Photo from: http://cosacucino.myblog.it
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While Venetians steep sardines in vinegar and onions, Sicilians stew them with raisins. Neapolitans slow-cook octopus in tomatoes but, moving north to Liguria, you find the eight-legged critter boiled with potatoes and a squirt of lemon.
In Naples, spaghetti with clams is a classic dish - clams, olive oil and garlic. Fresh clams are the key to a tasty sauce. Once cooked, the clams open and release their juice; this liquid adds an "oceany" complexity to the final sughetto. Spicy red pepper compliments the mollusks' briny taste.
INGREDIENTS:
* 1.5 - 2lbs of live manilla clams, in their shells
* 8 oz spaghetti, cooked al dente
* 6 tablespoons of olive oil
* 2 garlic cloves (or less; depends how "garlicky" you want it), sliced thin
* Red pepper flakes, to taste
* 2 tablespoons flat-leaf parsley, rough chopped
Scrub the clams, removing any sand still on the shells. Place the clams in a bowl and cover with water. Let the clams sit in the water for 20 min. The clams will expel whatever sand is inside, guaranteeing your meal is not a gritty mess.
Heat a dutch oven over medium. Do not add any oil yet. Put the clams in the hot pan and cover for 3-4 minutes. During this time, the clams should open up and begin releasing their juice.
Clams with shells open after cooking. Photo from: http://savourbcn.files.wordpress.com
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When they've opened, you can either keep the clams in their shells or toss out the shells. Remove the clams / juice from heat and set aside. If you choose to pull the meat from the shells, do not pour out the liquid they have emitted. Pour 6 tablespoons of olive oil into a separate skillet and heat over low. Toast the garlic / red pepper flakes the skillet until aromatic.
Photo from www.buttalapasta.it
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Once the garlic sizzles, add the conserved clams / juice to the pan with the garlicky oil. Cover and cook the clams for 15 minutes. Cook on very low heat. As a final step, toss the al dente pasta in the skillet with the clams, sprinkling with the chopped parsley.
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