Keri’s Quick Tomato Sauce
Description
Mr. Stone Soup and I love Rome. We've been there several times and each time, I fall more deeply in love with the city. It is all at once, a modern, bustling center of business and industry and an open archeological dig site. Its people are outgoing, busy, loud, gregarious and great fun. We LOVE Rome.
While traveling, we almost always eat well. Rome is a different attitude though. Romans, like most Italians, live to eat. But Romans guard their family and local connections, and finding the most authentic local cuisine takes more effort than finding decent Italian restaurants for tourists, which are everywhere.
Our first trip to Rome was during a miserably hot summer and rather than stand in endless lines to see the coliseum, we retreated to the Piazza Navona, where we sat on benches in the shade, ate gelato and watched the parade of people and entertainers go by. The Piazza Navona was not far from our hotel, and when we got hungry for our evening meal, new looked in the nooks and crannies of the streets around there. Our noses led us to a gated patio, where people were being allowed in to eat. It was clearly a restaurant, but had no signage, no greeter, no nothing. Mr. Stone Soup is intrepid and when it comes to good food, fearless. He went to the gate, cracked it open, and beckoned a person working there.
Speaking in broken Italian, Mr. Stone Soup asked that we be let in to eat. The man greeted us like a lion protecting his pride and said that they had no menu, and that his mother made whatever she felt like cooking every night, that it was a prix fixe menu, and that it wasn't a restaurant that tourists would enjoy. Mr. Stone Soup insisted that we would. The man insisted that we go to the pizza joint next door. Mr. Stone Soup insisted we would be good Americans and that we weren't interested in the pizza joint for tourists. The man told us to wait. We did, and were soon greeted by an elderly Italian woman, presumably Mama. She looked us over and said "this isn't a restaurant for tourists!" Mr. Stone Soup pointed to the food and in Italian said "the food looks and smells so wonderful! Please let us in!"
The woman finally shrugged and pointed to an empty table and said "put them over there." The heat of that summer evening in Rome had nothing on the heat of the searing stares of the patrons as we were admitted into the dimly lit patio outfitted with maybe a dozen small tables. We ordered nothing. We got a bottle of unmarked white wine, vegetables, pasta, a chicken dish and dessert. The whole experience was magical.
The next time we went to Rome, we tracked down the same restaurant, went through the same barriers and ritual to getting in, and eventually sat down to an equally sublime meal, which was largely the same as the first time we had been there. We loved every bite both times.
The pasta was rigatoni glazed in a mildly spicy and creamy tomato sauce. The following recipe is not exactly the same as the Mama made in her kitchen in Rome (how could it be?!) but it's a pretty good copy--and it's incredibly easy to make--I almost feel guilty when I make it! It's comprised of only five ingredients that most of us have on hand in our panty shelves at any given time. It's also good with almost any pasta.
Ingredients
Instructions
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First, now look--I know it's a lot of butter, but really, when you meter it out per serving, it's not really that bad. Don't substitute olive oil, even if you're tempted--it won't give this sauce the same creamy texture. Trust me--it has to be butter for this recipe.
In a large, heavy saute pan, melt the butter until it is bubbly, but not turning brown.

Add the garlic and red pepper flakes and saute for about a minute, until they get very fragrant.

Add the can of tomatoes and bring to a boil.

Once it reaches a boil, turn it down to low and let simmer for 30-45 minutes, until it reduces and thickens, stirring frequently to avoid any sticking. When the sauce is appropriately thick, add the 1/2 ts[ salt and mix well. Simmer for a few minutes longer, just to let the flavors meld.

In the meantime, prepare a 12 oz box of pasta according tot eh instructions. Or, if using homemade pasta, prepare one recipe according to instructions here.
Drain pasta, reserving about 1/2 cup of pasta water. Mi pasta into the sauce. Add a little of the reserved pasta water if the mixture is too thick. And that's it! It's lovely as a main dish with just a simple green salad or serve it as a side with chicken, salmon or even beef, along with a green salad and a big glass of chianti!
Buon Apetito!