Anolini with mushroom ragout and wild garlic and mushroom sauce

  • medium
  • 6
  • 3 hours 45 minutes plus 6 hours for braising the shiitake
Not yet rated

In Roberta Hall-McCarron's vegetarian recipe for anolini – a tiny stuffed pasta from Emilia-Romagnatruffles and goat's curd take the place of the more traditional beef and Parmesan. The pasta is served with a rich mushroom ragout and deeply savoury wild garlic and mushroom sauce. Traditionally an anolini stamp would be used to cut out the pasta, but this can be replaced with another small, round cutter.

First published in 2023

Ingredients

Metric

Imperial

Mushroom ragout

Mushroom stock

Pasta

Goats curd and truffle face

Wild garlic and mushroom sauce

Garnish

Equipment

  • Pasta machine
  • Spray bottle
  • Piping bags
  • Anolini cutter

Method

1

First, slowly braise the dried shiitake for the mushroom ragout in lightly salted water for 6 hours. Once cooked, finely dice the mushrooms

2

Preheat the oven to 160°C

3

Make the mushroom stock. Add the chestnut mushrooms, salt and water to a large, deep oven tray and cover with cling film. Cook for 2 hours 30 minutes. Once cooked, strain the stock through a sieve and infuse with the dried shiitake and thyme for 15 minutes, then strain again and set aside to cool

4

While the stock cooks, make the pasta dough and the farce. First, mix the flour, salt and semolina together in the bowl of a stand mixer with the dough hook attachment fitted. Beat together the eggs and egg yolk, then add to the bowl. Mix everything together until it forms a dough, and transfer to a work surface. Knead for a few minutes until it forms a smooth ball. Wrap the dough tightly in cling film and chill in the fridge for at least 2 hours

5

Add the goat's curd and olive oil to the mixing bowl of a stand mixer fitted with the paddle attachment. Mix together to combine, then add in the truffle and some salt and pepper to taste and mix again. Taste and adjust the seasoning if necessary, then transfer to a piping bag

6

For the mushroom ragout, add the onion, 100g braised shiitakes and king oyster mushrooms to a large pot with a dash of oil. Cook for 20 minutes, then add the rest of the ingredients. Cook over medium heat until almost all the liquid has evaporated. Taste and adjust the seasoning if necessary and set aside

7

For the wild garlic and mushroom sauce, first blanch the spinach, parsley and wild garlic and then refresh them in the ice water. Once cool, squeeze out all the water from the greens and transfer to a blender 

8

Blitz the greens with the mushroom stock and crème fraîche, tasting and adding salt if needed. Strain through a fine sieve and set aside

9

To shape the pasta, first cut the dough into two pieces. Flatten each piece of pasta dough slightly, and then roll it out into a rectangle the same width as your pasta machine

10

Start feeding one piece of dough through the machine, starting on the thickest setting. Fold the pasta in half and feed it through the thickest setting again several times until it becomes smoother. Repeat with the next setting down, gradually rolling out the dough until it’s very thin. Repeat with the remaining dough

11

Lightly dust the work bench with flour, and lay one sheet of dough onto the bench. Cut a 2 cm opening in your farce piping bag, and pipe 3 cm wide circles of farce onto the pasta, leaving roughly 2 cm on either side of each circle

12

Using a spray bottle, gently mist the pasta and the farce with water, then lay the second sheet of pasta over the top. Use an anolini cutter to press down over the centre of each piece of farce, sealing and cutting it in the process. Transfer to a floured tray until needed, and repeat with the remaining circles, then transfer to a floured tray until needed

13

To serve, warm the ragout and place in the base of your bowl. Cook the anolini in a pot of boiling salted water for about 2 minutes. Drain, and then add to the bowl with the ragout. Garnish the bowl with the sorrel, nasturtiums, sliced truffle and sliced mushrooms. Warm the wild garlic and mushroom sauce, and pour into the bowl

Roberta Hall-McCarron spent the early part of her career under the wing of Tom Kitchin but has since gone on to carve a path of her own, opening the acclaimed The Little Chartroom in Edinburgh, where her bold, seasonal food brings Scotland’s natural larder to the forefront.

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