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PastaQuickVegetarian

Anyone Can Make This

By April 22, 2013October 2nd, 201327 Comments

I should qualify that a bit. When I say that โ€œanyoneโ€ can make this, I suppose I should point out โ€” before the haters do โ€” that not just โ€œanyoneโ€ would be able to figure out how to invert his or her wrist in a way that helps distribute a container of grape tomatoes onto a baking sheet. This technique, also known as โ€œdumping,โ€ involves a slight acceleration of the wrist, which helps direct the tomatoes onto the baking sheet and not flying across the kitchen at an errant trajectory. Ohโ€ฆI guess itโ€™s presumptuous of me to assume that pretty much โ€œanyoneโ€ is going to own a piece of equipment as arcane as a โ€œbaking sheet.โ€ For those of you who donโ€™t own one, and who donโ€™t live near a grocery store (a place where food and cooking miscellany is sold), Iโ€™m sorry. This recipe is probably not for you.ย Nor is it for anyone who has yet to master water boiling. Or pepper mill grinding. Or who hasnโ€™t yet figured out how to transform a hard block of Parmesan cheese into snowy shreds, a technique known by many in the professional food world as โ€œgrating.โ€

But for everyone else in search of a quick dinner on a weeknight? This oneโ€™s for you.

Penne with Slow-Roasted Tomatoes
This recipe changes for us based on what kind of night it is. If you have some time, I advise slow-cooking the tomatoes for an hour and a half at 300ยฐF. This results in blistered, concentrated tomatoes that fall apart beautifully when mixed into the pasta. If itโ€™s a weeknight and you only have 30 minutes or so, proceed as directed.

.
1 16-ounce container of grape tomatoes (or however many youโ€™ve got)
1 small onion, chopped roughly (ok, I admit, a little skill involved here, but minimal!)
4 tablespoons olive oil
a shake of red pepper flakes (optional)
salt & pepper
a sprig of thyme, leaves removed (optional)
1 pound penne pasta (I like the ridged kind, penne rigate, or orecchiette)
1 tablespoon butter
ยฝ cup grated Parmesan, plus more for serving

Preheat oven to 350ยฐF. Dump tomatoes and onions on a baking sheet lined with foil. Add 2 tablespoons olive oil, salt, pepper, red pepper flakes, thyme leaves and toss with your fingers or a spoon. (Do this gently so you donโ€™t rip the foil.) Bake for 25-30 minutes until tomatoes look shrivelly and brown but not burnt.

Meanwhile, bring a large pot of water to boil. Add pasta and cook according to package instructions. When draining, reserve a ยผ cup of pasta water. Place pasta pot back on burner over low heat and add butter and remaining olive oil.

Add penne back to the pot and toss with tomato-onion mixture and cheese. If itโ€™s looking gloppy or sticky, add a little reserved pasta water to loosen.

Serve with additional grated Parm. If you are feeling indulgent, a dollop of ricotta is gonna be pretty excellent.

The post-roast. See how easy?

27 Comments

  • Avatar Lisa says:

    This was so yummy and easy! I think that little bit of butter at the end made the dish something special!

  • Avatar Laurie says:

    Iโ€™m making this right now while having working lunch @ home. I added 2 chopped cloves of garlic. My kitchen is starting to smell amazing! It reminds me of the โ€œonion trickโ€. Now combined with the tomato & garlic trick. Thanks Jenny

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