ratatouille pasta
original recipe
ingredients
- 1 large or 2 medium Italian eggplants (about 1½ lb.)
- Kosher salt
- 1 large or 2 small red bell peppers (about 9 oz.)
- 1 large zucchini (about 8 oz.)
- 2 medium onions
- 1 pint cherry tomatoes
- 4 garlic cloves
- 1 lemon
- 1½ oz. Parmesan
- ½ cup extra-virgin olive oil, divided, plus more for drizzling
- ¼ cup capers
- ½ tsp. crushed red pepper flakes, plus more for serving
- 1 lb. cavatappi
- 1½ cups basil leaves, torn if large, plus more for serving
instructions
- Cut 1 large or 2 medium Italian eggplants into ½” pieces. Transfer to a
colander set over a medium bowl and sprinkle with 2 tsp. salt. Let sit 30
minutes. Your eggplant might start to discolor and should start to release
some brownish liquid that will fall into the bowl below. That’s good! It’s
losing excess moisture that would prevent it from getting silky-soft.
- Meanwhile, cut 1 large or 2 small red bell peppers and 1 large zucchini into
½” pieces. Transfer to a medium bowl. Peel 2 medium onions, cut through root
end, then slice through root end into thin slivers. Transfer to bowl with
bell peppers. Halve 1 pint cherry tomatoes (the fastest—but dorkiest—way to
do this is to sandwich them between two quart container lids) and transfer to
a small bowl. Smash 4 garlic cloves, then coarsely chop and add to bowl with
tomatoes. Slice 1 lemon in half; set aside. Finely grate 1½ oz. Parmesan with
a Microplane or the small holes of a box grater into another small bowl.
- Your eggplant needs special treatment: Cooking it separately guarantees that
you can make it tender and golden (rather than chewy and gray) without
over-cooking it or causing the other veg to get soggy. When eggplant has been
sitting 30 minutes (okay, 25 if you’re antsy), gently squeeze it to get rid
of any more moisture (less moisture means more browning). No need to go
crazy, though.
- Heat 2 Tbsp. extra-virgin olive oil in a large Dutch oven or heavy pot over
high until shimmering. Once hot (test with one piece for starters!), add half
of eggplant and stir to coat in oil. Cook, stirring every 3 minutes or so
(you want to leave it undisturbed while also making sure lots of pieces get
their time against the hot pan), until eggplant is golden, with some pieces
starting to brown and char, 5–7 minutes. Reduce heat to medium if eggplant is
browning too quickly. Using a slotted spoon or fish spatula, transfer to a
plate. If any eggplant pieces stick, just scrape them up—no biggie. Heat 2
Tbsp. extra-virgin oil over high. Cook remaining eggplant using same process,
5–7 minutes. Transfer to plate with cooked eggplant.
- Scrape off any bits of eggplant from pot if needed (no need to wipe out).
Heat ¼ cup extra-virgin olive oil over medium-high. Add ¼ cup capers and ½
tsp. red pepper flakes (don’t be alarmed if capers sputter and foam—it’s
because they’re wet!). Cook, stirring, until bubbling subsides, 30–60
seconds.
- Add onion-pepper mixture, season with 1½ tsp. salt, and cook, stirring
frequently, scraping bottom of pan, and reducing heat if vegetables are
getting too brown, until vegetables are softened, slumped, and have started
to take on lots of color, 12–15 minutes. Meanwhile, bring a large pot of
generously salted water to a boil (this is for your pasta).
- Add tomato-garlic mixture to sauce, reduce heat to medium-low, and cook,
stirring occasionally with a wooden spoon, until almost all tomatoes have
burst and vegetables are starting to break down and deeply caramelize, about
10 minutes. Keep an eye on it and reduce heat if veg is getting too dark for
your liking.
- Finish the sauce: Return eggplant to pot and cook until vegetables are tender
but the vegetable pieces are still distinct (you don’t want total mush),
about 5 more minutes. Taste and season with salt.
- Add pasta to boiling water right after you add the eggplant, stirring
occasionally, until al dente. Before draining, scoop out 1 cup pasta cooking
liquid with a liquid measuring cup.
- Now the exciting part: Ratatouille and pasta join forces as one. Reduce heat
over sauce to low. Add drained pasta and stir to coat in sauce. Add 1 cup
Parmesan, pour ½ cup pasta cooking liquid over, then stir vigorously with a
rubber spatula or wooden spoon until a creamy sauce forms with no clumps of
cheese. Add more pasta cooking liquid as necessary if pasta starts to
stiffen. Remove from heat. Squeeze juice from ½ lemon over, then stir in 1½
cups basil. Taste for salt and lemon juice.
- Divide pasta among bowls. Top with cheese, basil, and red pepper flakes.
Drizzle with oil. Don’t be sad if you can’t finish it all: It’s even better
as cold leftovers.