Make tonight’s pasta extraordinary with langostino, sundried tomatoes, pancetta (or bacon!) and fresh Italian herbs.
Last night my husband paid me the best compliment of our entire marriage (over 30 years). He asked me where I had found the recipe for this Mediterranean Langostino Pasta. For a moment I thought that he was kidding and then when I looked at his face I realized that he was serious.
“Uhhhh…from my own noggin,” I said while tapping my head.
“You made this up?” he asked, looking genuinely surprised. “How?”
I wasn’t offended. Actually I felt like a little kid who has just done something really smart for their age. Wait. That can sort of apply to someone of my *maturity*…I did something smart for my maturing age.
Speaking of age, I am reminded of when I first went back to college, 9 years ago this week. I was in my mid forties and scared spitless. I knew that I was up against very bright, young minds and it was completely intimidating. I tried to keep a low profile–sat at the back of the classroom, slumped down in my seat, never raised my hand to ask or answer a question. Things were working pretty well and I felt completely unseen for the first few weeks.
Then we had our first test in anatomy. I aced it. “Yeah for the old lady,” I thought. Still I remained incognito at the back of the room, invisible. A few days following the test, a woman approached me and said that she had noticed me and was wondering if I would help her study. She explained that she had flunked the test and had spoken to the professor about it. He had advised her to find somebody in the class to help her study. For some reason she picked me. Later that same day, a young man in his mid twenties stopped me in the library and also said that he had seen me in class and was wondering if I would like to study with him.
So much for being invisible. Two people asking me to help them study, both in the same day. I guess I looked ‘safe’. Maybe sitting at the back of the room had called a lot more attention to me than I thought. I saw myself as an insecure, moderately dumpy, minivan driving, 40-something mother of three. As I think about it, that is probably pretty close to how others viewed me. I was a mom and by the looks of me I was obviously not on the prowl. Which made me a safe study partner for a woman who was desperately afraid of failing anatomy and a young man who was recently married. The young man could go home and tell his wife, “You don’t have anything to worry about, I am studying with a woman old enough to be my mom. She even drives a minivan.”
By the end of the week we had added a fourth person to our strange little study group, another young man who was engaged to be married in a few of months. He, too, had approached me after class one day and asked about studying together. He had a different style of approach…”Hi. My name is ——. I’ve been watching you sitting at the back of the class taking notes. You look smart. I bet you aced the test. Will you help me study?” He looked like a forlorn puppy that one of my kids might try to bring home, so I said yes.
Our group worked really well together. Age and gender seemed to fade into the background as we all supported one another in the learning process. Or so I thought.
One day I was sitting in the library in a carrel with my back towards the room at large. Behind me was a table of guys studying for what sounded like a math class. I was keeping my head buried in my anatomy book, relentlessly trying to memorize the parts and functioning of ‘the kidney’ (you’d be surprised how much there is know about the intricacies of kidneys). As I was studying, my ears picked up the sound of a familiar voice. It was the puppy from my study group and he was talking to the guys at the math table. “Hey guys, listen. Have any of you seen Terri?” “Who’s Terri?” one of them asked.
“You know, Terri. That older woman in anatomy that sits at the back of the room.”
Zing! I couldn’t decide whether to keep my head buried in my book or turn around and own the moment and the description. I chose the later. Casually turning around and hooking my arm over the back of my chair I coyly asked, “Did you, by chance, mean me?”
The puppy went 25 shades of pink and red as his buddies slapped their hands over their mouths stiffling their laughter. “She got you, man! She so got you!” The puppy started stammering. “I, I, I didn’t mean that you were old. I mean, well I mean, well I just meant…”
“Yes?” I said as I reveled in watching him squirm.
“I just was trying to describe you so that they wouldn’t think I was talking about one of the other girls. I mean you’re older than…”. He was digging himself deeper and deeper and his friends were laughing their heads off.
I don’t remember how things ended that day, but here’s the bottom line: older women can still have a few tricks up their sleeves, like leading a study group or passing nursing boards or even making up a recipe right out of their own noggins. Oh, the wonder of it all.
Some notes:
- Langostino is a bit of flavor cross between shrimp, lobster, and crayfish. I found frozen, cooked langostino at Costco. Because langostino can be seasonal and/or difficult to find, shrimp or chicken could easily be substituted for the langostino in this recipe.
- Pancetta is an Italian ‘bacon’. Many deli counters at grocery stores sell pancetta. American style smoked bacon is a good substitute for pancetta in this recipe.
For other recipes on this site using langostino please see:
Mediterranean Langostino Pasta
Ingredients
- 1 pound bow tie pasta see notes
- 5 ounces pancetta, chopped or small diced see notes
- 1 large onion, medium diced
- 1 yellow bell pepper, large diced
- 4 large garlic cloves, minced
- 1 pound langostino (shelled and precooked) see notes
- 1/4 cup chopped sundried tomatoes
- 4 tablespoons capers
- 2 tablespoons white balsamic vinegar
- 1/4 cup chopped fresh parsley
- 1/8 teaspoon crushed red pepper
- 2 tablespoons half and half, optional
- salt and pepper, to taste
- extra virgin olive oil
- freshly grated parmesan cheese, optional
Instructions
- While prepping vegetables, bring a pot of water to boil for the pasta. Cook the pasta according to package directions until al dente. Drain and set aside, reserving 1/4 cup pasta cooking water.
- In a large skillet, cook the pancetta, rendering out some of the fat.
- When pancetta is just getting a little crisp, add the onion and cook for 2 or 3 minutes. (Add a drizzle of olive oil if necessary to keep things from sticking to the pan.)
- Add the yellow pepper and garlic and cook for another 3 minutes, stirring as needed until the vegetables are just slightly past crisp tender.
- Stir in the langostino, sundried tomatoes, crushed red pepper, and the capers. Cook and stir until the langostino has warmed through.
- Stir in the parsley, white balsamic vinegar, and half and half (if using). Add salt and pepper to taste. Toss all ingredients with the pasta. Drizzle with the reserved pasta water and a little olive oil for moisture, if needed.
- Serve immediately. Can be topped with freshly grated parmesan cheese if desired.
Notes
Notes
- Pasta. I used bow tie, but other shapes will also work.
- Pancetta. American-style bacon, chopped and fried crisp would also work well.
- Langostino. Salad-size shrimp or chunky diced regular-sized shrimp could also be used. Additionally, chicken would be a great replacement for the langostino.
Nutrition
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The Crandizzles
Way to go! I’ll for sure try this one out!
Terri @ that's some good cookin'
Thanks Jenny! Nice to hear from you.
Lizzy
How sweet of your hubby!!! I’d be asking where the recipe came from, too…this looks amazing! I see a cookbook in your future 🙂
Terri @ that's some good cookin'
Lizzy, you’re so funny. I can’t even decide on a blog header! You’re the one who should be writing a cookbook!!!
Terri @ that's some good cookin'
Tina, I know what you mean about the langostino recipes. I didn’t find very many either. Thanks for your kind words.
Kristin
Another fun story to read! 🙂 This reminds me of my studying days at USU (I was a biology/biology teaching major). Way to go!
Terri @ that's some good cookin'
Kristin, good times. Right?
Anonymous
Made this dish tonight. It was great!! Thank you so much for the recipe and I love your photos. I added mushrooms to my dish in place of the bell pepper. It wasn’t as colorful but it sure was good. My husband kept coming back to the stove to pick more goodies out of the dish.
Terri @ that's some good cookin'
Anonymous–I’m so glad that this recipe worked well for you. Isn’t it nice when the hubs comes back to pick out of the dish.
Anonymous
Can I use your recipe here, http://restlessgourmet.com/
Royce, fuelmech@hotmail.com
Terri @ that's some good cookin'
Hi Royce. Thanks for dropping by and asking permission to post this recipe elsewhere. Yes you may use it on the Restless Gourmet. All I ask is that a link back to my blog be given along with the recipe and/or the photos if you use them. Enjoy. ~Terri
Anonymous
You got it, Thanks Terri. I have 2 pounds of Langostino and have used it in scampi type recipes, I’ll be trying this soon.
Anonymous
Great recipe, bought frozen langostino at Aquarius Fish co. next to Caputo’s on 300 So. SLC (the only place in town I’ve found Langostino from the USA). Didn’t know quite what to do with it so I searched the internet and your recipe won out…the whole family loved it, including my daughter who is really picky…
Thanks,
Bob
Terri @ that's some good cookin'
Hi Bob. That’s great that the recipe worked for you and your family. So glad you liked it. Thanks for letting me know about Aquarius Fish co and the langostino being from the US. Although I have been to Caputo’s on several occasions, I have never noticed Aquarius Fish Co. I love hanging out in Caputo’s–always come away broke, but with some great things to try. One day they had a sampling of many of their different olive oils. It was great to be able to do side by side comparisons, especially since my favorite turned out NOT to be the most expensive (wish I could say the same for my taste in balsamic). I could spend half a day grazing my way through all of their cheeses and meats, too. Anyway, I’ll have to head on over to Aquarius and check them out. Thanks for the tip.
Seatech
Great recipe. I placed a link on https://www.facebook.com/pages/Langostino/234592716668357?ref=hl back to your page.
Liz
Thanks Terri. I love all your recipes. Have a great weekend!
Terri @ that's some good cookin'
Thank you, too, Liz. I hope that you have a great weekend as well.
William Geary
Went Costco and purchased a bag of langostino over the holidays, but never tried it in a recipe before. Am I glad to have found your website. Followed the Mediterranean Langostino recipe precisely
as written and my coworkers absolutely flipped over it, delicious!!!
Terri @ that's some good cookin'
Congrats, William, on impressing your co-workers! You do realize that you are now going to be commanded to make “that langostino dish” for future office get togethers, right? That’s great! Everyone needs to have food fame for at least one dish. 🙂 ~Terri
Tani
Do you have the the nutritional values on this recipe? Calories, Fat (Sat/Unsat) etc?