Linguine With Clams, Roasted Tomatoes and Caramelized Garlic

- Total Time
- 45 minutes
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
- 14garlic cloves
- 2pints cherry tomatoes, a mix of colors is nice
- 6tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil, more for drizzling
- ¼teaspoon fine sea salt
- 1teaspoon black pepper
- Salt
- 1pound dry linguine
- ½teaspoon crushed red pepper flakes
- ½cup dry white wine
- 4dozen littleneck clams, scrubbed
- ¼cup torn mint leaves
Preparation
- Step 1
Heat the oven to 450 degrees. Smash and peel 8 garlic cloves; peel and finely chop the remaining 6. Toss the smashed garlic with the tomatoes, 2 tablespoons of oil, fine sea salt, and ¼ teaspoon black pepper. Spread the tomatoes out in a layer in one or two baking pans (make sure they aren't too crowded, so they don't steam) and roast tomatoes, tossing occasionally, until bursting, 15 to 20 minutes.
- Step 2
In a large pot of heavily salted boiling water, cook the pasta until it is 2 minutes from being done to taste. Drain.
- Step 3
Return the pasta pot to medium-high heat. Warm 4 tablespoons oil in the pot. Add the chopped garlic and red pepper flakes; cook for 30 seconds. Add the wine and let simmer 2 minutes. Stir in the roasted tomatoes and garlic. Add the clams. Cover the pot and cook until the clams open, 5 to 10 minutes. Use tongs to transfer open clams to a bowl; discard any that do not open.
- Step 4
Add the pasta and ¾ teaspoon black pepper to the sauce in the pot. Cook, tossing, until pasta is just cooked through. Return the clams to the pot and toss with the pasta. Divide mixture among serving bowls. Garnish with mint and drizzle with more oil.
Private Notes
Comments
Please stop perpetuating this myth about discarding clams that don't open. This myth was started by Jane Grigson in her 1973 book "Fish Book." Prior to that no cookbook made that recommendation, but since then hundreds have simply copied her advice without asking why. The way you tell if a clam is bad is BEFORE you cook it. If it's open, tap it with a utensil. If it doesn't close, discard it; it's dead. If it doesn't open after cooking, just pry it open.
Cooked as directed, but did Pernod as suggested by another. I've tried several clams and linguine recipes and this is the winner. The Pernod makes a big difference. Btw, I have access to the best, freshest fish ever here in Napa. I can shop at Osprey Seafood. These Christmas Eve clams were superb, the dish was perfect for Christmas Eve!
I'm sorry, folks, but the Pernod is a bad misdirection! You don't need it, unless you can't handle the beautiful brine the clams bring to this recipe. Think about it...the roasted tomatoes and garlic, not to mention the white wine, should provide all the counterpoint to the brine. Sadly, I love Pernod and jumped the gun. Don't make the same mistake!!!!!!
no to pernod. period.
Made this as my main Christmas Eve course for feast of the seven fishes and it was a major crowd pleaser. A few tweaks I made: sautéed up some finely diced panchetta first and set it aside, added back to the dish with the tomatoes before the clams. Swapped the linguine for cuttlefish spaghetti (mostly to get another species of fish into my menu) and it really added some extra umami oomph. Strongly recommend both, this is a new favorite for sure.
this is really a superior recipe in every way. The clams I got were really fresh and everything went fine. But it took a little longer than I thought it would.
