Categories
Veggie

Fettuccine Alfredo

OneandahalfSlices food blog recipes One and a half Slices Virginia eat local

Classic Fettucine Alfredo

one and a half slices fettucine alfredo recipe

Creamy, comforting Fettucine Alfredo is hard to beat. I already provided a short description of why American Italian classics are “inauthentic” and (shocker) less healthy in the gloriously elegant Spaghetti Al Limone post. Fettucine Alfredo is one of those classics that should probably be made with reserve pasta water, a little butter, and parmesan, but old habits die hard and I make my alfredo just like my mother. So, yeah, don’t eat a gallon of this stuff, but by all means, throw some steamed broccoli or sliced chicken onto a bed of this dreamy creaminess and float on off to heaven. You can elevate the flavors by adding toasted pine nuts, fresh green peas, or (my favorite) marsala mushrooms. Any which way, this is pure comfort in a pasta bowl, and perfect for a Sunday afternoon.

what you need

1 bunch parsley

1 package fresh fettucine noodles

6 tablespoons salted butter

1 large pinch of ground nutmeg

2/3 cup heavy cream

1 cup grated parmesan reggiano cheese

black pepper

dash of cayenne pepper or paprika

(optional) 1/2 package baby bella mushrooms, sliced thinly

*if using mushrooms, you’ll want a splash of marsala wine and some thyme

how to make it

First thing is first. Grate your cheese and chop your parsley. Set both aside.  

Then, mushrooms. Throw thinly sliced mushrooms in a saucepan with a tablespoon of olive oil and sauté until the juices from the mushrooms begin to run. Garnish with salt, cracked black pepper, a little bit of thyme, and a splash of marsala wine. Cook until juices disappear, remove from heat, and set aside. 

Next, pasta. Cook pasta until al dente per package instructions. Strain and return to the pot. While pasta is cooking, make the sauce. The key to the sauce is to warm it very, very slowly. Otherwise your butter will separate and your sauce will become chunky. We do not want this. Slow and deliberate are key here and this sauce will become foolproof for you. 

Start with the butter and the cream in a large saucepan over medium heat. Heat the mixture until the butter melts, give it a stir, and watch for the top of the cream to begin to steam. This is how you know it is time. 

Send in the spices. Cracked black pepper, nutmeg, and cayenne (can also use paprika). Stir just a moment more so everything is combined and remove this beauty from heat before it bubbles (v. important!). 

Now, cheese. Remove the sauce from heat and add the parmesan cheese, stirring until the cheese melts and the sauce is uniform. 

Back to the pasta. Add the parsley and mushrooms to the pasta and replace the pot over very low heat. Pour the sauce over the pasta and gently toss everything together with two forks until all the pasta is coated. 

Serve. Twirl into pasta bowls and add a hefty grate of black pepper and a bit more parm to the top. Garnish with a parsley sprig. If you want to get really fancy, you can sprinkle on some toasted pine nuts or fresh green peas. 

I like to make chicken alfredo by adding sliced, marinated, baked chicken to the top. Chicken Alfredo was frequently requested by my graduate school housemates (two orthopedic med students and a local English teacher – all male). The English teacher would leave a $20 on the counter by the coffee pot in the morning which I could loosely translate to mean “please go to the store, buy the good parmesan cheese, and make us chicken alfredo.” I happily obliged. These days, I tend to take my alfredo with some fresh florets of steamed broccoli given my cheesy broccoli obsession. But it is also just as good with a side salad – try the OneandahalfSlices Signature Salad for sure!

More Pasta!
one and a half slices recipe italian spaghetti meatballs

Best Meatballs

Last weekend my world was changed forever when I was schooled by a friend very dear to me in the subtle art of the perfect Lady and the Tramp style meatball. That fine grained, tender, perfectly seasoned Italian delicacy resting resting lightly atop a bird’s nest of egg noodles dusted with Parmesano Reggiano. As it turns out, the secret to the very best authentic Italian meatballs is threefold: 1) cook them a long ass time, 2) use a combination of meats (beef, pork, and lamb), 3) the love of cooking. Slow cooking. So here we have it. The Whiffletree Farm three-meat authentic Italian meatball recipe.

Go To Post »
one and a half slices zucchini parmesan girl dinner pasta delicious

Girl Dinner

I’m entering my level up era and I’ve been eating a lot of girl dinner. Yes, I know, girl dinner is french fries and a pornstar martini. But this girl dinner is a fraction of the cost and it takes like 15 minutes to make. At home. So you can continue doing #levelup things (or play videogames, either).

Go To Post »

Spaghetti Al Limone

This is a fresh, light, summery pasta dish I have wanted to try for a long time in keeping with my predilection for lemon things (like my equally as simple Little Lemon Cake). Pasta al Limone is an Italian classic. It requires just a handful of ingredients and only takes as long to make as it does to boil pasta. I like it with a piece of lemon-marinated, grilled chicken on top. Lemon and Pasta may not seem like two things that go together but, trust me, they do. It has an elegant simplicity to it that is perfect for a summery Sunday afternoon, a weeknight, or a date night. Do something different. Lemon Pasta. 🍋

Go To Post »
Facebook
Twitter
Email
Pinterest
Tumblr
Categories
Veggie

Borek

OneandahalfSlices food blog recipes One and a half Slices Virginia eat local

Sigara Böreği

- Turkish Street Food -

one and a half slices borek cigara boragi recipe

Borek [boh-rek] (plural Böreği) is a delicious Turkish/Eastern European street food that I added to the OneandahalfSlices repertoire in college when a Turkish friend took the time to teach me a little of his home cuisine. I would go as far as to call borek the Balkan empanada – pervasive with a distinct variation on the theme in every country. It can be baked, fried, filled with cheese, filled with greens, filled with meat, but usually involves Phyllo dough (unless you are me and are too lazy to deal with Phyllo dough).

The most common type of borek is probably Su Böreği (literally translated to water borek) which is baked in large sheets, filled with cheese or cheese and spinach, and cut into pieces (think Spanakopita if you like Greek food). This particular borek is called Sigara because it is rolled into tubes like a cigarette. It makes a great brunch, lunch, or light dinner option (as pictured here) and has its origins in Ottoman cuisine.

Ottoman cuisine has rich Central Asian, Balkan, Persian, and Arab influences owing mostly to its central location – both land and sea – to the spice trade and geography at the confluence of Asia, old Europe, and the Middle East. Ottoman cuisine boasts stews (this is where I learned to make tagine though I tend to use a more North African flavor profile), breads, yogurt-based sauces, grape leaves, and kebabs. Pair with a good Cajik sauce (coming soon), some very fresh vegetables, and an Öküzgözü if you are so bold.

what you need

1 block of feta cheese

1 bunch of curly parsley

1 package of Nasoya eggroll wraps (you can get these at most grocery stores in the produce section believe it or not)

1/2 cup plain, 0% fat Greek yogurt

1 egg

1 tablespoon lemon juice

Black pepper to taste 

Dash of paprika

A neutral oil (like Safflower or Sunflower) for frying

Serve with: thinly sliced avocado, cucumber, tomato, and red onion topped with olive oil, dill, parsley, and/or finely chopped toasted pistachios, and cajik or haydari sauce, if desired. 

how to make it

Chop parsley and feta separately and then mix until combined. In another small bowl, beat the egg with the yogurt, lemon juice, black pepper, and paprika.   

Lay out one eggroll wrap on a clean surface (they should be very easy to work with – no flour dusting required). Place a small spoonful of the egg mixture in the middle of the wrap on the diagonal, careful not to add too much (you do not want it spilling out into the pan and causing oil spatters). Add two spoonfulls of the parsley mixture to the top of the yogurt mixture. 

Starting with the bottom corner, fold the wrap up and over the mixture and tuck in each side. With a free finger, wipe some of the yogurt mixture on the top corner to seal with wrap. Roll the borek upwards to create a moderately tight wrap. 

Barely cover the bottom of a pan with oil and heat over medium-high heat. Add the borek, careful not to overcrowd them, and cook them for approximately three minutes on each of three sides. Prepare the plates as the böreği cook transferring them to a paper towel to cool slightly. Serve warm.

More Ottoman-style Cuisine
one and a half slices coconut harissa meatballs local recipe

Coconut Harissa Meatballs

This struck me as the strangest recipe and just the thing OneandahalfSlices needed after what shall henceforth be known as The Great Fridge Hiatus. In the midst of back-and-forth work travel to Florida and other exotic locales (Dayton, Ohio???), my freezer door was mysteriously left – ahem – ajar. Chicken and meat juices filled the freezer drawer and I stared in sadness as $300 worth of condiments, to include at least seven types of miso paste, expired in front of my eyes. Fixing the fridge, restocking the freezer, replacing the condiments, and getting my cooking mojo back took a good two weeks. So here we are…with coconut harissa meatballs – by far one of the stranger things I’ve tasted. I made this dish over the mashed white beans as originally instructed but I’m curious to try it over egg noodles and mashed gold potatoes. If you’re feeling experimental, I’d definitely give this one a try. 

Go To Post »
creamy coconut sweet potato soup recipe oneandahalfslices

Creamy Sweet Potato Stew

Coming out of Vegan October, we were a little tired of lentils and were looking for something to do with copious amounts of sweet potatoes. Hence this little gem was discovered. Creamy with coconut milk, almost like curry. Spiced with flavors of the same. Hearty with sweet potato and flourished with kale. Yes, there are still a few lentils, but they are hardly the stars of the show. This soup is light enough for any season and feels perfectly at home here at the end of October. 🧡

Go To Post »

Moroccan Tagine

I have been SO excited to release this post!!! Why? Because this is your new weeknight dinner. It will impress your family, fill your stomach, warm your heart, and make your house smell like North African spices. I started making tagine years ago when I first moved to DC and came across a tagine in World Market. I was instantly and aesthetically intrigued, and purchased the thing on the spot not having a clue what I would do with it. Well… figured that one out. A tagine is the OG slow cooker.  And whatever you put inside – lamb, chicken, chickpeas, rabbit, potatoes – you will taste the spicy exoticism. If you don’t have a tagine, no worries. You can make it in a Dutch oven, stovetop or, yes, in a slow cooker. And before you think this is just chicken slow roasted in tomato sauce… keep reading…

Go To Post »
Facebook
Twitter
Email
Pinterest
Tumblr
Categories
Veggie

Chimichurri

one and a half slices local simple recipes food

Argentinian Chimichurri

one and a half slices chimmichurri authentic argentinian uruguayan

If you’ve eaten at our house, chances are you’ve had authentic, Argentinian chimichurri. It’s Argentina’s only real condiment. And it goes on everything , from salad to Ovoka Farm wagyu. Go spicy. Go limey. Want it for breakfast? I got you: Crab Avo Toast.

argentina

what you need

2 cups of super finely chopped parsley

3-5 garlic super finely chopped garlic cloves

2 tablespoons super finely chopped red onion

1 super finely chopped red chili, seeds and all

Juice from one lime (or half a lime if you live in Florida)

1 tablespoon red wine vinegar

3/4 cup (plus a little more for good measure) good olive oil

Salt and pepper to taste

how to make it

Dice the parsley super finely and remove the stems. Using a chopper, finely dice the garlic, the onion, and the chili. Add it to the parsley and mix with salt and pepper. 

Add the lime juice, the red wine vinegar, and the olive oil, stir, and store in the fridge overnight or a few hours prior to eating. 

Enjoy!

More Authentic Argentinian
one and a half slices corn baked humita recipe

Humita

It’s summertime. Which means it is time for Humita. Humita is a highly versatile Argentinian dish that comes in many, many forms. Humita appears throughout the Argentinian culinary atmosphere as a soup, steamed in the

Go To Post »
one and a half slices ham and melon cantaloupe recipe summer

Jamon con Melon

This is the simplest of appetizers. Elegant and perfectly balanced. Sweet and Salty. aka Melon Carpaccio. #summervibes

Go To Post »
one and a half slices

Salt

“I have two lovers in life that I have never slept with. The city of Paris and potatoes.” – Francis Mallmann. The taste of empanadas, parrillada, and red wine came to flavor my adolescence, calibrating

Go To Post »
argentinian empanada recipe authentic argentine oneandahalfslices

Empanadas

There are many varieties but a recipe for specifically Argentinian empanadas is difficult to find – especially in English and out of the metric system. Often served as an appetizer, empanadas are hearty little handpies

Go To Post »
Facebook
Twitter
Email
Pinterest
Tumblr