
This rich, creamy pasta sauce was the result of an experiment. We wanted to make a creamy, mushroom-y pasta topping with no cream. We're trying to watch our diet a little better, and while we were eating pasta there was no need to indulge in cream, right?
The creaminess and thickness in a sauce can come through many methods. One of these is cream - the common ingredient of Alfredo and other cream sauces. Some pasta toppings, like carbonara, use eggs to thicken and give richness.
One lighter option is a roux, or flour-thickened, sauce. We had seen this dismissed as too difficult. Pshaw! A roux is nothing more than a little butter and flour, cooked over low heat until the flour grains swell. Then they are whisked together with hot liquid, the grains swell to thicken the sauce and voilá! You have thick, creamy pasta sauce without too much fat.
The bulk of this sauce is white wine, broth, and mushrooms. We don't use a lot of wild mushrooms - they are expensive, and just a few will do here to give flavor.
The result? Silky, thick and creamy pasta sauce - full of toothsome mushrooms and a little green parsley. The flavor of wine, wild mushrooms, and black pepper predominate - and it's not too fattening! Leaves you an excuse for plenty of cheese...
Wild Mushroom Pasta Sauce
serves 4
1 1/2 ounce package wild mushrooms
1 cup chicken, vegetable or beef broth, boiling
1 cup white wine
2 tablespoons butter, divided
3 8-ounce packages of white button or portobello mushrooms, washed and chopped
4 large shallots, minced
4 large cloves of garlic, minced
2 tablespoons chopped sage
3 tablespoons flour
1/2 cup chopped flat-leaf parsley
Salt and fresh ground black pepper
Crumble the dried mushrooms into a glass bowl or measuring cup and pour the boiling broth over them. Let steep for at least 20 minutes. Drain and reserve the drained liquid. Mix the drained liquid with the white wine.
Heat a tablespoon of butter in a large, heavy skillet over medium-high heat. Add the chopped button or portobello mushrooms and let sit, without stirring, for about four minutes or until they have thoroughly browned on one side. Stir and let them cook on the other side - again, without stirring - for about four minutes. Add the shallots, garlic, sage and steeped wild mushrooms. Turn the heat to low, and cook until they are all fragrant and soft.
Add the second tablespoon of butter and, when melted, add the flour. Stir rapidly, letting the flour thicken with the butter into a paste. Have a whisk ready! Slowly pour in the mushroom broth and white wine, whisking rapidly. Cook over medium-low heat, whisking, until the mixture thickens. It should thicken to the consistency of a thick gravy.
Add the chopped parsley, stirring until wilted. Season to taste with salt and pepper. Serve immediately over pasta with plenty of fresh Parmesan.
More Mushrooms!
• Recipe: Easy and Quick Mushroom Soup
• Survey: Do You Wash Mushrooms Before Cooking Them?
• Recipe: Parsnip, Mushroom and Leek Gratin
• Giant Matsutake Mushroom!
• Recipe: Roasted Lamb Chops and Mushrooms
This looks/sounds wonderful! I love noodles with mushrooms and "cream" sauce.
The miserable Chicago winter had me craving an old-fashioned tuna casserole last week and I ended up making a basic roux (flour, butter and skim milk) then added sauteed mushrooms and shallots, peas, tuna, egg noodles, lots of black pepper and parmesan cheese. It was the perfect comfort food for a cold night.
Do not be afraid to try a roux -they are really very easy and versatile.
view alexisfromtexas's profile
Delish!
view cremarie's profile
one way of creating a very flavourful and silky sauce would be to do an "immersion" style of cooking the pasta itself. while you should saute the components first, pour all the liquids and fixings into a pot of pasta with a little extra broth or water. let it simmer away and the pasta will absorb all the tasty liquid while also releasing some of its starches to assist with thickening. you may want more starch but a little cheese and butter will get you a creamy sauce in no time.
view pinstripeprincess's profile
There must be something in the air! Mushrooms are all over the food blogs. Great timing too, as scientists are reporting the antioxidant health benefits of the plain old button mushroom compared to its more exotic, more expensive relatives. And combined with a few simple ingredients, the humble button mushroom can taste pretty amazing, as your recipe demonstrates.
view Terry B's profile
Sounds delicious. I am going to bookmark this site!
view pumpkinpatch's profile
Anybody give any thought to using evaporated milk..?
view TheDailyFresser's profile