logo
Sophie Wyburd's recipes for summer pesto pasta

Sophie Wyburd's recipes for summer pesto pasta

The Guardian2 days ago
When hot summer days roll around, midweek dinners that require minimal cooking really come into their own. I love making pesto on such evenings, and not just the classic basil-and-pine-nut situation. Jazzing things up with braised greens or a red pesto made from lots of jarred goods are just two directions in which I like to take things for a big hit of flavour. Both of today's pestos freeze well, too.
An almost no-cook sauce of smoked harissa whizzed up with jarred peppers, almonds and parmesan, tossed through rigatoni and topped with a dollop of lemony ricotta.
Prep 5 min
Cook 20 min
Serves 4
Salt and black pepper
400g rigatoni
90g flaked almonds
350g jarred roasted peppers
80g sun-dried tomatoes
1 garlic clove, peeled1 heaped tbsp smoked harissa paste15g basil
90g pecorino romano
Olive oil
250g ricotta
Juice and finely grated zest of ½ lemon
Bring a large pan of salted water to a boil, then add the pasta and cook according to packet instructions, until al dente.
Meanwhile, toast the almonds in a dry frying pan on a medium heat for three minutes, or until lightly golden, then tip into a bowl and leave to cool to room temperature.
Tip 70g of the almonds into the bowl of a food processor, add the peppers, sun-dried tomatoes, garlic, harissa and basil, then grate in 70g of the pecorino and whizz to a paste. With the motor still running, gradually drizzle in 100ml olive oil, then season to taste.
Put the ricotta in a bowl, then grate in the remaining 20g pecorino and the lemon zest and juice. Whisk to combine, then season to taste with salt.
When the pasta is cooked, drain it, reserving a mugful of the pasta cooking water, then tip the hot pasta back into the pan. Add the pesto and a splash of the reserved pasta water, then mix and toss until well combined.
Spoon the pasta into bowls, top with a dollop of the lemon ricotta and a sprinkle of the remaining toasted almonds, finish with a drizzle of olive oil and serve.
Prep 5 min
Cook 45 min
Serves 4
Olive oil
1 onion, peeled and finely sliced
2 garlic cloves, peeled and finely chopped
200g runner beansSalt and pepper
400g casarecce70g pine nuts
15g mint
80g basil
70g parmesan
Juice of ½ lemon
Put a medium-sized saute pan on a medium heat, then add three tablespoons of olive oil. Tip in the sliced onion and saute for 20 minutes, stirring often, untilit has softened completely and taken on a bit of colour. Add the garlic and saute for a minute more.
Trim the woody ends off the runner beans, then cut them diagonally into 2cm lengths. Stir these into the onions, add 100ml water and a pinch of salt, then pop on the lid and leave to cook for eight minutes.
Bring a large pan of salted water to a boil, add the pasta and cook according to packet instructions, until al dente.
Meanwhile, toast the pine nuts in a dry frying pan on a medium heat for three minutes, until lightly golden, then tip out and leave to cool.
Pick the leaves off the mint, then put them in the bowl of a food processor with the basil (stalks and all) and toasted pine nuts. Grate in the parmesan, then pulse to a coarse paste.
With the motor still running, drizzle in 100ml olive oil, then stir in the lemon juice and season to taste.
When the pasta is cooked, drain it, reserving a mugful of the cooking water, then tip the pasta into the bean pan. Add the pesto and a splash of the reserved pasta cooking water, then mix and toss until well combined.
Spoon the pasta into bowls, top with a little more parmesan and olive oil, and serve at once.
Sophie Wyburd is the author of Tucking In: A Very Comforting Cookbook, published by Ebury Press at £22. To order a copy for £19.80, visit guardianbookshop.com.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

EuroMillions results and numbers: National Lottery draw tonight, July 8
EuroMillions results and numbers: National Lottery draw tonight, July 8

The Sun

timean hour ago

  • The Sun

EuroMillions results and numbers: National Lottery draw tonight, July 8

THE draw for tonight's National Lottery EuroMillions (July 8, 2025) has taken place, with life-changing cash prizes at stake. Check the results to see if you have just won a fortune and bagged enough to start that jet-set lifestyle you always dreamed of. 2 Every EuroMillions ticket also bags you an automatic entry into the UK Millionaire Maker, which guarantees at least one player will pocket £1million in every draw. You can find out if you're a winner by checking your ticket against tonight's numbers below. Tonight's National Lottery EuroMillions winning numbers are: 01, 08, 09, 18, 50 and the Lucky Stars are: 01, 05. The UK Millionaire Maker Selection winner is: MSDV09512 Tonight's National Lottery Thunderball winning numbers are: 01, 09, 26, 30, 31 and the Thunderball is 07. TOP 5 BIGGEST LOTTERY WINS IN THE WORLD £1.308 billion (Powerball) on January 13 2016 in the US, for which three winning tickets were sold, remains history's biggest lottery prize £1.267 billion (Mega Million) a winner from South Carolina took their time to come forward to claim their prize in March 2019 not long before the April deadline £633.76 million (Powerball draw) from a winner from Wisconsin £625.76 million (Powerball) Mavis L. Wanczyk of Chicopee, Massachusetts claimed the jackpot in August 2017 £575.53 million (Powerball) A lucky pair of winners scooped the jackpot in Iowa and New York in October 2018 The first EuroMillions draw took place on February 7, 2004, by three organisations: France's Française des Jeux, Loterías y Apuestas del Estado in Spain and the Camelot in the UK. One of the UK's biggest prizes was up for grabs on December, 4, 2020 with a whopping £175million EuroMillions jackpot, which would make a winner richer than Adele. Another previous UK winner who's whole life was altered with their jackpot was a player who wanted to remain anonymous on October 8, 2019. They walked off with a cool £170,221,000. Colin and Chris Weir, from Largs in Scotland, netted a huge £161,653,000 in the July 12, 2011. Adrian and Gillian Bayford, from Haverhill, Suffolk, picked up £148,656,000 after they played the draw on August, 10, 2012, while Jane Park became Britain's youngest lottery winner when she scooped up £1 million in 2013. The odds of winning any EuroMillions prize are 1 in 13. Could tonight's jackpot of £64million see you handing in your notice and swapping the daily commute for slurping champagne on a super yacht or lying back on a private beach in the Bahamas? 2

The next big thing in books? The ‘ceasefire babies' of Northern Ireland
The next big thing in books? The ‘ceasefire babies' of Northern Ireland

Times

time4 hours ago

  • Times

The next big thing in books? The ‘ceasefire babies' of Northern Ireland

The generation of people born in Northern Ireland in the 1990s are known, with varying degrees of affection, as 'ceasefire babies'. They are united by being too young to remember the Troubles — but they have got their own troubles to contend with. Suicide rates in Northern Ireland have jumped since the conflict ended. (In fact, 3,709 people killed themselves in the 16 years after the Good Friday agreement, compared with 3,600 people who were killed during the 30 years of fighting.) And in the absence of an armed struggle, there can be a kind of identity vacuum: if your parents fought for what they believed was right, are you supposed to just live an ordinary life — and be grateful for it? The rap group Kneecap have recently presented one solution to this problem: to take the anger of their forebears and reinvent it for a new generation. This astonishing short story collection represents another: to process those feelings of anger, disappointment and rootlessness through fiction.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store