Had the other half of the sandwich for lunch today, just perfect. Cold this time, that worked too. No wine. As a wannabe moderate epicurean, and someone who likes to get things done in the afternoon, I don't do wine at lunch. Unless I'm on vacation. Or at one of my occasional Friday Lunches at Lucia's with my friend Kathie. Shhhh...don't tell her boss! Lucia's ALWAYS suggests a lovely glass of wine, it can't be passed up, especially on a Friday!
Well, enough of that daydreaming. Today's not Friday, and I have lots to do, time for some Gavin DeGraw and a nice cup of tea to get me through my chores. I'd listen to my usual standby, MPR, but I can NOT stand to listen to judiciary committee senators grandstanding and bragging and droning on during the Sam Alito hearings. Not an ideal process, to say the least.
Me again, post-dinner, I MUST include the recipe for the pasta with tuna sauce I just made for dinner. Go beyond your first thoughts upon reading it, because you, like me, might not appreciate how GOOD it is, truly fantastic, especially if you have a spicy red Zinfandel lying around. The two together - fucking SUBLIME. But even if you don't have the Zin, or drink wine, I'm telling you, it's a KILL - and SIMPLE - dinner. It exists in the realm of linguine with white clam sauce, but it's much easier, and healthier, and cheaper, with a bit more kick - I'd say I prefer it. I ate mine with my eyes closed, and that means I'm having one of my experiences... (recipe in comments, below)
Pasta with Tuna SauceStephanie Levy, adapted from Cook’s IllustratedServes 4-63 Tbsp. olive oil6 medium garlic cloves, minced½ tsp. hot red pepper flakes2 Tbsp. minced Kalamata olives 1 Tbsp. capers, chopped½ c. dry white wine*2 – 7 oz. cans Italian (Genova, available at Byerly’s and probably other nice grocery stores) tuna packed in olive oil, drained and broken upsalt 1 lb. papardelle (or other wide pasta, I love Colavita brand, ooh, chewy fabulousness, at Byerlys; if you can’t find something as wide as papardelle, go for fettuccine)3 minced scallions, green part only (3 Tbsp. minced chives works too, of course)3 Tbsp. buttercoarse sea salt and freshly ground black pepperSet 4 quarts of water, with 1 Tbsp. of salt, to boil in a large pot. Meanwhile, prepare sauce: heat the oil, garlic, and pepper flakes in a 12-inch skillet over medium heat, stirring frequently, until fragrant and sizzling but not browned, 1-2 minutes. Add the wine and bring to a simmer, cook for 1 minute. Add the tuna, olives, and 2 tsp. salt and stir until heated through, 1 minute. Remove from heat. Add the pasta to the boiling water, cook until al dente. Reserve ¼ c. cooking water, then drain. Return pasta to the pot and add tuna, scallions, and butter, and toss, adding as much reserved pasta water as needed to create a sauce that coats the pasta. Serve with a bit of coarse salt (if needed) and additional pepper.* I’m sure you could substitute a combination of about 1/3 c. water and a couple of Tbsp. of freshly squeezed lemon juice, if you’re not a drinker. However, if you are, go for wine. I’ve even used Prosecco, since John and I have a glass basically every day, and it works great.
I hope you are not planning on your son reading this...Why does it require me to set up my own blog just to enter my comment...Nathan has skijammers again tomorrow and Kris said Nathan might get moved down...McCoy! dont chew on that...gotta go...
I changed it so you don't have to register to post a comment, sorry 'bout that, nathan's dad.

