Pasta for the Urbane Guest and the Kids

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Pasta for the Urbane Guest and the Kids
Pasta with wild mushrooms and rosemary is an elegant dish, the kind of thing you’d see at restaurants or maybe make yourself as dinner-party fare.
But take that same pasta, smother it with fontina and ricotta cheeses, plop it into a casserole dish and bake it until the edges crisp, the top turns golden and the center collapses into a molten mass, and you’ve turned what was once refined and genteel into a supremely comforting, kid-pleasing dish that’s still sophisticated enough to serve to guests.This is exactly what I’ve done here. I’ve upped the ante on a standard yet irresistibly gooey pasta bake by adding roasted wild mushrooms and creamy, funky fontina cheese.Roasting the mushrooms, in particular, lends this dish its earthy, heady charm. Mushrooms are mostly water, and cooking them at high heat condenses their flavor, caramelizes their sugars and gives them crunchy edges.This technique works with any kind of mushroom. Even the plain white button kind available in every supermarket will gain intensity and character when tossed with olive oil and exposed to searing temperatures.
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That said, the better and more interesting your mushrooms are to start with, the tastier they will become after roasting.Wild mushrooms — or the so-called wild ones you can find in many markets that are actually farmed — are an excellent choice in terms of both flavor and texture. Oyster mushrooms (maitake, chanterelles and the like) have lots of nooks and crevices, which allow them to get even more delectably crispy than the more evenly rotund creminis and white buttons. You can also use a mix of different mushrooms.As for the cheese, I chose fontina for its lusciousness when melted. But other good melting cheeses — Gruyère, Cheddar, Gouda — will work. And the ricotta adds a milky creaminess that rounds out the dish.Another reason to make this, besides the universal browned, gooey appeal of a baked pasta casserole, is that you can do it almost entirely in advance. You can roast the mushrooms, cook the pasta and even assemble the entire dish up to eight hours ahead. Just pop it into the oven right before serving, adding a few minutes to the cooking time if it’s still cold from the fridge.
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Then serve it forth — to your most stylish, urbane dinner guests and to your kids. This is one pasta casserole they will all get behind.Baked Cheesy Pasta Casserole With Wild MushroomsYield: 8 servingsTotal time: 45 minutes
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1 pound mixed wild or cultivated mushrooms, such as oyster, maitake and shiitake3 tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil1/2 teaspoon kosher salt, more as needed1/2 teaspoon black pepper, plus a few grinds
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2 fresh rosemary branches1/2 pound orecchiette, farfalle or other short pasta3/4 cup heavy cream1/2 cup fresh ricotta5 ounces fontina cheese, grated (1 1/4 cups)2 ounces Parmesan, grated (1/2 cup)1 teaspoon finely chopped fresh sage1 garlic clove, finely grated1. Heat the oven to 450 degrees. Trim the mushrooms and cut into 1-inch pieces. Toss with the olive oil, the salt, a few grinds of pepper and the rosemary. Spread on a large baking sheet and roast, tossing once or twice, until golden brown and crisped around the edges, 15 to 18 minutes. Discard rosemary.2. Meanwhile, bring a large pot of salted water to a boil. Add the pasta and cook for at least a few minutes less than the package directs. (You want the pasta very al dente; it will finish softening in the sauce.) Drain well.3. Turn oven up to 500 degrees. In a large bowl, stir together the cream, ricotta, fontina, Parmesan, sage, pepper, garlic and a pinch of salt. Stir in the pasta and mushrooms. Arrange in a shallow 2-quart gratin dish or 9- by 13-inch pan. Bake until cheese is melted and bubbly and browned in spots, 10 to 15 minutes.
© 2016 New York Times News Service
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