Pantry Puttanesca (2024)

Pantry Puttanesca (1)

This may not be the purist’s version, but neither are the people who inspired it.

by Erin Henderson

When I was happily betrothed to my ex (this was a while ago), we would often come home from a night out, a little tired, slightly drunk, and very, very hungry.

I took to making this pasta for our midnight meal – it was quick, easy, and could be slapped together with whatever was in the pantry. The maxim “fat and happy” truly defined us for a while. Until it didn’t. But that’s a story for another glass of wine.

While I don’t advise making this a staple of your late-night noshing, it is a terrific pantry dinner that you can get on the table in less than 30 minutes. And it happens to be vegan, if that’s your thing.

Puttanesca has the edgy translation of“whor*’s pasta” in English. As one might expect, puttanesca has a salacious history, but like most things acted out in the shadows, also a mysterious one: some suggest the ladies of the night made this to entice clients with its heady aromatics. Other stories say this was the quick dish the working women made for themselves when returning home, exhausted from a hard shift. Another legend reports trattoria cooks, near closing and out of food, would find these humble scraps in the larder to make a dish for the hungry courtesans who came in looking for a hot meal.

I find it amusing this was the dish I also made for my lover and me in the wee hours of morning.

Likely there are purists out there (purists? Of whor*'s pasta? I’m pretty sure that's irony) who will argue this is not a true puttanesca because it lacks anchovies. But as mentioned, the best part about this dish is you can tailor it to your preferences and whatever you happen to have on hand. I hate anchovies so I use the ingenious ingredient of miso paste – as I do in many of my sauces, stews, and soups – for a deep, salty umami richness. Some cooks hand-crush tomatoes, canned or otherwise, while I use tomato paste. Italians insist on leaving garlic cloves whole to cook and flavour the olive oil, then discarding; I throw in at least three minced cloves with reckless abandon. I sometimes add sun dried black olives when I’ve got them, but if I don’t, I don’t sweat it.

Pantry Puttanesca (2)

Pantry Puttanesca

The ingredients for this all have an intense saltiness, so be conservative with adding any more salt. Other than that, the beauty of making pasta – just like the ladies of carnal pleasures – is that there’s a certain looseness to how it’s done. Below is my version, and I have had numerous requests for another round (whether or not I’ve had the energy, is another matter). Feel free to tailor this pasta to your preference. As long as it’s good for you, it’s a success.

Serves: Optimistically 2 (but I’ve polished this off myself. Don’t judge.)
Chef level: It really can’t get any easier

Ingredients:
  • 4 oz / 120 grams (and honestly, I just throw in what looks right, but the proffered measurement is for the nervous amongst us) good quality linguine or spaghetti (I like Rummo brand)
  • ¼ cup extra virgin olive oil
  • ½ cup white or red onion or shallot, diced (whatever you’ve got)
  • 3 fat cloves garlic, minced
  • 2 tsp fennel seed
  • 1 tsp dried oregano
  • 4 sundried tomatoes, sliced thin and plumped up in hot water
  • 3 Tbsp capers in brine, roughly chopped
  • 3 Tbsp hot Calabrian peppers in oil, chopped (if you don’t have these, fresh chili flakes are fine)
  • ½ cup dry white wine
  • 1 Tbsp white miso paste (or chopped anchovies)
  • 1 Tbsp tomato paste
How to Make It:
  1. Pot a large of water on to boil, when boiling, add a small handful of salt and the pasta.
  2. Warm the olive oil, onion and garlic in a large, deep saucepan. You want the onion and garlic to gently cook and soften with the evoo as it heats.
  3. Add the fennel and oregano (and if using chili flakes, add them now, too).
  4. Once the onions and garlic are soft, fragrant, and translucent, add the sundried tomatoes, capers and optional hot Calabrian peppers. Stir to combine.
  5. Add in white wine – it should bubble but not immediately evaporate.
  6. Add in both tomato and miso pastes and stir to dissolve.
  7. When your pasta is about one minute from being done, remove it with tongs, and add to the sauce, stirring to combine. (We want the pasta to finish cooking in the sauce, which is also now slightlywatered down with the pasta water.)
  8. Leave the pasta water in the pot on the stove (turn off the heat), as you may need some extra scoops of water to loosen the sauce as it cooks.
  9. Taste it. There should be a lovely briny bite, but it shouldn’t be so salty you immediately dehydrate.
  10. If you find there’s too much salt, add in a scoop of tap water to reduce the salt. Stir and gently cook to make the sauce glossy and slightly loose – but not watery.
  11. Scoop into pasta bowls, with optional parmesan (I don’t add parm to mine, I feel like the flavours are intense enough on their own.)
Wine Pairing:

There's a lot of punchy flavours in this full-throttle sauce, so I would reach for a toothsome red that can bite back. With puttanesca's origin story coming out of Naples, I'd stick to a southern Italian red, such as a Sicilian Frappato or Nero d'Avola.

Pantry Puttanesca (2024)

FAQs

What does puttanesca mean in Italian? ›

It is an easy sauce, briefly cooked, and is very fragrant and spicy. Puttanesca translates as “in the style of the whor*.” The name derives from the Italian word puttana which means whor*. Puttana in turn arises from the Latin word putida which means stinking.

What are the ingredients in a puttanesca sauce? ›

Bold and comforting in the best way, puttanesca sauce is made of simple pantry staples including canned tomatoes, garlic, anchovies, olives and capers. Throw in some spaghetti for the perfect pasta puttanesca any night of the week!

What is the taste of puttanesca? ›

Puttanesca sauce recipes will vary based on what ingredients are available on-hand, but traditionally, puttanesca sauce tastes salty from the olives and anchovies with a sweet kick from the tomatoes and oil. Puttanesca is a unique variation from traditional tomato sauces, but its flavor profile is hard to beat.

What does alla puttanesca translate to? ›

And the dish is also made tastier by its unusual name: Puttanesca literally means “of, relating to, or characteristic of a prostitute,” raising questions about its origins, which are claimed by both the region of Lazio and Campania.

Why is puttanesca so good? ›

Unlike traditional tomato sauce, which is tomatoey through and through, puttanesca sauce is a study in opposites: Anchovies and olives are salty where tomatoes are sweet, oily where tomatoes are watery, dark in color where tomatoes are vivid.

What's the difference between marinara and puttanesca sauce? ›

Marinara is a simple tomato sauce consisting of tomatoes, garlic, extra virgin olive oil, garlic and herbs. Where Marinara is pretty tame, Puttanesca sauce is flavored with more pungent, punchy ingredients like olives, anchovies, capers and red pepper flakes.

Is puttanesca good for you? ›

Pasta Puttanesca is packed with tomato nutrition

Cooked with a little oil, the nutrients become more available for your body to use them. Fresh and canned tomatoes improve health by reducing the risk of heart disease and cancer.

What to pair with puttanesca? ›

Pairing puttanesca sauce with rustic Italian reds such as Primitivo or Nero d'Avola would support the “if it grows together it goes together” philosophy. Just keep in mind that the peppery heat of the dish will be amplified by higher alcohol wines.

What can I use in place of capers in puttanesca? ›

What's the Best Substitute for Capers? Try These 9 Ideas
  • Green olives. They're salty, they're acidic, they're savory, they're buried somewhere in your fridge—what more can you ask for? ...
  • Lemon. What a difference a squeeze of fresh lemon makes. ...
  • Pickles. ...
  • Green peppercorns. ...
  • Thyme. ...
  • Caper berries. ...
  • Artichoke hearts. ...
  • Anchovies.
Apr 15, 2020

What is badly cut pasta in Italian? ›

The excess parts of the dough, generally the edges, are left with irregular shape and thickness, therefore "poorly cut" or, in Italian, maltagliati. Maltagliati are therefore cut from such scrap pieces of pasta, and differ in shape, size and thickness.

What does spaghetti mean in Italy? ›

Spaghetti is the plural form of the Italian word spaghetto, which is a diminutive of spago, meaning 'thin string' or 'twine'.

What country is puttanesca from? ›

Naples, Italy

Spaghetti alla puttanesca is a relatively new addition to Italian cuisine, emerging in Naples in the mid-20th century.

Where did the name Pasta Puttanesca come from? ›

What is Italian slang for anchovies? ›

They're often indiscriminately referred to as alici or acciughe, two words defining the same thing, even though the former should technically refer to the fillets preserved in vegetable oil and the latter the whole fish, usually packed in salt.

Which Italian phrase refers to pasta? ›

The term al dente is almost always used to talk about food, particularly pasta. Most experienced cooks prepare rigatoni, fettuccine, macaroni, and other kinds of pasta so that it's still al dente when it's served. Al dente is Italian, and literally means "to the tooth," from a Latin root word, dent, or "tooth."

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