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Pasta all’anciova e muddica in a bowl with a patterned background across half of the table
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Pasta all’anciova e muddica

Pasta with anchovies and breadcrumbs

Pasta all’anciova e muddica in a bowl with a patterned background across half of the table
Save recipe
Not Too Tricky

serves 4

About the recipe

This traditional dish from Palermo is linked to the migration of many Sicilians to Northern Italy in search of work, and so is often called La Pasta Milanisa (the Milanese pasta). They brought with them long-lasting ingredients from home, like preserved salted anchovies, homemade tomato estratto (a rich concentrate) and dried fruit, and would make dishes like this one to remind them of the sunshine of the South, while living in the cool and often foggy darkness of Milan in the winter.



Recipe From

Cover of Hidden Italy with sketches of a tomato vine, basil leaves and garlic on a check board background

Gennaro's Hidden Italy: Regional Recipes to Treasure For Generations

By Gennaro Contaldo

Ingredients

16 anchovy fillets in salt (approx. 60 g/2 ¼ oz in total)

3 tbsp extra virgin olive oil

2 garlic cloves, finely chopped

2 small shallots, finely chopped

120 g/4 ¼ oz tomato puree

300 g/10 ½ oz bucatini

sea salt

20 g/ ¾ oz sultanas, soaked in

a little lukewarm water then drained

10 g/ ¼ oz pine kernels

handful of flat-leaf parsley, finely chopped

20 g/ ¾ oz dried breadcrumbs

Top Tip

Salted anchovy fillets can be found in good Italian delis or online. Please use the best tomato purée you can (not tinned or passata) as this, together with the anchovies, will impart a depth of flavour and richness to the dish, which is balanced by the sweetness of the shallots and sultanas. The addition of pine kernels and lightly toasted breadcrumbs adds a nice crunchiness.

Method

  1. Rinse the anchovy fillets in water to remove the salt, then pat dry and set aside.
  2. In a pan, heat 2 tablespoons olive oil over a medium heat and sweat the garlic and shallots for a couple of minutes until softened. Add the anchovy fillets and continue to cook for a couple of minutes until they have dissolved. Add the tomato purée and cook over a low heat for about 10 minutes, until it begins to thicken slightly.
  3. In the meantime, cook the bucatini in a separate pan of boiling salted water until ‘al dente’.
  4. In a smaller frying pan, heat the remaining olive oil over a medium heat and, when hot, lightly toast the breadcrumbs, stirring for about a minute. Remove from the heat and set aside.
  5. Drain the pasta and add to the anchovy and tomato sauce along with a little of the hot pasta water. Cook over a medium heat, mixing well, for a minute or so.
  6. Remove from the heat, sprinkle with the sultanas, pine kernels, parsley and toasted breadcrumbs and serve immediately.

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