
pasta with red lentil sauce
1 lb. dried pasta or 8-10 oz. fresh pasta
2 tbs olive oil
1 onion, small dice
3 cloves garlic, minced
2 stalks celery, small dice
2 carrots, small dice
1/2 can tomato paste
salt
freshly ground black pepper
1 cup red lentils, washed
Heat olive oil in a saucepan for a minute or two. Add the diced and minced vegetables and cook over a low heat until softened. Add the lentils, tomato paste, and salt and black pepper to taste, sauteing with the veggies for a few minutes, then add 2 1/2 cups water. If you're concerned about time, add the water hot or boiling, otherwise cold is fine. Bring to a boil, then cut back to a simmer and cook over low heat (electric) or medium heat (gas) until the lentils are as soft as you like them (I like a little bite).
While the lentils are on their simmer, bring your salted pasta water to a boil. Add the pasta and cook until done
al dente, remembering that means toothsome, not hard. Drain the pasta, reserving a bit of the cooking water in case the sauce needs lightening.
Put about half the sauce in a mixing bowl. Add the cooked, drained pasta (with a little pasta cooking water if the sauce is too thick for you) and toss. Plate each serving with a some of the sauce-tossed pasta and add a ladle of sauce to the top. Then garnish each to your liking with :
parmesan, pecorino, or other hard grating cheese, grated
rosemary, sage, tarragon, oregano or other herb, separated into leaves or torn in small pieces
This is a great, simple, hearty sauce for pasta. The kind of thing I could eat once or twice a month and not grow weary of, especially as one can tweak this infinitely. You can add leeks or shallots to the saute, use vegetable or chicken broth instead of water, add squash or peppers or peas with the lentils and of course add whatever seasonings you would like. The only thing to bear in mind is that the heartiness of the dish really shines with just one fresh herb to garnish. Too many herbs and the simplicity and elegance are spoiled.
Unlike a lot of lentil preparations ostensibly meant to serve as sauces, this is not a loosened dal. It's actually more reminiscent of bolognese sauce, especially with the holy trinity of onion, carrot and celery to bolster it up. It has a meat-like flavor that makes it excellent for a meat substitute or for a vegetarian missing the old meat sauce. And of course, for those of us who just love the hell out of lentils.