Some time in the past, Joanna instructed me concerning the coolest factor…
Final 12 months, Anton’s elementary college held a fundraiser referred to as Eat Pie Store (!) the place they arrange tables with totally different sorts of selfmade pies — candy ones, like chocolate, apple, crumbles, and many others., in addition to savory ones, like frittata and quiche. Additionally included on this glorious-sounding unfold? A spaghetti pie — which, Joanna instructed me, everybody went bananas over.
And never simply the youngsters! The adults, too. Have you ever all heard of this? It’s precisely what it seems like — tomatoey, tacky spaghetti that’s baked in a pie dish, then served in wedges, in all its crispy-edged glory.
So, it made full sense that after I was flipping by Jessie Sheehan’s new e book Salty Tacky Herby Crispy: Snackable Bakes, I finished quick at her recipe for Spaghetti Pie With Tacky Marinara. Sheehan — who hosts the Cherry Bombe podcast “She’s My Cherry Pie” and pops up throughout Instagram along with her cheerful signature greeting “Peeps!” — is enjoyable personified. Her e book is all concerning the quick-and-easy (the 100 recipes in her e book name on fundamental pantry staples and are available collectively in lower than an hour) and the playful, like that Spaghetti Pie, but additionally Every little thing Bagel and Cream Cheese Snacking Bread, Jalapeño Cheddar Shortbread Buttons, and issues like popovers, hand pies, and snacky bite-size issues that make a celebration a celebration.
Baked Spaghetti Pie With Tacky Marinara
From Salty Tacky Herby Crispy: Snackable Bakes, by Jessie Sheehan
Makes one 8-inch spherical pie
Says Jessie: Wrap the spaghetti in a clear dish towel (which is able to forestall you from spraying your kitchen with tiny damaged noodles) and break the spaghetti into thirds earlier than boiling it, because it’ll cook dinner sooner (in solely 5 minutes!) and the pie will probably be simpler to slice and eat.
olive oil for brushing the pan
¾ cup plus 2 tablespoons (88 g) finely grated Parmesan, divided, plus extra for serving
2 massive eggs
1½ cups (382 g) retailer–purchased or selfmade marinara sauce, plus extra for serving
¾ teaspoon kosher salt, or to style
½ teaspoon freshly floor black pepper
½ to ¾ teaspoon garlic powder
½ to ¾ teaspoon dried oregano
1¼ cups (125 g) shredded low-moisture, whole-milk mozzarella, divided, plus extra for sprinkling
⅓ cup (76 g) ricotta
¾ pound (340 g) spaghetti, cooked till al dente
Warmth the oven to 350°F. Brush an 8-inch spherical cake pan with olive oil and line the underside with parchment paper. Brush the parchment with further oil and sprinkle the underside and sides of the pan with ¼ cup (25 g) of the Parmesan to coat.
Evenly whisk the eggs in a big bowl. Whisk within the marinara, salt, pepper, garlic powder, oregano, ½ cup (50 g) of the Parmesan, ¾ cup (75 g) of the mozzarella, and the ricotta. Fold within the cooked spaghetti with a versatile spatula and switch the combination to the ready cake pan, urgent down together with your spatula to compress it. Sprinkle the remaining 2 tablespoons of Parmesan excessive.
Bake for about quarter-hour. Rigorously take away the cake pan from the oven, sprinkle the “pie” with the remaining ½ cup (50g) of mozzarella, and return the pan to the oven to bake for about quarter-hour extra, or till the cheese is properly melted. If you’d like your cheese bronzed and barely crispy, place the pie beneath the broiler briefly, preserving a watchful eye, about 2 minutes or so.
Take away from the oven and let cool for 10 minutes earlier than working a knife across the fringe of the pan and inverting the “pie” onto a serving plate. (It’s possible you’ll want to present the underside of the cake pan just a few agency faucets to assist it launch.) Let it relaxation for five to 10 extra minutes, then serve the “pie” in wedges, passing additional Parmesan and sauce, if desired, on the desk.
Would you make this? What different enjoyable dinners do you advocate?
P.S. 5-ingredient dinners, and a pasta sauce style take a look at.
(Photograph by Nico Schinco.)