La Vignarola
- 4 tablespoons plus 1/3 cup extra-virgin olive oil
- 4 ounces pancetta, minced
- 1 large yellow onion, peeled and minced
- 2 pounds spring peas, shelled
- 2 cups dry white wine
- 2 pounds fresh fava beans
- Fine sea salt
- 6 to 12 baby artichokes, with several inches of their stems intact
- Freshly cracked pepper
- Zest of 1 lemon, finely shredded
- 2 fat cloves garlic, peeled, crushed, and finely minced
- 1 cup torn fresh mint leaves
- In a large saute pan over a medium flame, warm 1 tablespoon of the olive oil and brown the pancetta for several minutes.
- Soften the onion until transparent in the fat, taking care not to color it.
- Add the peas and the wine, bringing the combination to a simmer.
- Cover the pot, its lid askew, and gently simmer the peas for 20 minutes or less, until barely tender.
- Remove the fava beans from their pods and cook in boiling sea-salted water for 12 to 15 minutes or until they are nearly tender, rather like the al dente stage in cooking pasta.
- Set aside.
- Blanch the artichokes in boiling salted water for 3 minutes.
- If they are of the purple-lipped variety and no larger than a small plum, leave them whole, barely trimming their tender petals and scraping at their stems a bit.
- If they are somewhat larger, give the stems a scrape or two and slice them in half, lengthwise, removing any signs of a more than embryonic choke.
- In another saute pan, over a lively flame, warm 1/3 cup of olive oil and saute the artichokes, salting them generously, adding freshly cracked pepper and tossing them about for several minutes or until they are nearly tender.
- Transfer the artichokes and their accumulated juices to the saute pan with the peas and pancetta, sauteing the mixture for 2 or 3 minutes just to finish cooking the artichokes.
- In a small saucepan, warm 3 tablespoons of olive oil with the lemon zest and the garlic, taking care not to color the garlic.
- Set the scented oil aside.
- Add the blanched favas and the mint leaves to the saute pan, gently heating the components together and taking care not to let them reach a simmer.
- Remove from the heat, stir in the lemon/garlic-scented oil, and serve la vignarola as an antipasto or a first course, warm or at room temperature, with oven-toasted bread and cold white wine.
extravirgin olive oil, pancetta, yellow onion, spring peas, white wine, beans, salt, baby artichokes, freshly cracked pepper, lemon, garlic, mint leaves
Taken from www.epicurious.com/recipes/food/views/la-vignarola-391081 (may not work)