Spaghetti alla puttanesca
Alternative names | Pasta alla puttanesca, pasta puttanesca |
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Course | Primo (Italian pasta course) |
Place of origin | Italy |
Region or state | Naples, Campania |
Main ingredients | Spaghetti, tomatoes, olives, capers, anchovies, garlic, peperoncino, extra virgin olive oil |
Variations | With tuna |
Spaghetti alla puttanesca (Italian: [spaˈɡetti alla puttaˈneska]) is a pasta dish invented in the Italian city of Naples in the mid-20th century and made typically with tomatoes, olives, capers, anchovies, garlic, peperoncino, extra virgin olive oil, and salt.[1][2]
Etymology
[edit]Because puttana means roughly 'whore' or 'prostitute' and puttanesca is an adjective derived from that word, the dish may have been invented in one of many bordellos in the Naples working-class neighbourhood of Quartieri Spagnoli as a quick meal taken between servicing clients.[3][4][5] Alternatively, food historian Jeremy Parzen suggests: "Italians use puttana (and related words) almost the way we use shit, as an all-purpose profanity, so pasta alla puttanesca might have originated with someone saying, essentially, 'I just threw a bunch of shit from the cupboard into a pan'."[6]
Origin
[edit]Various recipes in Italian cookbooks dating back to the 19th century describe pasta sauces very similar to a modern puttanesca under different names. One of the earliest dates from 1844, when Ippolito Cavalcanti, in his Cucina teorico-pratica, included a recipe from popular Neapolitan cuisine, calling it vermicelli all'oglio con olive capperi ed alici salse.[7] After some sporadic appearances in other Neapolitan cookbooks, in 1931 the Touring Club Italiano's Guida gastronomica d'Italia lists it among the gastronomic specialties of Campania, calling it maccheroni alla marinara,[8] although the proposed recipe is close to that of a modern puttanesca sauce. In Naples, this type of pasta sauce commonly goes under the name aulive e chiapparielle (lit. 'olives and capers').
The dish under its current name first appears in gastronomic literature in the 1960s. The earliest known mention of pasta alla puttanesca is in Raffaele La Capria's Ferito a morte (Mortal Wound), a 1961 Italian novel which mentions "spaghetti alla puttanesca come li fanno a Siracusa" (lit. 'spaghetti alla puttanesca as they make it in Syracuse').[9] The sauce became popular in the 1960s, according to the Professional Union of Italian Pasta Makers.[10]
Nonetheless, the 1971 edition of the Il cucchiaio d'argento (The Silver Spoon), one of Italy's most prominent cookbooks, has no recipe with the name puttanesca, but two recipes that are similar: the Neapolitan spaghetti alla partenopea is made with anchovies and generous quantities of oregano, while spaghetti alla siciliana is distinguished by the addition of green peppers; still again, there is a Sicilian style popular around Palermo that includes olives, anchovies, and raisins.[11] In Dom DeLuise's 1988 cookbook, Eat This... It'll Make You Feel Better!, he offers a recipe named "Puttanesca Sauce (Harlot Sauce)", which he explains was introduced to him by Caterina Valente during the filming of The Entertainers in 1964.[12] DeLuise's recipe calls for both olives and capers, along with red pepper flakes, but no anchovies or oregano.[12]
In a 2005 article from Il Golfo—a daily newspaper serving the Italian islands of Ischia and Procida—Annarita Cuomo asserted that sugo alla puttanesca was invented in the 1950s by Sandro Petti, co-owner of 'O Rangio Fellone, a famous Ischian restaurant and nightspot.[13] According to Cuomo, Petti's moment of inspiration came when, near closing one evening, Petti found a group of customers sitting at one of his tables. He was low on ingredients and told them he did not have enough to make them a meal. They complained that it was late and they were hungry, saying "Facci una puttanata qualsiasi", meaning something like 'make for us whatever the fuck you got!'.[a] Petti had nothing more than four tomatoes, two olives, and some capers—the basic ingredients for the sugo, "So I used them to make the sauce for the spaghetti", Petti told Cuomo. Later, Petti included this dish on his menu as spaghetti alla puttanesca.
Basic recipe
[edit]The sauce alone is called sugo alla puttanesca in Italian. Recipes may differ according to preferences; for instance, the Neapolitan version is prepared without anchovies, unlike the version popular in the Lazio region. Spices are sometimes added. In most cases, however, the sugo is a little salty (from the capers, olives, and anchovies) and quite fragrant (from the garlic). Traditionally, the sauce is served with spaghetti, although it is also paired with penne, bucatini, linguine, and vermicelli.
Garlic and anchovies (omitted in the Neapolitan version) are sautéed in olive oil. Chopped chili peppers, olives, capers, diced tomatoes, and oregano are added, along with salt and black pepper to taste. The cook then reduces this mixture by simmering and mixes it with the spaghetti al dente. The final touch is a topping of parsley.[14]
See also
[edit]Media related to Spaghetti alla puttanesca at Wikimedia Commons Spaghetti alla Puttanesca at the Wikibooks Cookbook subproject
Notes
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ "Spaghetti alla puttanesca". La Cucina Italiana. Retrieved 18 June 2024.
- ^ Zanini De Vita & Fant 2013, p. 68.
- ^ "How to make the classic pasta alla puttanesca". thelocal.it. 17 May 2019. Archived from the original on 28 May 2022. Retrieved 8 June 2020.
- ^ "Pasta Puttanesca: What's With the Name?". italymagazine.com. Archived from the original on 25 January 2022. Retrieved 8 June 2020.
- ^ Dan Gentile (27 January 2016). "The Sordid Story of Puttanesca, the Prostitute Pasta Sauce". Thrillist.com. Archived from the original on 9 July 2022. Retrieved 20 February 2021.
- ^ L.V. Anderson (23 October 2014). "You're Doing It Wrong: Puttanesca Sauce". Slate. Archived from the original on 3 September 2022. Retrieved 20 February 2021.
- ^ Cavalcanti, Ippolito (1844). La cucina teorico-pratica, ovvero Il pranzo periodico di otto piatti al giorno. Naples: Stamperia e cartiere del Fibreno. p. 179.
- ^ Guida gastronomica d'Italia. Milan: Touring Club Italiano. 1931. p. 362. ISBN 9788836529407.
- ^ The dictionary entry is cited in Jeremy Parzen, ‘The origins of Sugo alla puttanesca?’ Archived 6 February 2018 at the Wayback Machine, Do Bianchi, 13 January 2008, an article which supplied a number of the sources used here.
- ^ 'Sughi d'Italia: 1000 anni di pasta, 1000 anni di condimenti' Archived 23 October 2007 at the Wayback Machine, Unione Industriali Pastai Italiani.
- ^ Il nuovissimo cucchiaio d'argento, ed. by Antonia Monti Tedeschi, 6th ed. (Editoriale Domus, 1971), pp. 220–221.
- ^ a b DeLuise, Dom (1988). Eat This... It'll Make You Feel Better!. Simon & Schuster. p. 125. ISBN 978-0-671-74584-4. Archived from the original on 23 October 2023. Retrieved 23 March 2023.
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: CS1 maint: date and year (link) - ^ Annarita Cuomo (17 February 2005). 'Il sugo "alla puttanesca" nacque per caso ad Ischia, dall'estro culinario di Sandro Petti'. Il Golfo. Archived from the original on 13 August 2014.
- ^ Recipe on the site for the Accademia Italiana della Cucina Archived 7 October 2014 at the Wayback Machine.
Bibliography
[edit]- Zanini De Vita, Oretta; Fant, Maureen B. (2013). Sauces & Shapes: Pasta the Italian Way. New York: W. W. Norton & Company. ISBN 978-0-393-08243-2.