Pasta With Burst Cherry Tomatoes
Updated June 19, 2018
- Total Time
- 20 minutes
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
1 pound fusilli pasta
1 tablespoon extra-virgin olive oil, more for drizzling
6 ounces pancetta, preferably thick cut, diced
6 garlic cloves, smashed and peeled
Pinch of red pepper flakes
Fine sea salt and black pepper, as needed
1 quart cherry or grape tomatoes, halved
3 tablespoons butter
Fresh ricotta cheese, for serving (optional)
3 cups whole mint leaves, torn
4 scallions, preferably red scallions for color, thinly sliced
Flaky sea salt, to finish
Preparation
- Step 1
Bring a large pot of heavily salted water to a boil. Add pasta and cook until 1 minute shy of al dente. Drain pasta, reserving ½ cup pasta cooking water.
- Step 2
Meanwhile, heat a large skillet over medium-high heat for 15 seconds, then add the oil and heat until it thins out and easily coats the pan when swirled. Add pancetta and cook until it starts to render its fat, about 2 minutes. Add garlic, red pepper flakes and a large pinch of salt and pepper and cook until fragrant, about 2 minutes. Add tomatoes and cook until they burst, turn golden at the edges and shrivel up slightly, about 5 to 8 minutes.
- Step 3
Add pasta to pan and toss with tomato-pancetta mixture; if the mixture looks dry add a little pasta cooking water a few tablespoons at a time. Cook over high heat until the pasta finishes cooking in the sauce. Add the butter and toss until it melts and coats everything.
- Step 4
Divide pasta among warmed pasta bowls. Garnish with dollops of ricotta if desired, and top with a generous mound of fresh mint and scallions. Drizzle with olive oil and sprinkle with sea salt and more pepper before serving.
If you would like to leave out the pancetta (making the dish vegetarian), toss ⅓ cup grated pecorino in the pasta along with the butter.
Private Notes
Comments
I first tried this July 2014, I played with the recipe and tried some feta as a Greek play on the mint. Might also drop the panchetta and use some cured black olives. Just thoughts.
LOVE that Ms. Clark adds options for vegetarian - was wondering how to substitute pancetta's umami and fat - and there it is - at the bottom of the recipe! Pecorino! Way to go Ms. Clark!
In reply to my own question, I went ahead and made the recipe as I first remembered it, with whole grape tomatoes. After about 6 minutes on medium to high heat (5-6 on a gas range with 10 as maximum), they had almost all split. Then I just used a cooking spoon to mash them down a bit and the tomatoes that weren't yet "burst" did so easily, with the result a lovely, sweet sauce. I am not sure why the recipe was altered to include cutting in half, but it's not necessary.
Scallions ruined this for me - overpowered what should have been a tomato-forward dish
It's even better with torn burrata instead of the ricotta.
The more the merrier with the tomatoes. If you have too much you don’t have enough


