Pasta With Artichokes and Pancetta

- Total Time
- 1 hour
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
- 1lemon, cut in half
- 4medium artichokes, or 8 to 10 small or baby artichokes
- 8ounces short tubular or corkscrew-shaped pasta
- Kosher salt
- 1tablespoon extra-virgin olive oil, more as needed
- 6ounces pancetta, diced
- 1large leek, halved and thinly sliced
- ½teaspoon ground black pepper, more for serving
- 2tablespoons dry (white) vermouth or not-too-dry white wine
- 2tablespoons chopped chives
- ¼cup parsley or mint leaves, chopped
- ¼cup grated Parmesan cheese, more for serving
- Fresh lemon juice, for serving
Preparation
- Step 1
Squeeze one lemon half into a large bowl of cold water. Pluck off all tough leaves from one artichoke, until you reach leaves that are pale and soft. Using a vegetable peeler or paring knife, peel stem and trim base of artichoke, then dunk it in lemon water to keep it from browning. Cut off the top ⅓ of artichoke and discard. Cut artichoke in half; remove any inner purple leaves and scoop out the fuzzy choke if there is one. Thinly slice artichoke lengthwise to include some of the heart. Put slices in the lemon water and leave them there as you cut remaining artichokes.
- Step 2
Bring a large pot of heavily salted water to a boil, then cook pasta according to package directions. Reserve 1 cup pasta water, then drain.
- Step 3
Meanwhile, heat oil in a large skillet over medium heat. Stir in pancetta and cook until browned and crispy, stirring occasionally, 8 to 12 minutes. Use a slotted spoon to transfer pancetta to a paper towel-lined plate; leave fat in pan.
- Step 4
Drain the artichokes, shaking them well to remove excess water. Raise heat under pan to medium-high, and stir in artichokes, leeks, ½ teaspoon salt and ½ teaspoon pepper, and cook until golden brown and tender, 10 to 12 minutes. Reduce heat to low, and stir in vermouth, scraping up any browned bits from bottom of skillet.
- Step 5
Stir in cooked pasta, pancetta, chives and parsley. If the mixture seems dry, add pasta water, a little at a time. Stir in more salt to taste, Parmesan and lemon juice to taste.
- Step 6
Transfer to serving plates and top with a drizzle of oil, more black pepper, and more grated cheese.
Private Notes
Comments
any chance one could use canned or frozen artichokes?
How heinous of a culinary crime would it be to use canned artichokes? I think I'd be much more likely to make it... :)
I just couldn’t see myself doing the prep work with fresh artichokes so used frozen artichoke hearts and this pasta dish was delicious. Definitely a keeper of a recipe.
Delightful! I did use high quality jarred artichoke hearts, and it turned out wonderfully. Fresh would be even better for those who have time.
The salad bars in a couple of our local grocery stores have non-marinated (in a mild brine of sorts, but no intrusive flavoring) artichoke pieces from the heart end. When I don’t feel like breaking down a whole one I get a container of those - they work great, plus it’s bulk, so you can get as much or little as you like. Otherwise I would go with frozen over either jarred or canned - but it’s an incremental hierarchy, so whatever you can source will make a tasty dish.
Do not skip the fresh lemon juice at the end it is the entire key to a fabulous dish. Made it 3x. Canned artichoke hearts sliced and sautéed with leeks works great. Pancetta small pieces. Do not use bacon unless it’s already cooked and crisp.
