This is a print preview of "Cipolline novelle con piselli (Spring Onions and Peas)" recipe.

Cipolline novelle con piselli (Spring Onions and Peas) Recipe
by Frank Fariello

This recipe shows how relatively subtle changes in a recipe can result in a whole new dish. While many recipes for peas call for a bit of onion as a flavor base, you don’t really taste the onion itself—it’s there to bring out the peas’ natural sweetness. In this recipe for Spring Onions and Peas, you get a completely new dish from essentially the same ingredients in different ratios. The onion steps up as an equal player, and the two make a beautiful duet, both visually and gustatorially.

Spring Onion and Peas is a great way to enjoy true spring onions from your local farmers market, as I did this week. And while using young, tender, just-picked farm-fresh peas would also be ideal, fine frozen peas actually work just fine. Recipes usually call for olive oil only, but I find a dab of butter lends an appealing extra sweetness to the dish. Pancetta adds savor if you want, but as pictured here, I prefer pure vegetable version. And if you leave out the butter from your Spring Onion and Peas, the dish is vegan. If you’re using young, tender vegetables, this dish will take you barely 15 minutes to make—don’t overcook it, either, or the dish will lose its sweetness.

Ingredients

Serves 4-6

2 bunches of spring onions

250g/8 oz of peas, frozen or fresh and shelled

Water or broth

Olive oil and butter

Salt and pepper

50g (2 oz) pancetta, cut into small dice (optional)

A pinch of sugar (optional)

Directions

Spring onions look much like giant scallions, but with a rather more bulbous base. It’s that base that you want to use for this recipe.

Wash and dry your spring onions well. Trim off the root ends, then cut off the green tops. Depending on their size, cut the bulbs lengthwise in halves or quarters. If they’re very small, you may want to leave them whole.

Heat melt a dab of butter in some olive oil in a sauté pan or braiser. When the butter is just melted, add the spring onions (and the pancetta, if using) and let them sauté very gently for a few minutes, seasoning with salt and pepper as you go.

If using frozen peas:

Add a ladleful of broth or water and cover. Let the onions simmer until they are almost tender. If your onions are young and fresh, this should take no more than 5 minutes. Uncover the pan and add the peas, mixing gingerly. Continue simmering, uncovered, until the onions and peas are done and the liquid in the pan has almost, but not quite, evaporated. A minute or two should be enough. Taste and adjust for seasoning before serving.

If using fresh, shelled peas:

Add the peas to the onions, give them a turn, then add a ladleful of water or broth. Cover and simmer gently until both peas and onions are tender, about 10 minutes or so if your peas are young. If there is excess liquid left in the pan, uncover, raise the heat and let the liquid reduce. Taste and adjust for seasoning before serving.

Notes on Spring Onions and Peas

Farm-fresh spring onions are the best way, in my opinion, to enjoy this dish—and this is the right time of year, here in the Northern Hemisphere, to enjoy them. But if you can’t find true spring onions, you can substitute baby onions or large scallions. I bet that shallots, peeled but left whole, would also work nicely.

As mentioned in the introduction, frozen peas work just fine in Spring Onion and Peas. In fact, they work even better than most fresh peas you might find in a supermarket, which tend to be rather too large and mealy for this dish. But if you want to use fresh peas and find that may not be just off the vine, a pinch of sugar can help bring back their sweetness.

If you slightly undercook them initially, Spring Onions and Peas can be made ahead and reheated whenever you’re ready to eat.

Cipolline novelle con piselli (Spring Onions and Peas)

Ingredients

Instructions

Spring onions look much like giant scallions, but with a rather more bulbous base. It's that base that you want to use for this recipe.

Wash and dry your spring onions well. Trim off the root ends, then cut off the green tops. Depending on their size, cut the bulbs lengthwise in halves or quarters. If they're very small, you may want to leave them whole.

Heat melt a dab of butter in some olive oil in a sauté pan or braiser. When the butter is just melted, add the spring onions (and the pancetta, if using) and let them sauté very gently for a few minutes, seasoning with salt and pepper as you go.

If using frozen peas:

Add a ladleful of broth or water and cover. Let the onions simmer until they are almost tender. If your onions are young and fresh, this should take no more than 5 minutes. Uncover the pan and add the peas, mixing gingerly. Continue simmering, uncovered, until the onions and peas are done and the liquid in the pan has almost, but not quite, evaporated. A minute or two should be enough. Taste and adjust for seasoning before serving.

If using fresh, shelled peas:

Add the peas to the onions, give them a turn, then add a ladleful of water or broth. Cover and simmer gently until both peas and onions are tender, about 10 minutes or so if your peas are young. If there is excess liquid left in the pan, uncover, raise the heat and let the liquid reduce. Taste and adjust for seasoning before serving.

0.1

http://memoriediangelina.com/2016/05/13/spring-onions-and-peas/

(c) Frank Fariello

Related