Pumpkin Ravioli with Creamy Sage Sauce

The beta carotene king in classic mode

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This is an Italian classic except here I made a sauce using cream instead of just butter. Frying the sage leaves in butter is of course incredibly delicious but I quite like this version.  The flavours of sage and pumpkin suit each other well…there really isn’t much more to say except make sure you try this dish once.

Ingredients – for 4 servings

One quantity of fresh egg pasta

and some semolina for dusting and general non stickiness

For the sauce:

  • A handful of fresh sage leaves
  • 250ml heavy cream/ double cream /”smantana dulce”
  • 100ml white wine
  • 2 cloves garlic and half a white onion finely chopped

For the pumpkin filling:

  • Half a butternut squash roasted (roughly quarter and roast for 40 mins at 180C) – use the rest for soup
  • The other half of the onion – finely chopped
  • half a tsp nutmeg
  • a pinch of salt and pepper

How To

First make the pumpkin filling.Gently fry the onion until translucent and add the nutmeg, salt and pepper.  Now add the scooped out parts of the roast pumpkin flesh and mash with a fork. You can blend with a hand blender but the flesh should be soft enough to do this with a fork. Set aside.

Now on to the ravioli…really not as hard as they sound. You can make these ahead and refrigerate up to 3 days or even better freeze on trays before bagging them.  You dont need fancy equipment or a machine although I do love my little serrated wheel that I bought in Italy that cuts them.

I use my pasta making machine to make nice sheets. I put the pasta through 4 times ie not the absolute thinnest setting – I find this makes for tearless ravioli in all senses.  You can go old school and set to with the rolling pin – keep rolling using lots of semolina to keep things from sticking, although if the dough is nice and elastic it shouldn’t be sticking but be “just right”.  Once you have wide sheets strips you are ready to make small blobs of the pumpkin filling.

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If you want to be regimented you can cut your strips into neat rectangles. I tend to leave mine as they exit the pasta machine – curvy and irregular – a bit like you and me.

Now just brush around with a tiny bit of water and fold over the sheet envelope style. Press between each “blob” with your fingers first to seal the pasta. This makes the little pillows.  Now use a serrated cutter to make them look pretty and to cut them.  A regular knife of course will do.

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Lift them off with a spatula and put them on a tray already dusted with semolina

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If you are going to refrigerate them, i find its best to put a tea towel over them.

The Sauce

Gently fry the onion and garlic until translucent and add the salt and pepper and the sage leaves. Pour in the wine and cook until all is almost evaporated.  You want an “essence of wine” kind of taste and if you do not reduce the wine, the sauce may curdle. make sure the sage is cooked because raw sage unlike other herbs is really a bit too much.

Now add the cream until it bubbles. Turn down to a very low heat or switch it off and re-heat if you are going to use it later.

Bring the dish together:

Place a large pan of salted water on the boil.  Place a batch of ravioli in the water (its better to do in batches because as they only take three minutes to cook its better than having a great clump of ravioli all stuck together in your pan). As soon as they float to the surface they are done! You can place them on a tea towel on a hot dish to keep warm before you serve either in one big bowl or plated.

Finally warm your sauce up, pour over, and for extra pumpkin ness serve with chunks of roasted pumpkin too. It can do no harm.

Fresh Egg Pasta

So simple. So silky. So key to so many great meals.

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The recipe is also almost too simple to write down as a recipe, however do not be deceived.  Its all about being able to know how the dough should feel and adjust accordingly.

The basic ratio is 1 egg to 100g of strong high protein low gluten flour, preferably the “durum” wheat type which fulfils those criteria and hence makes very good pasta.  Eggs need to be the best you can find, organic fresh bright yellow yolked eggs make great pasta.

For two people 2 eggs and 200g of flour should suffice and so on.  However I generally make batches involving 4 eggs and 400g of flour because sometimes the eggs are a bit small and I need to add an extra egg…then the mixture is a teeny bit too sticky so I might then add say 20-30g more flour.  Thats more difficult to do when you only have 2 eggs as a starting point.

Ingredients

4 large organic eggs

400g durum wheat flour

How To

I learned to make pasta in Italy, with two sisters. One was in her seventies the other in her eighties. The next day I went to the pharmacy for something to calm my inflamed tendons (was it the inflammation from the kneading or being slapped on the wrists by the Mamas for my dodgy bread kneading technique deemed so totally wrong for pasta..anyhow…it hurt) and while it is fun and amazing to make pasta with mounds of flour on worktops, tipping the ingredients into a food processor yield great results and less mess too.

Tip all the ingredients into your food processor bowl or mixer (I use the dough hook) and process until it comes together.  Try and process as much as you can without burning the motor out.  It will be quite a stiff dough compared to bread dough yet should still be elastic.  It must be kneaded..and kneaded..and kneaded until it becomes silky.

Then wrap in cling film and keep chilled in the fridge or a damp towel if using  immediately.

Persian Halva

Eaten at funerals in its home country – this is nothing to be mounful about

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It is rare I am a recipe skeptic but so it was with the Persian halva.  I was skeptical that a dessert  made merely with flour would deliver the lovely texture of the semolina variety common to Turkey & Greece. But I bowed to this mighty cuisine and I decided to try it out.  Its smooth but almost chewy , its slightly candied, of course the rosewater and saffron has me at every bite and its sinful. A glass of real Persian tea with it was just heaven.  For me this is a very very small step in the glorious alchemy of syrups, nuts, perfumes, essences, pastries, puddings, spices and candies that is Middle Eastern dessert making.  I cant stop nibbling.

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