Please, Sir, Allow Me Pasta
- 1/2 pounds Pasta Or Gnocchi
- 2 cups Bruschetta
- 1/2 cups Searing Flour
- 2 teaspoons Worcestershire Sauce
- 1/2 cups Beef Broth
- 1/2 teaspoons Garlic Powder
- 18 teaspoons Cayenne Pepper
- Parmigiano Reggiano To Taste
- While your pasta boils, cut sirloin into thin strips.
- Then, take a mallet-like object and beat strips until they are satisfactorily thin.
- Cut strips into bite-sized pieces.
- In a Ziploc bag, combine the flour, cayenne, and garlic powder and go check Facebook for new developments while the pasta cooks.
- When the pasta is al dente, drain and put back into the pan you boiled it in.
- At this point I like to add a little butter or margarine, but hey, thats just me.
- Heat up your skillet and coat it with some vegetable or olive oil.
- Throw about a third of those bite-sized pieces of beef into the Ziploc bag that has been patiently waiting, and give it a good shake to coat the meat.
- Fry the pieces until medium or medium-rareyou want everything to be as tender as possible.
- Toss the morsels of deliciousness on top of the mound of pasta.
- Repeat until the meat is all cooked.
- Turn off the flame under the pan.
- Add the Worcestershire sauce and the beef broth, scraping and stirring to get all the wonderful little browned bits incorporated into the sauce.
- Add the bruschetta, stirring throughly.
- Now warm the sauce gentlyyou dont want to bring it to a fast and hard boil or the tomatoes will get all funky and bitter.
- Pour the sauce over the pasta and beef all warm and snug in the pot, mix and top with Parmigiano Reggiano.
- Serve up in big ol pasta bowls with nice crusty bread alongside.
pasta, flour, worcestershire sauce, beef broth, garlic, cayenne pepper
Taken from tastykitchen.com/recipes/main-courses/please-sir-allow-me-pasta/ (may not work)