Butternut Squash Carbonara

Butternut Squash Carbonara - If you love carbonara, you will love this! It is amazingly creamy and loaded with crispy pancetta and fried sage leaves!

If you love carbonara, you will love this! It is amazingly creamy and loaded with crispy pancetta and fried sage leaves!

Butternut Squash Carbonara - If you love carbonara, you will love this! It is amazingly creamy and loaded with crispy pancetta and fried sage leaves!

So we lost the World Series.

We’re absolutely devastated. Even though we kind of knew that the Red Sox was going to win.

One can only be so hopeful, right?

So don’t mind me. I’m drowning my sorrows, all of my sorrows, in this seasonal carbonara.

Butternut Squash Carbonara - If you love carbonara, you will love this! It is amazingly creamy and loaded with crispy pancetta and fried sage leaves!

It has all the crispy pancetta one can need with the best part ever:

Fried freaking sage leaves.

Yes, yes, yes. And the sauce is so incredibly rich and creamy with the help of the butternut squash puree.

Helpful tip: you can actually use canned butternut squash puree, which cuts the prep time down by an hour at least!

Butternut Squash Carbonara - If you love carbonara, you will love this! It is amazingly creamy and loaded with crispy pancetta and fried sage leaves!

Butternut Squash Carbonara

If you love carbonara, you will love this! It is amazingly creamy and loaded with crispy pancetta and fried sage leaves!

Ingredients:

  • 12 ounces spaghetti
  • 4 ounces diced pancetta
  • 2 tablespoons olive oil
  • 1/3 cup fresh sage leaves
  • 3 cloves garlic, minced
  • 1 shallot, minced
  • 1 cup butternut squash puree
  • 1/2 cup freshly grated Parmesan
  • 1 large egg, lightly beaten
  • Kosher salt and freshly ground black pepper, to taste

Directions:

  1. In a large pot of boiling salted water, cook pasta according to package instructions; reserve 1 cup water and drain well.
  2. Heat a large skillet over medium high heat. Add pancetta and cook until brown and crispy, about 4-6 minutes; set aside. Reserve excess fat in the skillet.
  3. Heat olive oil with reserved excess fat. Add sage and cook until crisped, about 3-5 seconds; set aside.
  4. Add garlic and shallot, and cook, stirring frequently, until fragrant, about 2 minutes.
  5. Stir in butternut squash puree and 1/2 cup reserved pasta water. Bring to a boil; reduce heat and simmer until slightly thickened, about 3-5 minutes. Reduce heat to low.
  6. Working quickly, stir in pasta, Parmesan and egg, and gently toss to combine; season with salt and pepper, to taste. Add additional reserved pasta water, one tablespoon at a time, until desired consistency is reached.
  7. Serve immediately, topped with pancetta and sage.

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Perfect Match Recipe: New York Strip Steak with Buttered Onions & Chile Skillet Broccoli Rabe (Wine Spectator)

“One of the great joys is knowing things,” says chef Linton Hopkins. “It’s almost like peeling back an onion. I want to know things. I’m a curious person.”

In addition to overseeing six Atlanta restaurants, including C. Ellet’s steak house and the Wine Spectator Best of Award of Excellence–winning Restaurant Eugene, Hopkins has made it his mission to learn all he can about the beef industry. His goal is ambitious: to pioneer the first Kobe-grade beef program in Georgia.

If Hopkins, with the help of the University of Georgia and the Georgia Department of Agriculture, can succeed in implementing the extremely high standards for top-grade Wagyu steak within Georgia, he hopes not only that it will elevate his game and that of restaurateurs like him, but also that it will lift the whole community of Georgia cattle farmers, butchers and beef distributors, all to the benefit of diners and home cooks. Ultimately, he submits, it all comes down to an abiding impulse to create: “As a cook, I like making things from scratch.”

Of course, Hopkins doesn’t expect you as a cook to learn everything there is about beef before you shop for steak night. But he does believe you should get to know a solid butcher and rely on their expertise. “It will make your life better,” he contends. “The butcher will cut you better steak. So it’s sort of Old World that way. But I think it’s what we need more of.”

Even without the help of a butcher, you can apply a few basic standards to the steak you buy for the recipe that follows. “The look is going to be one of the first keys,” Hopkins says. One reason Kobe is prized is that it is abundantly marbled, meaning there is a good amount of fat dispersed between the muscle fibers. Look for a fairly even distribution of white bits throughout the cut, which will help it cook evenly. In a hot pan, the melting fat will both keep the meat moist and impart flavor.

“To get the right caramelization-to–internal temperature ratio,” Hopkins recommends buying steaks 1 to 1 1/2 inches thick. It’s worth noting that “where it was cut in the strip is important.” If you can have your strip steak cut to order, he suggests asking your butcher to cut it from the rib end, where the cut will be one continuous, narrow muscle. If it’s cut from the sirloin end, closer to the back of the animal, it will come as two pieces divided by a vein, which is harder to cook evenly.

The meal has supporting roles from broccoli rabe cooked with chile paste and lemon juice, as well as slowly simmered, buttery onions.

For the onions, Hopkins notes, a heavy-bottomed pan is a must; steer clear of the thin aluminum ones. “They scorch too easily; they don’t regulate heat evenly across the bottom of the surface,” he says. “I can burn water in a bad pan. And I have.”

The onions are cooked low and slow in butter. “You’re coaxing it into this golden-brown, soft, velvety fondue state.” He suggests considering the process, often called “sweating” onions, with a measure of empathy. “If it’s too high heat, you’re gonna die. But if it’s like a good sauna, you get a good sweat and it’s healthy, you know?” Ultimately, he says, “You’re purging the onions of their moisture that’s starting to blend with the butter to create this magical thing.”

How do you know if you’re doing it right? “You should be able to hear it,” he counsels. “That’s an important thing. There should be a slight little sizzling, bubbling sound.”

And how long is long enough? “Take it for a ride,” he suggests. “Take it out there and see how long you can go.” If your heat is in that perfect mellow zone, you almost can’t overdo the cook time.

For the steak, Hopkins likes to get the pan hot but not too hot before adding the meat, which he says ensures that it adheres to the pan’s surface, “getting maximum caramelization from edge to edge across the steak.” He recommends heating the pan, adding the oil and then immediately adding the meat rather than letting the oil heat as you normally might.

“I find if the oil is crazy hot and the pan’s crazy hot, I have less perfect stick,” he explains. “If the steak is cooked properly, it will release, and then that’s when you know you’re in a way done: You start seeing the cooking come up the sides of the steak.” At this point, you can flip the meat (Hopkins notes you should flip away from yourself, never toward) and baste it in butter.

What you wind up with is a very fine steak-night supper from someone who really knows his steak, even if he’s too modest to admit it. “I’m still learning,” Hopkins says. “I love that about food.”


Pairing Tip: Why a Chilean Red Works with This Dish

[videoPlayerTag videoId=”5852862790001″]

Visit our YouTube channel to watch a version of this Perfect Match video with closed captions.

For more tips on how to approach pairing this dish with wine, recommended bottlings and notes on chef Linton Hopkins’ inspiration, read the companion article, “New York Strip Steak With a Chilean Red,” in the Dec. 15, 2018, issue, via our online archives or by ordering a digital edition (Zinio or Google Play) or a back issue of the print magazine. For even more wine pairing options, WineSpectator.com members can find other recently rated South American reds in our Wine Ratings Search.


New York Strip Steak with Buttered Onions & Chile Skillet Broccoli Rabe

  • 1/2 stick (4 tablespoons) plus 2 tablespoons unsalted butter, divided
  • 2 cups thinly sliced sweet yellow onion, such as Vidalia
  • 1 fresh bay leaf, torn in half to release flavor
  • 8 stalks broccoli rabe, trimmed
  • One 16-ounce New York strip steak
  • 3 teaspoons kosher salt for seasoning steak, plus more
  • 3 teaspoons coarsely ground black pepper for seasoning steak, plus more
  • 2 tablespoons high heat–tolerant oil, such as refined peanut, canola or grapeseed oil
  • 2 sprigs thyme
  • 1 tablespoon olive oil
  • Zest of 1 lemon
  • 1 tablespoon Calabrian chile paste (or your favorite chile paste, such as Asian chile garlic sauce)
  • 2 tablespoons lemon juice

1. About 1 hour before cooking, remove steak from the refrigerator.

2. Place 1/2 stick butter in a heavy-bottomed pan set over medium heat. Melt butter, cooking just until foamy; do not let it brown. Add onions, stirring to coat well with butter. Add bay leaf and cook, stirring gently, until the onions are translucent and soft. This step can be achieved in about 5 to 10 minutes, though for ultimate butter-and-onion luxury, you can go for 30 minutes. (It’s worth it, I promise!) The key to slow-cooking onions is to gently achieve a golden hue with no browning. If they start to brown, turn heat down to medium-low. Season onions with salt to taste and set aside, covered to keep warm.

3. Prepare an ice-water bath in a medium bowl and set aside. Bring a large pot of salted water to a rapid boil. Add broccoli rabe and cook until just shy of crisp-tender, about 2 minutes. Transfer immediately to ice water to chill. Drain, pat dry and set aside.

4. Season the steak generously with 3 teaspoons each salt and pepper, pressing the seasoning into the steak’s surface. Turn on the hood system and/or open a window or cooking the steak will smoke up your house. Heat a 10-inch cast-iron skillet over high until just beginning to smoke.

5. When the pan is hot, add the oil, swirling to coat, and immediately add the steak, pressing down with a spatula to ensure the entire steak is touching the hot surface. Cook for 2 minutes, then reduce heat to medium-high. You are looking and listening for a strong sizzle. Cook for another 2 minutes, then carefully flip the steak. Smear remaining 2 tablespoons butter across top of steak, and top with the thyme sprigs.

6. As the steak cooks and the butter begins to melt, spoon the hot pan juices over the top of the steak. The butter should be dark. As the hot fat bastes the thyme, it will sizzle vigorously, so stand back to avoid splatters. If thyme sizzles too vigorously, reduce heat to medium.

7. Cook until the meat feels like it is just beginning to tighten, about 3 to 5 minutes, or until an instant-read thermometer inserted into the steak reads 135 F for medium-rare. Transfer steak to a meat board and let rest, tented with aluminum foil. Carefully drain the drippings from the skillet and discard.

8. Heat the steak pan over high. Add olive oil, and when it shimmers, add broccoli rabe and press into a single layer. Cook until the bottom starts to brown, 1 to 2 minutes. Add the lemon zest and chile paste and stir to combine. Add lemon juice, season with salt and pepper to taste, and remove from heat.

9. Cut the steak into 1/2-inch-thick or 1-inch-thick slices across the grain. If steak is particularly wide, slice crosswise as well, if desired. Divide the steak, broccoli rabe and melted onions among two plates. Serves 2.

2018 New York Wine Experience: Celebrating the Best of Wine (Wine Spectator)

The final night of the Wine Experience is marked by the Grand Award Banquet, which provides a last chance to catch up with longtime friends, make new ones and talk about the incredible wines everyone had the chance to try over the past few days.

But it’s also the official recognition of the restaurants which have recently joined one of the most exclusive clubs on earth—Wine Spectator Grand Award winners. These 91 restaurants, located in 14 states and 16 countries, have built the most impressive wine selections and service in the world.

At the banquet, executive editor Thomas Matthews explained how Wine Spectator editor and publisher Marvin R. Shanken first proposed the Grand Awards. “The Restaurant Awards program was an idea that Marvin came up with in 1981 that no one believed in,” explained Matthews. “He said, ‘Restaurants in this country have crappy wine lists. This is something we have to fix. How can we fix it? Let’s give an incentive to restaurants to build up their wine lists and that will give consumers a reason to go to those restaurants.’”

Shannon Sturgis

The Les Coureur des Bois team accepted their new Grand Award en masse.

“Everyone said, ‘It will never work.’ So here we are in 2018, and nearly 4,000 restaurants around the world are in our program. It’s become the crown jewel of a restaurant to win a Grand Award.”

Befitting such an auspicious evening, the celebration started with Champagne. Guests gathered in a ballroom downstairs for hors d’oeuvres and a selection of nine different top-flight bubblies, including Bollinger Brut Champagne Special Cuvée NV, Perrier-Joüet Brut Rosé Champagne Blason NV and Pol Roger Brut Champagne 2008. Attendees could say hello to some of the vintners who presented their wines during the weekend. Several longtime winemakers snapped selfies with old and new friends.

Upstairs, guests dined and enjoyed the wines of Domaine Serene in Oregon, whose owners, Grace and Ken Evenstad, were being honored with Wine Spectator’s Distinguished Service Award. The Evenstads joined a who’s who of the wine industry at the head table, including Angelo Gaja, Piero Antinori, Prince Robert of Luxembourg of Château Haut-Brion and Mel Dick of Southern Glazer’s Wine & Spirits.

Shannon Sturgis

Grace and Ken Evenstad accept their 2018 Distinguished Service Award.

The restaurateurs and sommeliers representing the 7 new Grand Award winners for 2018 recounted the lifetime of work put into building such amazing programs, featuring thousands of wine selections. Ryan Fletter, owner and wine director of Denver’s Barolo Grill, said, “I actually cried when I first got this award. I’ve been at Barolo Grill for 25 years. I was a busboy, bartender, wine director, general manager … I’m a bit of a wine eccentric in that I can’t stop buying it and collecting it and serving it and serving it the right way.”

For Paul Mekis, wine director of Madera in Menlo Park, Calif., the Grand Award was a sign of how far American wine service has come in the past few decades. “I would like to thank Wine Spectator for opening our eyes to the world of wine since 1976,” he said. “I feel honored to be a part of such an elite group.”

The winners also recognized that the Grand Award is not just for who can amass the biggest wine cellar—it’s a recognition of excellent service and food. “This is a hospitality award,” said Hristo Zisovski, beverage director of New York’s Ai Fiori. “So to all our guests, past and future, thank you for coming in. Thank you for letting us take care of you.”

Shannon Sturgis

Everybody’s dancin’ when Kool & the Gang take the stage.

Hospitality was also on the mind of the Distinguished Service Award winners. The Evenstads moved to Oregon’s Willamette Valley when its wines were still relatively unknown. They have helped build it into a world-class wine region and are now giving back, including donating $6 million to establishing the Grace and Ken Evenstad Center for Wine Education at Linfield College in Oregon. Accepting the award, Grace remarked, “Most importantly, I want to thank all of our customers who have supported Domaine Serene all these years. Thank you.”

A celebration is never complete without music, and the night was capped off with a performance by R&B legends Kool & the Gang, performing “Celebration,” “Jungle Boogie,” “Ladies’ Night” and numerous other hits. It was certainly the perfect night to celebrate good times.