Pasta with camera experiments

September 17th, 2007

I am learning to use the new camera. Once I figure out what all the settings are, I should produce better photos, but this camera has possibilities the 10 year old one never dreamed of, and there’s definitely a learning curve. So yesterday I decided to make a very simple pasta and use the camera to illustrate the process while also exploring what I’ve read on the blogs of much better photographers than I.

The pasta is almost “aglio e olio” which is almost as simple as it gets with pasta. The only ones I can think of that are simpler is with just butter or with just oil.

These are the ingredients I used with the pasta.

I bought those cherry peppers to see how hot they were. Barb and I were discussing this only last week. The answer is pretty hot, but not atomic. I used half of one for one serving and it was pleasantly piquant for me, and maybe too hot for most Umbrians. The cherry tomatoes are from a Puglian vendor and are just as sugary sweet as I recall them being in Puglia. That could be a problem in some dishes, but it won’t be in this one. The photo was taken outside in full sun. Most good photographers recommend that, and I love the shadows and the flooding light. I wouldn’t love my pasta so much if it had to go outside before eating it.

I heated the water to boiling, salted it and put the penne in to cook before I started the sauce. The penne I used are from Gragnano, which is a word you should look for. It’s a place where they still do dried pasta the traditional way, and it doesn’t cost more. It actually costs less than better-known pastas. It takes up to 10 minutes (they say) to cook penne, but I think between 8 and 9. That’s how long it will take to make the sauce.

I heated the frying pan and added good olive oil, then the minced half of the cherry pepper and about 1/4 teaspoon of salt to sauté for a few minutes. I then added one minced clove of garlic and a ladle full of the pasta water, which is about 1/2 cup. Five minutes into the cooking of the pasta, I added cherry tomatoes which I had halved or quartered, depending on the size, and this is what it looked like at that point. Note that I see the steam, but the lens isn’t steaming up. I wonder if that is because it is so much smaller than the previous lens?

Once the pasta was done to my decidedly al dente taste, I drained it and quickly added it to the simmering sauce, plated it and put a little aged, grated Pecorino on it. I later added more, but I didn’t take the chance that it wouldn’t taste right and my pasta would already be covered in it. There are many things I will do for this blog but eating really bad food is not one of them.

That’s the least successful of all the photos. I haven’t yet really got a handle on doing close-up shots yet and the part that is in focus is in the middle of the plate while the leading edge is out of focus. I bought this camera largely for it’s superior ability to deliver macro photography, so obviously I need to read that part of the manual a few more times.

But the pasta was good, maybe even great. I could have eaten the same bowl twice, as a matter of fact. As they always say, the first law of Italian cookery is to choose the ingredients right and to respect them. It turns out that cherry peppers and very sweet cherry tomatoes make pleasant companions in the mouth.

It would also work to toss in some cooked white beans toward the end. What I’ve made here is the beginning of many Puglian pastas, to which are added the vegetables and fish which are the important things in the Puglian kitchen. This spiced oil would end up with beans and mussels to make the single best thing I ate last Spring in Puglia. I am going to offer this to Ruth for Presto Pasta Night, but shan’t be hurt if she turns it down, because it is just as much about a camera as it is about pasta.

I need to go back. To Puglia

The next day: Today I did the same thing only added beans instead of pasta. That was yummers!

So then I wandered over to Olga’s to talk about what an Umbrian would do with these peppers, and there were all the roofers taking coffee in her kitchen. They all had chili stories!

When they left, Olga and I decided to see where the heat is. We slivered off first flesh, nope. Then seeds, nope. I found it in the membranes and had to be stuffed with bread because I was ON FIRE!

Entry Filed under: Food, Italy, Beauty, kitchen stuff, mussels, seafood, pasta, vegetarian, tomatoes, economical, Italian food, cucina

5 Comments Add your own

  • 1. Ruth  |  September 17th, 2007 at 12:18 pm

    Great story and good luck with the new camera.

    As for the pasta, delicious and perfect for presto pasta night.

  • 2. qualcosa di bello  |  September 17th, 2007 at 4:41 pm

    hooray for the new camera!! i am with you there…mine baby is only a month in my hands & i am still so confused.

    no matter about your focus…i am still very hungry after looking at that yummy pasta :)

  • 3. dummy from that kitchen  |  October 3rd, 2007 at 5:03 am

    Thanks for the steps! They look yummalicious. I got a bit lost with the seafood part, but that’s ok. Anyway, I can’t find cherry peppers where I am. Anything I can use as an alternative?

  • 4. admin  |  October 3rd, 2007 at 8:44 am

    Of course you can use whatever chili pepper there is where you are in Australia. It’s up to you to test to see how hot and piquant it is. Start with just a little or leave out the inner membranes, which are the hot part.
    I have since made this several times often with tinned white beans. That’s really good. With fried crumbled sausage meat which some would like better than I.
    Welcome to the Italian kitchen, anyway, and do browse using the search button to find other dishes you can make. There are lots of them, and not just pasta.

  • 5. dummy from that kitchen  |  October 3rd, 2007 at 10:53 am

    Thanks, browsing away. And I’m currently in Malaysia. The chilli peppers here are a bit extreme. They are either not at all spicy or dynamite. I don’t think those small powerpacked ones will be suitable for pasta dishes. I might try those bigger red ones and remove some of the seeds.

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