Molly Baz's Drunken Cacio e Pepe from More is More

Photographs from More is More by Peden & Munk

This pasta is so impressive-looking, you’d never guess how easy it is to make (the best kind of pasta dish). You’re romancing classic cacio e pepe with a deep, dark, shmoody red wine sauce, a technique I learned from the amazing Montreal pizza and natty wine joint Elena. You’ll reduce an entire bottle of wine (!!!), along with lots of garlic and black pepper, until it’s thick and fragrant and devoid of any astringency, and then add boatloads of salty cheese. I like to use a fifty-fifty mix of Pecorino Romano (salty, sheepy) and Parmigiano Reggiano (nutty, sweet), but you could use one; just know that pecorino is a supremely salty cheese, so you might want to hold back on the salt elsewhere in the recipe.

(If you get this book, this goes with: mashed potato arancini (page 63, Mollyz Ballz (page 142), and triple threat garlic bread (page 99))

SERVES 4

Ingredients:

PRODUCE

8 garlic cloves

DAIRY

3 ounces Pecorino Romano and/or Parmigiano Reggiano, plus more for serving

 8 tablespoons (1 stick) unsalted butter

PANTRY

Kosher salt

2 tablespoons black peppercorns

1 (750 ml) bottle full-bodied red wine, such as zinfandel or cabernet1

1 tablespoon extra-virgin olive oil

1 pound spaghetti

Directions

DO SOME PREP:

Put a large pot of water on the heat to boil. Salt it generously.

Coarsely grind enough black peppercorns to measure a scant 2 tablespoons. The grind should be very large! If your pepper mill doesn’t make a large grind, use a mortar and pestle or resealable plastic bag and crush them with the bottom of a heavy skillet.

If it’s not already, finely grate 3 ounces Pecorino Romano.*

Cube 6 tablespoons unsalted butter.

Keep chilled in the fridge.

MAKE THE BASE OF THE SAUCE:

Crack open 1 (750 ml) bottle full-bodied red wine.

In a large Dutch oven, heat the remaining 2 tablespoons butter and a glug of olive oil over medium-high heat (the olive oil raises the smoking point of the butter, allowing you to cook over medium-high heat without burning it). Add the sliced garlic and ground peppercorns, season with salt, and cook, stirring, over medium heat until the garlic is softened but not browned, 1 to 2 minutes.

Pour the whole bottle of wine into the pot,** raise the heat to high, and bring to a boil. Cook until the liquid reduces to ¾ cup, 16 to 20 minutes. IF YOU’RE GONNA USE IT, USE IT (PG 20)

MEANWHILE, COOK YOUR PASTA:

Once the wine has been reducing for 10 minutes or so, add 1 pound spaghetti to the pot of boiling water. Give it a stir and cook until very al dente, 2 to 3 minutes less than the package directions. Scoop out a cup or so of the pasta water and drain the pasta.

FINISH IT UP:

Once the wine has adequately reduced, reduce the heat to low and add the cold cubed butter, a few pieces at a time. Shake the pot back and forth, while stirring, to emulsify the butter and wine into a silky homogeneous sauce.

Add the drained pasta to the pot. Using a pair of tongs, coat the noodles in the sauce. And here comes the cacio: add the 3 ounces grated cheese, along with a big splash of the reserved pasta water. Continue stirring and coating the pasta with the sauce, adding more of the reserved pasta water, a splash at a time, until a loose, silky sauce is formed (you may not use all the pasta water). Give a final seasoning of salt.

Divide the pasta among serving bowls and eat immediately, with more grated cheese on top.

*If using a Microplane, you’ll want a few BIG piles; if using store-bought grated cheese, you’ll need a few big handfuls (about ¾ cup).

** I don’t like to use super-high- quality, expensive wine when cooking. Of course, it’s got to be something you like the taste of, so find your balance. A lot of the nuance of flavor will get cooked off, but the essence will remain.

More is More Copyright © 2023 by Molly Baz. Photographs copyright © 2023 by PEDEN + MUNK. Illustrations Copyright © 2023 Claire McCracken. Published by Clarkson Potter, an imprint of Random House.” 

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