Tuesday, December 14, 2010

I wish I had a better name for this recipe....






I’m a big fan of meals that use lots of bits and pieces from the fridge or freezer.  I feel that they require more creativity than a meal that requires a trip to the store and there is just something cathartic about creating  more empty space in your fridge.  Last week’s adventure began with me thinking that breakfast for dinner sounded like a good idea, we had a lot of eggs and a partial package of bacon begging to be used.  It kept gnawing at me though that there was a half can of pureed pumpkin and some already washed baby spinach.  So I remixed breakfast ingredients and here is what developed:

Pumpkin Carbonara
1 lb spaghetti
½ lb thick sliced bacon
2 large cloves garlic (3 if they’re small), chopped fine
1 ½ cups fresh spinach
1 tablespoon fresh thyme, chopped fine
3 eggs
¾ cup pureed pumpkin (or whatever is less when you have used 1 cup for one of the many recipes that calls for only 1 cup of pumpkin)
1 cup hard Italian cheese, shredded (I used grana padano and pecorino romano)
¼ teaspoon ground nutmeg
Salt and pepper to taste

Bring a large pot of water to boil for the pasta and heat a medium sized skillet of your choice.  Chop the bacon crosswise into ½ inch strips and cook on medium until crispy.  Remove the bacon from pan with a spatula and place on paper towels to drain grease.  Drain the bacon grease except for 1 tablespoon into a container for later use (I’ll put up my Individual Yorkshire Puddings recipe at some point, this uses the leftover).  You could probably use turkey bacon or another less fatty bacon for this recipe, you would just have to add a little oil to the pan.

Add the garlic to the pan and let cook on low to golden brown, add the spinach and cook for 2 minutes and then add thyme.  Hopefully by now the water is boiling and you can cook your pasta as directed, it is important for this recipe that the pasta is hot when the ingredients are mixed.  While the pasta and spinach cook, beat the eggs with the pumpkin.  If it looks too thick, you may want to add a splash of milk, use your judgment.  Blend the cheese and nutmeg with the egg mixture.



Drain the pasta, turn off the heat and return the pasta to pot.  Put bacon back in skillet and blend with the spinach.  Add the spinach/bacon mixture to the pasta and stir together (tongs worked really well for doing this).  Then add the egg/cheese/ pumpkin mixture, stirring constantly until the sauce thickens as the eggs cook.

Garnish with sprigs of thyme, extra cheese, and/or extra bacon.

Wookiee loved it, the pumpkin taste was really subtle and it had a great fall flavor, perfect comfort food!  We ate while watching the latest Iron Chef America (really low scoring battle) and I managed to pull a dessert out of the situation also.  In the spirit of the evening, my secret ingredient was PUMPKIN!  I re-heated some leftover pumpkin waffles I had made earlier in the week (a total of 1 and a half waffles) and served with hot maple syrup, whipped cream and a sprinkle of cinnamon. It was also great because I had been originally planning on using them for the breakfast dinner anyways!


In the words of the great Alton Brown: I bid you good eating.