I was oddly pleased recently when someone complained that my pasta was inedibly hard. I thought: “I’ve finally leant what ‘al dente’ really means, and to make pasta that would not make my Italian friends cringe!” Italians, as you know, take their pasta quite seriously. And no wonder. When it comes to comfort food there’s nothing quite like it (or dal, I might add). And while it takes a certain amount of courage to stop when the pasta is still obviously uncooked, achieving that delicate point between undercooked and soggy is well worth striving for. What is also worth the effort is seeking out fregula, a bead-shaped pasta from Sardinia that has shot up my list of favorite types of pasta.
Fregula (also spelled fregola), if you’ve not had it before, will remind you of “giant” or Israeli couscous. And in fact both are made from semolina by a very similar process. Indeed, according to this Wikipedia entry, fregula was brought over from North Africa by Ligurian immigrants. You cook it like any other pasta: in a large pot of well-salted, boiling water. Drain. Do NOT rinse. It is easy to overcook so keep a watchful eye after the first 5 minutes or so. Fregula is fantastic in soups but here, in this recipe from Food & Wine magazine, it is married with cherry tomatoes and red onions roasted in balsamic vinegar to make perhaps the tastiest pasta salad you’ve ever had!
Yield: 4 servings
Prep Time: 10 minutes
Cook Time: 1 hour
Total Time: 1 hour 10 min
Chef Jeff Banker in Food & Wine magazine (link)