Something quick for summer
This is for my friend Betsy, who observed that most of the recipes on this blog are rather long and involved . . .
I make this basic pasta salad many times each summer. It is open for endless variation–leave out the cheese for non-dairy gatherings, substitute broccoli for the green pepper, use nuts only if you have them, etc. The original recipe used pimentos instead of artichoke hearts (but I HATE pimentos). This past weekend when I made it, I added a pint of grape tomatoes (just tossed them on top).
[Given the current “tomato salmonella scare” I’m sticking to grape and cherry tomatoes until they get the rest figured out. A week or so ago, my food coop sold me tomatoes from Mexico and insisted that since they were organic they are safe, regardless of what the FDA says . . . and even claimed that no manure is used on organic produce . . . though as far as I know, it is just “synthetic fertilizer” that is not considered organic . . . oh well.]
I’ve included the Pasta Salad recipe on its own page, but will put it here as well:
Lucinda’s Favorite Pasta Salad
Time: 30 minutes to prepare, several hours to chill
Servings: Many
Ingredients
1 lb. (raw) pasta–medium shells, Campanelle, and Farfalle (Bow Tie) work well
1/2 cup olive oil
1/2 cup red wine vinegar
a spoonful of pesto OR 10-20 basil leaves (fresh) OR 1/2 tsp basil and 1/2 tsp oregano (dry)
1 large green bell pepper, diced
1 medium red onion, minced
1-15 oz can artichoke hearts or 2 jars marinated artichoke hearts, cut into bite-sized pieces
1/2 cup (packed) freshly-minced parsley
4 oz. mozzarella cut into cubes
a handful of toasted pine nuts
salt and pepper to taste
Directions
Heat 4-6 quarts of water to a boil. Add salt (if desired) and the pasta. Return pasta to a boil and cook until al dente (approx. 8-10 minutes depending on the shape).
Drain pasta in colander. Rinse in lukewarm water. Drain thoroughly.
Transfer pasta to large bowl. Add olive oil. Stir. Cover and chill for at least 30 minutes.
Add all the remaining ingredients, mix well. Chill and serve cold.
Enjoy!
Copyright © 2008, Lucinda DeWitt
Ah, yes, I remember this salad… you brought it– or a slight variant– to my Mom’s house once when you visited (to pick strawberries, perhaps?) It was my first experience with artichoke hearts. Love at first bite. 🙂