Pret-a-Manger: Six Pasta Recipes from Designers & Friends (2024)

Follow the Directions On the Box

  • Text: Nima Jalali, Risa Hiratsuku, Karen Kim, Kaya Sorhaindo, Marshall Columbia, Sofia Prantera
  • Illustrations: Robert Beatty

Pret-a-Manger: Six Pasta Recipes from Designers & Friends (1)

From bowties and shell shapes to spaghetti straps and pasta prints, we’ve seen how everybody’s favorite meal influences fashion and Everything Else, so why not the other way around? Nobody knows the importance of thoughtful formulation like the designers of our most-savored essentials—we look to them to bring pleasure to our wardrobes, homes, self-care routines, and, now, to our stomachs.

When we think about pasta, of course, we take it personally. Behind every twirled forkful is an abundance of careful considerations. Perhaps you prefer a spoon. Or maybe it depends on the noodle. How many minutes for the perfect al dente? Don’t forget to reserve the pasta water. If the sauce turns out to be soppy, a side of garlic bread will call for extra butter (as one must always have on hand). Pair it with a medium-bodied wine. Oh, and always—yes, always—top with fresh parm.

Brought to life (and style) by illustrator Robert Beatty, the following recipes are intended to inspire and fulfill your next craving for pasta, including all the important details: homemade breadcrumbs, meticulously chopped mushrooms, a gorgeous and glossy orange vodka sauce. Call it a spaghetti spectacle! Personalize each as you please. Satisfaction? Dare we say...guaranteed.

Pret-a-Manger: Six Pasta Recipes from Designers & Friends (2)

Nima Jalali,
Pasta with Spicy Vodka Sauce (4 Servings)

Ingredients:

¼ cup olive oil
½ shallot, finely chopped
1 small garlic clove, finely grated
½ cup tomato paste
2 tablespoons vodka
1 cup heavy cream
1 teaspoon crushed red pepper flakes
Kosher salt, freshly ground pepper
1 pound fusilli or rigatoni
2 tablespoons unsalted butter
1 ounce finely grated parmesan, plus more for serving
¼ cup chopped fresh basil

Directions:

Heat oil in a large skillet over medium. Add shallot and garlic and cook, stirring occasionally, until softened, about 5 minutes. Add tomato paste and cook, stirring occasionally, until paste is brick red and starts to caramelize, about 5 minutes. Add vodka and cook, stirring constantly, until the liquid has mostly evaporated, about 2 minutes. Add cream and red pepper flakes and stir until well blended. Season with salt and pepper; remove from heat.

Meanwhile, cook pasta in a large pot of boiling salted water, stirring occasionally, until al dente. Drain, reserving 1 cup pasta cooking liquid. Add pasta to the skillet with sauce along with butter and ½ cup pasta cooking liquid. Cook over medium-low heat, stirring constantly and adding more pasta cooking liquid if needed, until butter has melted and a thick, glossy sauce has formed, about 2 minutes. Season with salt and pepper and add 1 oz. parmesan, tossing to coat. Divide pasta among bowls, then top with basil and more parmesan.

Do ahead: Vodka sauce can be made 5 days ahead; cover and chill.

Pret-a-Manger: Six Pasta Recipes from Designers & Friends (3)

Risa Hiratsuka, Olga Goose Candle
Spinach and Tuna Pasta (2 Servings)

Ingredients:

160 g spaghetti (1.9 mm)
2 cloves garlic
2-3 bunches spinach
150 g (approx.) canned tuna
50 ml extra virgin olive oil
2 tbsp white wine
2 pinches salt
a dash long pepper powder
a dash black pepper
3 litres boiling water
30 g (approx.) coarse salt

Directions:

Pour the olive oil into an unheated frying pan. Add the garlic, cut in half and smashed, and fry on low heat. Continuously shake the pan to prevent the garlic from burning. Once the garlic turns golden brown, remove it from the pan.

Fill a deep pot with water and bring to a boil. Add the coarse salt and the spaghetti. Reserve the pasta water.

Add the spinach and drained tuna to the frying pan. Once the spinach and tuna is warm, add the white wine to the pan and bring to a simmer to cook off the alcohol. Transfer about 2.5 tablespoons of pasta water to the frying pan and turn off the heat until the spaghetti is fully cooked.

Once the spaghetti is fully cooked, transfer it to the frying pan and mix thoroughly, until the spaghetti has a glossy sheen. Add a little pasta water if the mixture is too dry. Be careful not to fry the spaghetti. Dial in the seasoning by adding a pinch of salt if necessary, and finish with a dusting of ground black pepper and long pepper powder.

Long pepper is a South-East Asian seasoning that’s grown in Okinawa. I encountered it on Ishigaki Island last year and it’s become a huge favorite of mine. It has a sweet fragrance similar to that of cinnamon, along with a hint of acidity. The flavor seems like it’s about to hit you, but in the end it isn’t really tangible. Even if I had to try to pin the flavor down, I couldn’t, because the tingling stimulation it delivers completely takes over my tongue and in the end I can’t tell what it tastes like. It’s also a tasty addition to coffee.

Pret-a-Manger: Six Pasta Recipes from Designers & Friends (4)

Karen Kim, BINU BINU
Pasta E Ceci

Ingredients:

¼ cup olive oil, plus more for drizzling
4 cloves of garlic, smashed
3 tbsp tomato paste
½ tsp red chili flakes
3 anchovy fillets
14 oz can chickpeas
¾ cup small pasta like tubetti or macaroni
3 cups chicken broth or water
1 tsp kosher salt (Diamond Crystal brand), or to taste
handful or two of lacinato kale, or spinach leaves, washed and torn, ribs removed (if using kale)
finely grated parm

Directions:

Heat oil in a dutch oven or other heavy-bottomed pot.

Add garlic and cook for 30 seconds or until fragrant and slightly golden.

Add red chili flakes and anchovies and cook for 1 minute, breaking up the fillets with a wooden spoon.

Stir in tomato paste and cook for 2-3 minutes to caramelize; paste should darken noticeably, thicken, and start to smell sweet and amazing.

Slowly add broth or water while stirring, scraping the bottom of the pan as you mix everything together.

Add chickpeas and pasta, put on the lid, turn the heat to high and bring to a boil. Once boiling, stir, replace the lid and reduce heat to low; simmer for 10 minutes.

Taste, season with salt and black pepper.

Add greens and let steam for 1 minute with the lid on until they are wilted.

Ladle into wide bowls to serve, drizzle with olive oil and bury under a mountain of parm.

Pret-a-Manger: Six Pasta Recipes from Designers & Friends (5)

Kaya Sorhaindo, FOLIE À PLUSIEURS
Trumpet Mushroom Pasta

Ingredients:

7 trumpet mushrooms (cut batonnet)
30 ml soy sauce
30 ml Japanese saké
2 to 3 tbs of butter
5 pcs of garlic (cut in thin slices)
.5 to 1 cup of Italian parsley
black pepper
salt
parmesano
spaghetti

Directions:

In a medium frying pan, add butter and mushrooms. Stir mushrooms, make them sweat, and then get dry again.

While stirring the mushrooms, add half a portion of soy sauce.

Turn heat medium-high and add saké.

Turn heat down to medium. Add garlic and half of the parsley.

Add remaining soy sauce, black pepper, and remaining butter.

When the pasta is ready, add it to the mushrooms—mix in with tongs, carrying over a little bit of the water from the pasta. The soy sauce should provide enough salt, but feel free to add more.

Plate up, add a little parmesano, and enjoy.

Pret-a-Manger: Six Pasta Recipes from Designers & Friends (6)

Marshall Columbia, Marshall Columbia
Vegan Baked Mac and Cheese (8 Servings)

Ingredients:

18 ounces elbow macaroni
vegan butter, ½ cup for sauce and 2 tbsp for topping
6 tbsp all purpose flour
5 cups unsweetened coconut milk
1 cup vegetable stock
3 tbsp dijon mustard
1 cup nutritional yeast
3 tsp onion powder
3 tsp garlic powder
1 and ½ tsp smoked paprika
1 and ½ tsp salt
1 and ½ tsp ground black pepper
whole wheat bread, 3 slices toasted
vegan butter, 2 tbsp melted

Directions:

First add ½ cup vegan butter to a pot and let it melt. After it has melted, add in the all purpose flour and stir it in with the melted butter. Pour in the coconut milk and the vegetable stock. Use a hand whisk to whisk out the lumps. Keep whisking until it starts to boil and then keep whisking for a few minutes after it has boiled until it thickens. Even as it cools, it will continue to thicken.

Remove it from the heat and add in the dijon mustard, nutritional yeast, onion powder, garlic powder, smoked paprika, salt and pepper and whisk in. Now that your sauce is ready, you can prepare your macaroni.

Cook your macaroni according to the package directions and then rinse and drain. Add the cooked macaroni into the pot of sauce and toss it up with the sauce. Transfer the macaroni and sauce to a 9 x 13-inch baking dish and smooth down.

Preheat the oven to 400°F (200°C). Prepare the crumb topping by breaking up the 3 slices of toasted whole wheat bread and placing them into the blender. Pulse blend until you have crumbs. Then transfer to a mixing bowl, add in the melted vegan butter (2 tbsp) and toss together.

Place the breadcrumbs evenly over the top of the macaroni cheese. Bake for 20 minutes until the topping is golden brown and crispy.

Pret-a-Manger: Six Pasta Recipes from Designers & Friends (7)

Sofia Prantera, ARIES
Caprese Pasta

Ingredients

pasta of choice
3 tablespoons olive oil
minced garlic (1 or 2 cloves if you love garlic)
minced onion
about 15 halved cherry or grape tomatoes (add less or more to your liking)
salt ¼
(about 7) basil leaves
(about 2 tablespoons) white wine
1 teaspoon of oregano
pepper flakes, if you like spice
can’t forget the mozzarella

Directions

In a large pot of boiling salted water, cook pasta (short or long) until al dente.

In a large frying pan (I use a cast iron skillet), add oil, garlic, onion, tomatoes, a little white wine and saute until brown and soft (NOT BURNT).

Pour cooked pasta and about a cup of pasta water, plus the mozzarella, in the frying pan or cast iron.

Fully mix everything over medium heat until the mozzarella starts to melt.

Top it off with some parmesan cheese, then enjoy with a nice red wine.

  • Text: Nima Jalali, Risa Hiratsuku, Karen Kim, Kaya Sorhaindo, Marshall Columbia, Sofia Prantera
  • Illustrations: Robert Beatty
  • Date: August 11th, 2021

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Pret-a-Manger: Six Pasta Recipes from Designers & Friends (2024)

FAQs

Is 12 oz of pasta 1 pound? ›

Almost all pasta in the U.S. comes in a 1lb. container (16 ounces).

How long to boil angel hair pasta? ›

While regular pasta cooks in about 8 to 10 minutes, angel hair pasta cooks in about 3 to 5 minutes. Angel hair pasta is similar to capellini pasta, but angel hair is actually a bit thinner. Both are best used with thinner, more delicate sauces according to the National Pasta Association.

How long to cook dried spaghetti? ›

The most popular way to cook spaghetti is simple. Put the pasta into plenty of boiling water, stir it, bring it to a simmer, turn the heat off, put a lid on and leave it to finish cooking for 10-12 mins. This method works perfectly fine.

What is the most delicious pasta in the world? ›

Check out the top-ten pasta dishes in the world:
  • Pappardelle al cinghiale- Tuscany, Italy.
  • Pasta carbonara- Rome, Italy.
  • Tagliatelle al ragù alla Bolognese- Bologna, Italy.
  • Lasagne alla Bolognese- Bologna Italy.
  • Linguine allo scoglio- Campania, Italy.
  • Pasta all gricia- Grisciano, Italy.
  • Giouvetsi- Greece.
Aug 29, 2023

What is the number one pasta in the world? ›

Spaghetti is the most popular of all the pasta types. It is the favorite of many, especially kids. Indeed, this is one of the most frequently cooked pasta worldwide. It is also usually available in most restaurants.

How many people does 2 lbs of pasta feed? ›

Most recipes call for one pound of pasta — which is a standard box or bag — to serve four to six people. It's far easier to eyeball this than fuss over specific measurements. I find that half the box, or a half-pound (eight ounces) of pasta, serves two to three people, depending on sauce and hunger level.

Is 4 cups of pasta 1 lb? ›

Depending on the pasta's shape, usually 4 cups of dry pasta is equal to 1 pound of pasta. Because 1 cup of dry pasta equals about 2 cups of cooked noodles, 1 pound of dry pasta yields 8 cups cooked.

How many cups is 2 lbs of pasta? ›

🍽️ Standard Guideline: As a general rule, 1 pound of dry pasta is roughly equivalent to 4 cups. 👩‍🍳 Adjustment for Shape: Larger pasta shapes might yield slightly fewer cups, while smaller shapes could result in more cups per pound. 🌐 International Variations: In some regions, pasta may be measured by grams or ounces.

Should you rinse angel hair pasta after cooking? ›

Do Not Rinse. Pasta should never, ever be rinsed for a warm dish. The starch in the water is what helps the sauce adhere to your pasta. The only time you should ever rinse your pasta is when you are going to use it in a cold dish like a pasta salad or when you are not going to use it immediately.

What is the real name for angel hair pasta? ›

Angel Hair pasta, also known as capellini, or "fine hair," is the perfect choice when you want to pair a light, refined sauce with a delicate cut of thin pasta.

What is the difference between spaghetti and angel hair? ›

Angel hair pasta is a long, thin noodle with a rounded shape. Although it resembles spaghetti – another long, thin pasta – angel hair is much finer. This delicate shape is best used with simple, light sauces and vegetables, such as pesto sauce or a primavera dish.

Why do you need cold water to boil pasta? ›

This method reduces the overall cooking time. Since the pasta sits in cold water initially, it has more time to absorb water, allowing it to cook through more quickly once the water begins to boil. It's a timesaver, especially when preparing a quick meal or feeding a large group.

What happens if you put pasta in water before it boils? ›

There are times when you do want to start with a large pot of already-boiling water. The first is when cooking fresh pasta. Because fresh pasta is made with eggs, if you don't start it in boiling water, it won't set properly, causing it to turn mushy or worse, disintegrate as it cooks.

Does pasta float when done? ›

Luckily, filled pastas will give you a visual cue when they're ready: whether dried, fresh or frozen, filled pastas come to the surface of the water and float when they're fully cooked. So, once your cappellettis or pierogies come to the surface, drain them immediately.

What are the 4 main Italian pasta dishes? ›

There are four classic Roman pasta dishes: cacio e pepe, carbonara, amatriciana, and alla gricia.

What is Italy's number 1 pasta? ›

Barilla Pasta is Italy's largest dry pasta brand and dominates the European and American markets. With a long-standing reputation as one of the best Italian pasta brands in the United States, Barilla's products are made with high-protein durum wheat flour, ensuring top quality.

What is the most eaten pasta in Italy? ›

Spaghetti is the most popular pasta in Italy–at least according to a July 2021 poll by the Unione Italiana Food ranking the country's top ten pasta shapes. Spaghetti nabbing the number one spot will hardly come as a shock; it's undoubtedly the pasta shape most strongly associated with Italian cuisine.

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