courtesy Martha Stewart; from Everyday Food, July/August 2008
- Prep Time30 minutes
- Total Time35 minutes plus cooling
- YieldServes 6
Ingredients
Coarse salt and ground pepper
- 1 pound elbow macaroni
- 2 ounces thinly sliced prosciutto, cut into strips
- 1 small shallot, minced
- 1/4 cup red-wine vinegar
- 1 teaspoon Dijon mustard
- 1/2 cup extra-virgin olive oil
- 1 medium tomato, chopped
- 1/2 cup crumbled goat cheese (2 ounces)
- 1/4 cup pitted Cerignola olives (or your favorite olives), sliced
- 2 tablespoons capers
- 1/4 cup chopped fresh parsley
Directions
- In a large pot of boiling salted water, cook macaroni until al dente. In a small skillet, cook prosciutto over medium until crisp; discard fat.
- Combine shallot, vinegar, and mustard in a large bowl; whisk in oil in a slow, steady stream. Add tomato, cheese, prosciutto, olives, and capers.
- Drain pasta; add to bowl with tomato mixture, and toss. Add parsley; season with salt and pepper. Cool to room temperature, and serve.
Cook's Note
To store, refrigerate up to 1 day.
JENNIE'S NOTES:
I was worried about adding the pasta (while it was still warm) to the goat cheese; I ended up adding everything together BUT the goat cheese before I stirred the pasta in. Then I added the goat cheese. It mixed in anyway, but I think I like it better that way-- distributes among all of it, makes a creamy kind of sauce. The picture that comes with the recipe online looks like nothing was really mixed together; I like it better how it is above.
I used three Roma tomatoes instead of one medium.
I used Barilla small elbow macaroni; it has little ridges which hold everything better.
I didn't want to have to search out Cerignola olives at a specialty store, so I bought pitted green olives (in a can) from Trader Joe's. They aren't that great, I found... (more sweet, than brine-tasting like most other olives I like). I added them anyway since I had them, don't know if they added anything to the taste. I'd try a stronger-tasting green olive next time; I think Kalamatas would overpower the salad though.
Next time I'm going to try sautéing/slightly caramelizing the shallots first. Shallots are strong! and I don't like the heavy lingering onion taste that pervades my mouth. And I did use a small one.
Make sure you use Italian/flat-leaf parsley.
I think this makes way more than six servings... unless you're serving it as a main dish-?
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