Good morning. There’s a term in Italian cooking, cucina povera. It translates literally as “kitchen of the poor,” but in practice means the kitchen of the frugal, the cooking of the thrifty and unwasteful. I think of it, myself, as the cuisine of the empty nester, of the dope who once again forgot to pick up sausages during the weekly shop, who doesn’t have a pound of ground beef in the freezer, who arrives at Sunday afternoon with only a decent pantry and a bunch of oldish vegetables in the crisper.
For him, for her, for them, for me: pasta al sugo finto (above), a hearty Tuscan “fake sauce” of onions, carrots and celery fortified by mushrooms with tomato paste-thickened tomato purée. Topped with herbed bread crumbs and a dusting of grated Parmesan, it’s a wonderful autumn feed of the sort you might take in at the kitchen counter while talking on speakerphone with a child in college far away.
Featured Recipe
Pasta al Sugo Finto (Vegetable Ragu)
With your Sunday supper taken care of, you can turn to the rest of the week. …
Monday
It is Thanksgiving Day in Canada, and I’m nothing if not polite. I’ll toast our neighbors to the north with a recipe Elizabeth David wrote and I adapted for a tiny Thanksgiving in the States: turkey cutlets marsala, awesome with mushroom risotto.
Tuesday
Sarah Copeland’s recipe for tofu makhani is a vegetarian riff on Indian butter chicken, seasoned with warm and powerful spices and finished with heavy cream. Some substitute coconut cream for the cream. But you cannot omit the butter. It’s the whole point of the dish.
Wednesday
Roasting salmon slowly, at a low temperature, until it’s just cooked through, delivers the silkiest version of the fish imaginable. Genevieve Ko’s recipe for maple-baked salmon does just that, beneath a glaze of syrup, mustard seeds and minced cilantro stems suspended in just a little bit of mayonnaise. “I followed the simple recipe as written,” one subscriber commented, “and I would not change a thing.”
Thursday
In September, it’s easy to believe that tomatoes will be perfect forever. Lidey Heuck’s new recipe for a caramelized tomato and shallot soup shows what you can do with the less-perfect ones we’re seeing in the market now, caramelizing the fruit with tomato paste to deliver a rich, earthy and deeply satisfying flavor.
Friday
And then you can welcome the weekend with Kay Chun’s new recipe for pork chile verde, a classic version of the Mexican stew of tangy tomatillos, green chiles and garlic surrounding tender braised pork. Take care to find sweet onions, like Vidalias, to balance out the tart tomatillos.
There are thousands and thousands more recipes to cook this week waiting for you on New York Times Cooking. Go see what you find, then save the recipes you want to cook.
You can write to us at [email protected] if you’ve got questions about your account. Someone will get back to you. Or you can write to me at [email protected] if you’d like to say hello, complain about something or pay a compliment to my hardworking colleagues. I can’t respond to every letter. There’s a lot of mail. But I read every one I receive.
Now, it’s a considerable distance from anything to do with affairs of the kitchen, but I’m moved to ask you to read Willy Staley’s piece in The New York Times Magazine about the last 10 years of Netflix, and what it’s done to us.
Darker still, Lizzie Presser has a shattering story in ProPublica about a deadly intersection between teens and fentanyl in Green Bay, Wis.
On the lighter side of the ledger, here’s Hanif Abdurraqib in The New Yorker on The Killers returning to Las Vegas. Hot fuss!
Finally, it is the musician Paul Simon’s birthday. He’s 83. Here he is at almost 38, singing “Ace in the Hole” live at the Agora Theatre in Cleveland, Ohio, in September 1979. Play that while you’re cooking and I’ll be back next week.
The post This ‘Fake Sauce’ Is Truly Good appeared first on New York Times.