Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Get the recipe: Spring Chicken Pesto Penne With Mozzarella Simply Scrumptious Made with roasted butternut squash, and spinach, this homemade creamy sauce pairs perfectly with penne pasta.
COOK pasta as directed on package, omitting salt. Meanwhile, heat oil in large nonstick skillet on medium heat. Add chicken; cook and stir 7 min. or until done.
For premium support please call: 800-290-4726 more ways to reach us
Pesto alla siciliana, sometimes called pesto rosso (red pesto), is a sauce from Sicily similar to pesto alla genovese but with the addition of fresh tomato and almonds instead of pine nuts, and much less basil. Pesto alla calabrese is a sauce from Calabria consisting of (grilled) bell peppers, black pepper, and more; these ingredients give it a ...
Pasta primavera with shrimp. In 1975, New York restaurateur Sirio Maccioni flew to the Canadian summer home of Italian Baron Carlo Amato, Shangri-La Ranch on Roberts Island, Nova Scotia. [1] [3] Maccioni and his two top chefs began experimenting with game and fish, but eventually the baron and his guests wanted something different. [1]
A Genoa pasta dish, made with trenette pasta (a dried pasta similar to flat spaghetti), with pesto sauce: Troccoli al ragù di seppia: Apulia: A Daunians pasta dish, made with troccoli pasta (a local variant of spaghetti alla chitarra), with a ragù sauce based on cuttlefish: Troccoli con pomodori secchi, acciughe e mollica: Apulia
Traditional pesto is made with a base of fresh basil leaves and pine nuts, while this sun-dried tomato pesto is made with a base of sun-dried tomatoes and walnuts. Yields: 6 servings Prep Time: 15 ...
Pomodoro means 'tomato' in Italian. [1] More specifically, pomodoro is a univerbation of pomo ('apple') + d ('of') + oro ('gold'), [2] possibly owing to the fact that the first varieties of tomatoes arriving in Europe and spreading from Spain to Italy and North Africa were yellow, with the earliest attestation (of the archaic plural form pomi d'oro) going back to Pietro Andrea Mattioli (1544).