +93

    now we know ezio’s favourite food

    • @rebel4466
      @rebel4466 Год назад +16

      There is a story about a cook watching a beautiful woman while cooking and messing up basically everything, putting in too much chili and garlic and his customers were like "do you want to kill us?". That's how the name came to be. Of course there will always be multiple stories, but that's one of them.

    • @nat5276
      @nat5276 Год назад +3

      @@rebel4466 that’s pretty awesome, thanks for sharing!

  • @Kaadmon
    @Kaadmon 2 года назад +15

    Adam, you're the best cooking channel I've come across.I always wanna start cooking what you do in these videos

  • @hellinahandbasket2
    @hellinahandbasket2 2 года назад +6

    That looks wonderful. I can hardly wait to try it.

  • @matthewbickley4289
    @matthewbickley4289 Год назад +1

    I've always felt like my sauce never sticks to the noodles the way I want. I tried cooking this style and it was exactly what I was looking for. I used a red wine instead of white and it turned out really good.

  • @broccolirat9884
    @broccolirat9884 9 месяцев назад

    WOW! Thank you so much for this Recipe. Everything is just right. I love the richness of the tomatoes flavor in my spaghetti❤

  • @spacelight5261
    @spacelight5261 2 года назад +5

    watching adam put in uncooked broken pasta felt like I was witnessing a crime

  • @kenmore01
    @kenmore01 2 года назад +30

    This looks like something I would actually make! Ingredients I can buy in America in a normal grocery store, one pan, it looks intriguing and delicious, and really not that hard. Thanks Adam!
    Now I just need to scale it down to a meal (or two with leftovers) for one.

  • @kazimiraz-zaxel5240
    @kazimiraz-zaxel5240 Год назад +1

    Just made this excellent recipe for the second time, this time with a heated coat of olive oil before I add the garlic. It crisped up lovely and the pasta was deliciously al dente. 2:3 ratio of tomato passata to water or veg broth was ideal for me. Thanks for the banger Adam!

  • @Ravencroft81
    @Ravencroft81 Год назад +2

    I always loved day old reheated spaghetti as a kid. Slightly fried, dry and then covering it in nutty quality Gruyere cheese.

  • @JohnSmith-kw6be
    @JohnSmith-kw6be 2 года назад +33

    I laughed hard at the "call the pasta police" commentary.

    • @jakmanxyom
      @jakmanxyom 2 года назад +3

      Adam's relying on his "ancestral immunity", I see...

  • @piotrbukowski9566
    @piotrbukowski9566 2 года назад +31

    Just made it at home and it's definitely great - the pasta tastes really tomatoey, and the sauce got luxuriously thick from the released starch. The fried texture was very unique as well!
    It felt a little bit too much on the dry side though, but maybe I should add more water to the pan at the very end. Thanks for an awesome new way of preparing pasta.

  • @nikvibing1538
    @nikvibing1538 2 года назад

    i tried this, ive gotta say its more or less my new favourite/go-to way to make pasta

  • @themspiderstho5441
    @themspiderstho5441 2 года назад

    Found your channel yesterday, this was the first video I watched. Cooked that pasta today and I am hooked. Thanks mate!

  • @imp187
    @imp187 2 года назад +22

    I had that a few weeks ago in Bari, they topped it with seasoned stale bread crumbs. Delicious!

    • @vigilantcosmicpenguin8721
      @vigilantcosmicpenguin8721 2 года назад +2

      Oh my god, that would be the perfect crunch.

    • @nonnapapera3044
      @nonnapapera3044 Год назад

      @@vigilantcosmicpenguin8721 in southern Italy is pretty common, in the past seasoned fried breadcrumbs were a really cheap and always available option to upgrade dishes with something crunchy and tasty. Spaghetti all'assassina are crunchy already but you can try it on a great deal of pasta dishes, you'll not regret it

  • @hathorthecow7146
    @hathorthecow7146 Год назад +13

    This sounds so tasty, and as someone with a meat intolerance I highly appreciate it not needing meat. I've only ever had pasta fried after boiling and definitely want to try this next time I do red sauce from scratch 😋

  • @Theupgradeguy
    @Theupgradeguy Год назад

    Very interesting recipe. My mother, and now I, have always taken the leftover spaghetti from the day before and fried it in a pan with Butter. Everyone loves the crispy, crunchiness, & slightly saltiness of the fried pasta. One of our family favorites! I'll have to give this method a try.

  • @NguyenVinhHang
    @NguyenVinhHang 2 года назад

    Thank you Adam for this plant based one pot dish, so satisfying! 🍅😋

  • @federicoclaps5099
    @federicoclaps5099 2 года назад +8

    I always do this when i overcook the pasta. I used to eat this often when I was in high school: my mom would make pasta for me but i would come back from school when it was already cold or overcooked. So I put some olive oil in a pan and fried it.
    Now that I think about it, I'm gonna boil some pasta before i go to bed so I can fry it tomorrow for breakfast.

    • @iota-09
      @iota-09 2 года назад

      Same here
      It's not exactly the same at all, but the taste should still be far closer than with regular cooking.

  • @soralb6368
    @soralb6368 2 года назад +9

    Crispy pasta is fabulous. Check out Spanish Fideua and Persian "macaroni".
    I often make one pot pasta dishes with a crispy pasta bottom inspired by these recipes. By the way, if you don't cover the bottom of your casserole dish with sauce when you are making lasagna, you can get a crispy noodle layer at the bottom. Delicious!

  • @takenizzy
    @takenizzy 2 года назад

    I made this for supper tonight, and my god, this recipe is simply exceptional. Thanks for sharing this, Adam.

  • @aidenmuraca4081
    @aidenmuraca4081 Год назад +1

    This has become a staple recipe for me almost weekly. The basic cooking method for the spaghetti can be transfered to any sort of vegetables, making it a perfect weeknight vegetarian dish.
    It works for any level of cook and can be made even easier if you want to use a jarred sauce of your choosing.
    Personally, I've adapted to making this with a jar sauce, red peppers, onion and garlic just due to my personal preferences. My main take away from this video was, how simple and easy it is to make a tasty and different way of making pasta.
    It comes out starchy, and crispy with some beautiful homogenetity if you do end up completely frying the bottom layer.
    Thanks for this staple dish Adam!

  • @cdemike7517
    @cdemike7517 2 года назад +4

    Bought a predictably oversized box of cherry tomatoes yesterday from Costco, so this was well-timed. Recipe kind of reminds me of sopa seca.

  • @ly9031
    @ly9031 2 года назад +8

    I love the result of cooking pasta in stuff other than plain salty water! We always end up having big pots of broth from cooking chicken and veggies for my dog, so we'll take the broth and cook noodles for various dishes in it and it always results in such a unique flavor

  • @unheardof3078
    @unheardof3078 2 года назад +1

    I make this all of the time and I LOVE it

  • @chocopiton
    @chocopiton Год назад

    Just tried this recipe today, I tried it with some red pepper and added tabasco while frying to compensate for the lack of spiciness though. And the result was far beyond my expectations, I really loved this alternative way of making spaghetti. Thanks alot!

  • @lb6135
    @lb6135 Год назад +3

    Adam, definitely going to try this! Reminds me of a Mexican pasta called Sopa Seca, a favourite of mine, where you toast vermicelli in olive oil before building the dish.

  • @W_Ero
    @W_Ero Год назад +3

    Just stumbled upon this vid while craving pasta, might try this tonight

  • @MidnightSt
    @MidnightSt Год назад

    Thank you, I... definitely DID NOT DO this recipe, but the things it describes were very helpful in actually getting the sauce into the spaghetti.

  • @Niejos
    @Niejos Год назад

    I just made this, with some added chicken for the protein and without the pepper for garnish, and it is absolutely delicious! Thanks :)

  • @yaboifab2
    @yaboifab2 Год назад +3

    I'm from germany but my grandma has been making this every now and then for about as long as I can remember

  • @halycon404
    @halycon404 2 года назад +5

    I've been accidentally doing something similar to this for years out of laziness of not wanting to clean an extra pot. My usual go to is a couple quick large diced roma tomatoes, green onion, garlic. I like toothsome chunks of tomato, so large diced roma. I'll let that sit in the pan till the tomatoes soften and lose most of the water content, get some light color. Then I'll add the pasta. After that it's just add small amounts of water, or left over chicken stock if I have some sitting around. Really I'll toss anything in it that'll work if I've got it on hand. Mushrooms, whatever. Sometimes I'll add capers or olives. Same idea, I know it's time to add more liquid when the sound changes. And I do use a steel pan. Deglaze with every addition of liquid and the browned taste kinda melds all over the entire dish. One last deglaze before taking out of the pan. It's fast and I only need to clean one pan, a knife, a cutting board, a plate, and a fork. It's a lazy meal.

  • @catalinagomez924
    @catalinagomez924 2 года назад

    Thank You again for an other yummy recipe. This one was a family hit 🥳 so as soo many of your recipes collections. 🤩🤩

  • @MrDagonFire
    @MrDagonFire Год назад +1

    I made this tonight and it was just delightful. Thanks Adam!