Pasta Sauce in a Clay Pot
Hocus Pocus, Pasta & Noodles, Veggie Delights January 15th, 2005In one of my previous incarnations as a junior government bureaucrat, I was travelling all the time yet hardly saw the places that I went to. However, not having enough time to go around did not stop me from visiting the marketplace or the grocery just to have a feel of the daily life of the populace. I would also eat where locals go and sample their fare. If I only knew then that I would be maintaining a food blog! Sigh!
Among the places that has my heart (and stomach) captured is Rome. Whether in the office canteen, the trattorias or ristorantes, I was fascinated with the simplicity and freshness of the cuisine. Even as I was preoccupied with work, at the back of my mind I was trying to dissect what I was eating such that I could cook them myself. I’ve always been partial to red sauces for my pasta and in Rome I learnt of combinations that I wouldn’t have come up on my own. Returning home, I recreated some of the recipes which I now regularly cook. Following the same principles, I have also come up with my own recipes.
While craving for pasta the other day, I just realised that there seems to be a dichotomy in my cooking – Filipino food using native implements and western or Hispanised food in metal pots and pans. Hmmm… time to think out of the box. So one afternoon in Quezon City, as I was preparing to go home to Santa Rita, I thought of cooking pasta sauce in a bâlangá (palayok or clay pot) over a wood-fired stove. It never occurred to me before but an earthen vessel would be the best for the slow simmering needed to bring out the flavours of pasta sauces.
The pasta sauce is a combination of vegetables that I like and thought would taste good together. I would have added some olives and capers but I wanted it to taste relatively simple. It seems like a clay pot over a wood-fired stove indeed worked well for the sauce. It tasted better on the second day as the flavours melded well, mellow yet full.
Pasta Sauce in a Clay Pot
½ kg. ripe tomatoes, peeled and de-seeded
1 cup pureed tomatoes or tomato sauce
2 large carrots, sliced into small cubes approximately the size of the peas
2 large courgettes (zucchini), cubed in the same size as carrots
1 cup button mushrooms (fresh or canned), sliced thinly
½ cup sweet peas
2 heads garlic, finely crushed
3 small onions, sliced thinly
handful or two fresh basil, finely torn or sliced
2 tablespoons olive oil
½ cup red wine
thin slivers of cheese (for this recipe, I made use of leftover Queso de Bola or Edam cheese)
1 cup water
salt to taste
Heat oil in a clay pot over medium heat. Fry the onions then add the garlic and then the tomatoes, salt and half of the basil. Simmer for around 20 minutes, adding a few tablespoons of water and stirring occasionally. Pour the tomato puree then simmer for 5 minutes
Put in the carrots, simmer for two minutes, the button mushrooms, the courgettes and then a few tablespoons of water. After simmering for around 5 minutes, drop the rest of the basil and around four tablespoons of cheese. Simmer for another ten minutes, pour the wine and simmer for around 5 minutes then turn down heat. I just let the pot simmer with embers.
Serve over fusilli (spirals) pasta and drizzle with cheese.


January 16th, 2005 at 7:15 pm
I would love to taste
the sauce cooked in clay pot. Innovative, Karen.
January 16th, 2005 at 8:10 pm
the clay pot concept is very true, even old italian moms in the mountains would cook in their own clay pot, they say terracotta is tradition. hhehehe lucky me, i was just given an antique cook ware plus a recipe to match , i even have antiques for fondue .-)
IM READY FOR MY NEXT ASSIGNMENT:hungry:
thank you. yummmmm!!!
January 17th, 2005 at 5:05 pm
Thanks Thess! The flavours just came out much better than when I use my usual pot.
Jing, so my instincts are still on track? Hehehe! Congratulations on your acquisitions! Show us the pictures!
January 22nd, 2005 at 1:05 am
Hi Karen!
My first time here. YUMMINESSSSSS!!!! Wow, ginutom ako. What a nifty site. Sarap talaga kumain, pati magluto (I admit that grudgingly, as long as I don’t have to cook for a lot of people), I wish I had more time.
Cooking with the palayok is just like how my grams used to do it. I sure miss her and her cooking. Will be back for more.
January 23rd, 2005 at 1:46 am
Natts, that’s all-veggie. You can eat that. I’m glad you’re now enjoying the kitchen, hehehe! After your Christmas and New Year adventures, you can do anything!