It feels like winter here right now, but the daffodils and hyacinths and tulips pushing their way out of the earth are beautiful reminders that spring is here, and it's nearly time to plant that vegetable garden. This year, in addition to the usual staples like eggplant, zucchini, cucumbers and tomatoes, I hope to plant some delicious seeds for some difficult-to-find Indian veggies: a gift from my friend Roshani.
Roshani's green thumb is quite an inspiration to a clumsy but eager gardener like me. She grows a variety of vegetables and herbs each year in her postage-stamp backyard and even has a raspberry bush and a fig tree crammed in there. What's more, she's made room for a rain barrel.
Me, my backyard is mostly the domain of my adventure-seeking two, Opie and Lucy. They rampage through it at will, trying to seek and sniff out every little bit of trouble they can get their noses into. The vegetable garden is out of their reach because it's fenced off, although they do spend a lot of time looking at it and then me with soulful eyes, trying no doubt to hatch a plan to get in.
My recipe today is for a really simple but really special pasta dish that uses cashew cream. Cashew cream is nothing but a very creamy, very delicious paste of soaked cashews. It makes a great substitute for cream in any dish--and a healthier one as well.
To make this dish, I add a little zip to my cashew cream with a chipotle chilli pepper. You can buy chipotle chillis in adobo sauce at any supermarket, in the South American foods aisle. It is usually available in little cans and, when refrigerated in an airtight box, it lasts forever. In my kitchen it's an indispensable ingredient: I use it to add some smoky, sassy chutzpah to anything from curries to quesadillas to pasta.
Here's the recipe.
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Pasta with Vegan Chipotle Cashew Cream
Ingredients
- 1 ½ cups raw cashews (soaked overnight or at least 8 hours)
- 1 chipotle chili (with 1 tablespoon of the adobo sauce. Use more or less per your taste)
- 16 oz pasta (I used whole-wheat fusilli, but you can use any small pasta or even a ribbony one like fettuccine.) Cook al-dente according to package directions.
- 1 red onion , thinly sliced
- 3 medium tomatoes , sliced
- 8 oz button mushrooms , halved or quartered depending on their size
- 2-3 cloves garlic , minced
- 2 tablespoon olive oil
- ¼ cup parsley (finely chopped)
- Salt to taste
Instructions
- To make the chipotle cashew cream, drain the cashews, then grind them up into a really smooth paste with the chipotle chili and adobo sauce and enough water. You can use the soaking liquid. Add a little water at a time. Set aside.
- Heat the olive oil and add the onions. Sprinkle some salt and saute them for a few minutes until they are soft and transclucent but not brown.
- Add the garlic, stir, and then add the tomatoes and the mushrooms. Cook until the tomatoes are soft and have broken down.
- Add the cashew cream, mix together, and immediately add the pasta.
- Stir well to coat the pasta with the sauce. If the pasta is too dry, add a cup or so of the pasta cooking water. Add salt to taste. Mix in the parsley.
- You can add other veggies to this along with the tomatoes. Asparagus, broccoli and peas would all be great, and so would some scallions or green onions. You could saute leeks for an extra-special dish.
- Enjoy, all!
Tatiana
I know this recipe was postef ages ago but I was wondering if it could be canned?
Vaishali Honawar
Hi Tatiana, never tried canning this before, so I can't say for sure.
Stacey in Texas
I have a question about the water you reference when making the cashew cream sauce .. is it the water that the cashews have soaked in and how much do I use?
Vaishali
Use enough water to make a smooth paste. Add a little bit at a time to ensure you don't make the cream too thin. And yes, you can use the water you soaked the cashews in.
Anonymous
I absolutely loved this dish. I am making some this weekend for a couple of guests who are vegan. Thanks!
Britta
Thank you so much for this wonderful pasta, tasted really great.
If you won't get any chipotle I am sure Hot Pimenton de la Vera which is easily to get in Europe will work instead.
Maija Haavisto
Sounds yum! Now I just have to find chipotles (I've never seen chipotles in adobo sauce, but in Finland I was able to find chipotle sauce at least, here in Amsterdam no such luck yet in seven months).
Vaishali
Thanks for the feedback, Sequoiacone.Glad you liked it. 🙂
sequoiacone
I made this last night and my husband and I both loved it. It reminded me of pasta primavera, which I don't eat any more.
I added a sliced yellow pepper, and some asparagus- tons of veggies and the sauce covered them all.
Thanks for sharing this recipe.
Vaishali
Tibik, I wish I lived nearer too, because I'd have loved to try that. :)What a lovely idea to add beans and chipotle to the cabbage rice!
Chinna's Mistake
Vaishali,
Your writing has made me embrace chipotle chillies. I am totally in love with your idea of fusing Mexican and Indian spices. I made your cabbage rice(yet again) with the addition of a chipotle chill and cooked garbanzo and black eyed peas.Wish you loved nearer, would have had you over too.
Have a nice day!
Tibik