Ham and Cheese Pasta With a Handful of Peas

Ham and Cheese Pasta With a Handful of Peas
David Malosh for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Simon Andrews. Prop Stylist: Paige Hicks.
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This is a no-recipe recipe, a recipe without an ingredients list or steps. It invites you to improvise in the kitchen.

Pick up a box of large shells — the ones the size of a knuckle, so they hold a little pasta water in them. Pick up a ham steak from the butcher or the corner of the supermarket meat display, and dice it. Pick up a bag of frozen organic peas as well — they’re sweeter. You’ll need a block of good Swiss if you can find it, or some Jarlsberg if you can’t. (Hey, it melts like a dream.)

Set a large pot of salted water to boil, and prepare your pasta. While it cooks, get to work on the next burner, browning the ham in a pat of good unsalted butter in a skillet. Offstage, grate about a cup of cheese into a large serving bowl. When the pasta has been cooked for just shy of the time called for on its packaging, throw in a handful of peas, cook another minute, then drain, reserving a little cooking water. Toss the whole mess into the cheese, along with the hot ham, another pat or two of butter and a splash of the pasta water. Watch as the cheese goes soft and ribbony in the heat, and the fat of the ham mingles with the butter and the pasta water, and the shells pick up some of it and grab peas in their valves. Shave some Parmesan over the top. Don’t you want to eat that right now?

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Comments

Loved this. To the ham, I added onion and minced garlic. I also zested a lemon into the pasta for brightness. Next time, I may add breadcrumbs to the top and set it under a broiler for crunch. Years ago, I was working on my mac & cheese recipe and was advised to shred my own cheese, as pre-shredded cheese has a coating that affects creaminess. With that in mind, I shredded a block of Swiss for this recipe and added a large splash of pasta water, so I didn't encounter an issue with "globbing.

This was SO. GOOD. I used a mix of cheddar and provolone cheeses (because that's what I had) and deglazed the pan I cooked the ham in with a splash of white wine to scrape up all the browned bits.

The Swiss is a mistake, it globs together into a solid mass taking with it all the peas and ham. Gruyere as suggested by Peggy is the way to go, or a mixture of both.

Great recipe for the night you get home from vacation and don’t want to go to store!!! Only thing I didn’t have was the cheese specified so I used goat cheese. Delicious and next time I’ll grab Gruyère because I think that would be amazing. You need to make this if you can.

Oh delicious! Thanks S.S. and Commenters. Per you all, I splurged on two 4 oz slabs of BF ham at the deli and a chunk of Gruyere. Used 1/2 pound of shells since I like more manavelins than pasta. Sauted cubed ham in unsalted butter with shallots and a minced garlic clove. Be patient with this, I went for the browned crispy bits shown in the photo. Pasta water is absolutely essential, save more than you need. Yes, do lob in another large pat of butter and a handful of Parm.

i found this reasonably good as a hot mixture, but better as a cold salad. in any case, I used 2-year swiss and didn't have the problems with texture that other cooks mentioned.

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