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The fridge is full to bursting right now with various pots of jam, a silly amount of mustards in tubes and jars, two or three cheeses and a bunch of homemade fruit syrups (raspberry! elderflower! apple-currant, too!), but, as I stood in front of it with a gnawingly empty stomach today, there was nothing in it for lunch. We had no bread to make impromptu grilled cheese sandwiches, and no vegetables to do a simple stove-top sauté. The last of the rice was used up last night and I thought if I even so much as looked at another potato I'd hurl it at a wall. (Potato pancakes, potato dumplings, potato cake, I think we need to talk.)

When this happens to you, do you usually throw in the towel and go out for lunch? Or do you scrounge around until you find something suitable to eat, even if that means canned sardines on top of instant polenta with toasted sesame oil for flair? If I had not still been wearing my pyjamas at lunchtime (uh, one of the benefits of working from home, yes), I would have thrown in that towel and made someone else make me lunch. But vanity and laziness made me resourceful. You see, we did have a small jar of anchovies in oil and a can of my very favorite pomodorini di collina and an obliging parsley plant on the balcony.

Suddenly, things were looking up.

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I first read about this sauce on Rachel's mouthwatering blog earlier this year. It's Marcella Hazan's recipe and seems to be almost like the devastating Sofia Loren to her more Jayne Mansfield-like tomato-butter-onion cult. You melt a few anchovies in some olive oil, throw in a bit of garlic (I leave mine in chunks big enough to fish out, but you could mince it, too), and then simmer a can of tomatoes in that dark, funky base until the sauce is reduced and thick enough to coat a panful of spaghetti. I find it needs a bit of chopped parsley to make it feel like a proper lunch, but that's about it. You barely need any salt, you certainly don't need any grated cheese on top and the sauce's richness (not fishiness, don't worry) makes for a very satisfying meal.

With a square or two of chocolate for dessert, of course. One needs something special to book-end a scrounge-y meal like this, after all.

So, tell me, readers: what do you eat when there's "nothing" at home to eat?

Tomato and Anchovy Sauce
Serves 2 or 3

1 clove garlic, peeled and halved (or minced)
3 tablespoons olive oil
5 flat anchovy fillets
1 16-ounce can imported Italian cherry or plum tomatoes
2 tablespoons chopped parsley

1. Heat the oil in a skillet and gently brown the garlic over low heat. Add the anchovies and, stirring constantly, allow the anchovies to melt into the oil.

2. Add the tomatoes and bring the sauce to a low simmer. Let simmer, uncovered, for 20 to 25 minutes. Taste for seasoning. In the meantime, bring a pot of water to the boil and cook enough spaghetti for two or three people. Drain the spaghetti, toss with the sauce and sprinkle with parsley. Serve immediately.

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76 responses to “Marcella Hazan’s Tomato Anchovy Sauce”

  1. KC Avatar

    this looks delish! There are so many nights when we come home from long days and cant see what to make so we end up ordering takeout. It seems everytime I try to go impromptu it flops but hey I am working on it!
    xoxo
    KC

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  2. thecatskillkiwi Avatar

    I ALWAYS keep at least a couple of cans of these cherry tomatoes in the cupboard for exactly this “scratching around for a meal” type situation!!

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  3. eva Avatar

    Indonesia rice noodle! Soak 1 minute, stir-fry with garlic+shallot+pepper+salt and it is ready 🙂

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  4. Maria Desiderata Montana Avatar

    Pasta is great with tomatoes, anchovies and garlic!

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  5. loulou Avatar
    loulou

    Faced with a similar predicament, we made a version with anchovies, white beans and parsely (& garlic of course), but this looks so tasty and a little lighter. Can’t wait to try it!

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  6. Denise @ Chez Danisse Avatar

    Oh, I can so relate to the predicament you describe. One thing I can almost always scrounge up, when the refrigerator has no more than condiments, is pasta with peas. I just boil and drain some pasta (usually Eduardo’s capellini), drop frozen peas on top of pasta, add olive oil, some good s&p, swirl it all around, slide it into a bowl and add a little grated cheese and extra pepper on top.

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  7. JP Avatar
    JP

    idk, my mom made it exactly from the recipe and it was…erm, just ok & a bit nasty frm anchovies. If u luv anchvy its gud, but me I like it better w tuna or better just basil & hot chiles

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  8. Darina Avatar

    This looks fantastic. I’ve been cooking quite a lot from Marcella’s Essentials of Italian Cooking but seem to be making the same recipes over and over. I tend to fixate. I’m going to give this one a try. Who can resist tomatoes and anchovies. Not me!

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  9. Scott at Real Epicurean Avatar

    And a fantastic sauce it is, too

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  10. Heather @ chik n' pastry Avatar

    i throw in the towel more than i should, but last night we found some brats in the freezer and an onion and pepper. since hubs was already grabbing beer on the way home, it was a no-brainer to make beer brats!

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  11. mai truong Avatar
    mai truong

    I grew up in Germany where Abendbrot was dinner (though only when I was at a friend’s house since I am Vietnamese and my mother made a slew of dishes for a proper Vietnamese dinner). So when I have “nothing” in the fridge, I turn to my German roots and take out some dark and thick slices of bread, some cold cuts, cheeses, spreads of whatever kind I have on hand, and there you go! Guten Appetit 🙂

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  12. Debjani Roy Avatar

    I have trained myself to always have the storecupboard essentials on hand for this:
    http://comosolo.wordpress.com/2009/12/09/lemon-creme-fraiche-pasta/

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  13. Fort Lauderdale Divorce Lawyer Avatar

    I used to despise anchovies since the first time I had them was on top of pizza and it wasn’t as good as the ninja turtles made it seem. But then I learned about melting them into the oil before making a sauce as you were describing above and now I love them. I too know the feeling of looking in the kitchen at lunch time in your pj’s and being tired of everything you see but I like your improvisational skills here. I’ll have to pick up some anchovies next time I’m at the store.

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  14. Katie@Cozydelicious Avatar

    This is the perfect thing to eat when there is nothing to eat! My favrite meal for those days when I haven’t made it to the market is a strata of some sort. Even if it’s been weeks since I got to buy groceries, I always have eggs, and some sort of bread-like thing, even english muffins work well. Throw in cheese or veggies or bacon or all of the above, and it’s a meal!

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  15. Nooyawka Avatar

    Why 20-25 minutes? Any Puttanesca recipe is about 5-10 minutes (minimum). Anchovy is standard European/Continental pasta sauce ingredient. Try adding basil, just basil.
    This is my fave. The only quick comfort food that comes close is yakisoba.

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  16. Sprout Avatar

    I just purchased Hazan’s “Essentials of Classic Italian Cooking” and cannot wait to get to the pasta section. (Yes, I read my cookbooks front-to-back before doing any major cooking from them – just to get the ‘feel.’)
    But this post has me rethinking my unwritten rule! Thanks for sharing.

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  17. Gabriel Avatar

    Indeed, anchovies are the anchor to many a good sauce. We just got a lasagna kit with our Farm-to-Table box last week. It came with a recipe for marinara that I wrote (in full disclosure I’m the communication lead for Full Circle) and I totally forgot the anchovies in the recipe. Though I didn’t when I made mine! Thanks for the recipe.

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  18. hannah @ greenoats&jam Avatar
    hannah @ greenoats&jam

    oh wow that looks very scrumptious. mm mm! b:
    http://greenoatsandjam.wordpress.com

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  19. Rocky Mountain Woman Avatar

    Lovely recipe, I usually have most of that stuff around and it sure beats my usual of a grilled cheese sandwich on those nights when nothing really sounds good!

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  20. Danny Avatar

    This dish looks terrific! and now i got a serious craving for some pasta 🙂

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  21. pinky black Avatar

    when i have nothing to eat? now i know i can recycle foods in my fridge. im really not into experimenting foods. mainly because i hate failure. failing to cook the right kind of dish. and our anchovies in the fridge barely used, with these recipe i think our anchovies would be in demand.

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  22. Grace Geiger Avatar

    I like to make some kasha with potatoes and mushrooms, and top it with a poached egg and some thai chili sauce or hot sauce. Easy, filling, healthful, hard to beat!

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  23. Enzo Avatar

    I use salted anchovies all the time (and I even made them with my mother many many years ago in the south of Italy) but I have never tried this simple, beautiful and mouthwatering combination. I got all the ingredients so I’ll cook it tomorrow. Very good post indeed, thank you.

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  24. Tracy Avatar

    My hubby would go nuts on this, loves this pasta but i just couldn’t get it right. Very mouth watering share!

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  25. Anna Johnston Avatar

    Aahh yes, I know the lunches you speak of, especially when your on a roll & the hair & pj’s are not things you want to change but your craving food. I have been known to invent some pretty strange dishes under such conditions myself. Anchovies always bring a little something to pasta don’t they.

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  26. Alicia Avatar
    Alicia

    I made this recipe last week for just a regular weeknight dinner. Added some mussels ($5.99 at whole foods- i remember you mentioning that in an older post-thanks for the tip!). It was so wonderful the bf made me re-create just a few days later. But it’s great too because it’s such an low maintenance meal.
    I always keep smoked fish around- those little canned tins of sardines or clams… that’s usually my go to meal, draped over toast and cream cheese if it’s on hand. Another is pasta “carbonara” with just butter and an egg and parmesan sprinkled over top. Such comfort food, on a cold day after an exhausting day at work, best eaten out of the pan it was cooked in!
    Thank you for cooking and keeping me hungry! I love your meals and your wonderful spirit.

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