A few Augusts ago, my friends Jeni and Ben and their three kids came to visit us. They live on the Upper West Side, which is only about a 20-minute drive from my house, and yet, with full-time jobs and full-time families (their oldest daughter was about 4 which would make her twins 2, and my kids were 6 and 4), we had the hardest time coordinating get-togethers. (You know that famous New Yorker cartoon, โHow about never โ does never work for you?โ That was us.) Well, on this particular occasion, we had by some miracle figured out a time that worked for a drive-by. It was a Saturday โ couldnโt do lunch (soccer practice, naps) couldnโt do dinner (twinsโ bedtime looming) so we settled on the somewhat odd, not-quite-cocktail-hour of 5:00.
โJust stay for dinner,โ I told her when she called that morning.
โNo no no,โ she said .โPlease donโt do anything.โ
โBut itโs no trouble.โ
โJust trust me. Itโs more stressful if I try to feed the kids there. Please donโt worry!โ
I agreed begrudgingly. But then I hit the farmerโs market where, of course I was bamboozled by my daughters into buying a container of BuddhaPesto. The stuff is so good. I mean, so so good and leprechaun green and fresh you just canโt believe it. (The Timesโ Jeff Gordinier was similarly smittenย last summer.) And, since it was August, there were tomatoes. The kind of tomatoes you dream of all year long. Striped, heirloom, green, gold, cherry, plum, little, big, blistered, exploding. The kind of tomatoes you slice at dinnertime, drizzle with a little olive oil and sprinkle with sea salt, and then back away from. Because to do anything more, to add anything else, would be to incur the wrath of the tomato godsโฆor me, for that matter.
The thing is, I never promised Jeni and Ben I wouldnโt cook for them. Just the kids. So at some point during the course of the familyโs two-hour cameo โ at which point I think every single toy in the toy box had been removed and discarded on the floor by five gleeful children ย โ I plopped two dinner plates on the table for the grown-ups. Spaghetti tossed with that BuddhaPesto, and slices of heirloom tomatoes (salted, oil-drizzled) that looked like they shouldโve been painted by Cezanne. (I can brag about that because I had absolutely nothing to do with it. They came that way.)
You know the Virginia Lee Burton book The Little Houseย about the cottage that stands peacefully still as construction and skyscrapers and general chaos looms all around. Thatโs how I picture Jeni and Ben eating that dinner. I will never forget how grateful two people could look eating the worldโs simplest summer meal, as five screeching kids launched into their fifteenth game of Elefunย in the living room.
Jeni tried to fight it, but was powerless in the face of the tomatoes.
โI told you not to do anything,โ she attempted weakly.
โI didnโt. I boiled a pot of water. That was the extent of my cooking.โ
โBut you did! Look at this.โ
I guess. But, I reminded her, it doesnโt take much.
Spaghetti with Pesto and Summer Tomatoes
Cook spaghetti according to package directions. Drain, reserving 1/4 cup of pasta water. Toss pasta with a little olive oil while it sits in the colander. Add prepared pesto (the freshest you can find, such as BuddhaPesto) to the same pot you boiled spaghetti in and whisk in a drizzle of pasta water until itโs saucy, but not watery. Add pasta back to the pot and toss. Serve garnished with freshly grated Parmesan.
While spaghetti cooks, slice summer tomatoes onto a plate. Drizzle with a tablespoon or so of the best olive oil youโve got, sprinkle with sea salt (and pepper, if you must) and serve alongside pasta.
We have been making lots of pesto lately โ an excellent way to use up greens: arugula, kale, parsley. And so fresh and green, yum! Great addition for sandwiches too. If only we got tomatoes like you describeโฆwrong climate in NE Minnesota. Thanks for inspiration and reminder how much parents appreciate a meal like this!!
I read your newsletter, do I win the Frannyโs cookbook?
โI read your newsletter, do I win the Frannyโs cookbook?โ
Funny how meals like these can end up being the ones you remember and keep talking about years later.
also: I read your newsletter, do I win the Frannyโs cookbook?
I read your newsletter, do I win the Frannyโs cookbook?
I read your newsletter, do I win the Frannyโs cookbook?
How much do i love Frannyโs foodโฆalmost as much as your recipes!
Such a perfect dinner. Yum.
I read your newsletter tooโฆ Do I win the Frannyโs cookbook?
Okay, BIG pet peeve of mine is for friends to come by near dinner time, but insist that we not go out of our way to feed them! Umโฆhello, it is going out of our way not to eat at dinner time!โฆnot a problem to throw a little extra food in the pot and serve everyone! And oh how I love sliced heirloom tomatoes with a little salt and pepper!
โI read your newsletter, do I win the Frannyโs cookbook?โ Annnnd, I Like you on FB, tooโฆ8-)
Thanks for the chance to win!
I read your newsletter, do I win the Frannyโs cookbook?
I read your newsletter, do I win the Frannyโs cookbook?
I read your newsletter, do I win the Frannyโs cookbook?
Lovely summer dinner! Those tomatoes could not be more beautiful.
I read your newsletter, do I win the Frannyโs cookbook?
I read your newsletter, do I win the Frannyโs cookbook?โย
I made your past tonight with a local Portland, OR pesto with arugula and hazelnuts and tomatoes from the garden!! Yummy, a perfect Summer meal.
I do read your newsletter, do I win the Frannyโs cookbook ? We donโt have a Frannyโs in Oregon!!
Delicious indeed. You are a good friend to have!
One of the best flavor combinations ever! I fall back on it regularly and always end up loving those fresh, flavorful meals.
I read your newsletter (and use a well-stained copy of the DALS book more often than any other), but Iโm not eligible to win the Frannyโs cookbook.
BIG HUGS from one of your BIG FANS in Canada,
j
I meant to say, tooโฆthanks for the recipe and story above. I did pesto + pasta + tomatoes last week and there was a little something missingโฆand now I know what it was: pasta water.
๐
I read your newsletter, do I win the Frannyโs cookbook?
This makes me smile. I read your newsletter, do I win the Frannyโs cookbook?
I read your newsletter, do I win the Frannyโs cookbook?
Pesto is one of our summer staples, and one of the few things both my boys will eat.
I read your newsletter, do I win the Frannyโs cookbook?
โI read your newsletter, do I win the Frannyโs cookbook?โ
Love this pasta dish. We make a variation on it regularly!
I read your newsletter, do I win the Frannyโs cookbook?