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Recipe: Harrods' Wild Mushroom Papparadelle
By ZELDA PANDE
August 04, 2022 12:24 IST

London is probably the capital of the restaurant world, along with Paris, but I was surprised that I had to pound the streets of fancy Mayfair and adjoining Oxford Street and Bond Street looking for a place still serving dinner on a Saturday at 9 pm.

Finally I settled on a not-so-so-expensive Italian restaurant still welcoming customers past nine on a rainy night. My bill was close to £20 and the pasta was way below par and they were so miserly with the Parmesan, dishing out little kanjus pinches.

My perpetual hankering for eating a special tasting pasta in London remained unfulfilled.

So the next day I decided to try to find some pasta through a more tried-and-tested route and headed to Knightsbridge to the popular Pasta Evangelists counter at Harrods.

It was summer and the Summer After Two Years of COVID-19 and travel-starved tourists packed Harrods' food hall browsing for the their fave variety of baklava or caviar or creme brulee or macarons or truffles or...

This food hall is a Good Food paradise where not only do you find the delectable you had been dreaming about all your life, but five varieties of it and it is often not so unaffordable as you would expect.

Harrods' food hall doesn't permit you to eat inside and you pack your lunch and head to the open air food court outside, or if you are desperate, like some I saw, you sit on the curb.

I chose cooked-in-front-of-you buttery papparadelle teamed with a wild mushroom sauce (£10.50 totally) topped with shavings of fresh Parmesan cheese and some excellent creme brulee for dessert and had it packed.

It was a gloriously sunny but not overwarm early July day and I took my loot and headed to Hyde Park and had a heavenly afternoon to remember.

This recipe is a close approximation of the pasta I ate that day.

Photograph: Zelda Pande

Harrods' Wild Mushroom Papparadelle

Serves: 2-3

Method

Note: Meat lovers may like to substitute the mushroom with 200 gm curry-sized pieces of lamb or mutton that should be sauteed like the mushroom was in this recipe, till it browns evenly on the outside.

The meat will need to cook eventually with the onions and vegetables, 2 cups water and, if you prefer, ½ cup red wine for a long time to form a sauce, 5-8 whistles over medium heat in a pressure cooker till well done.

This pasta main course also pairs well with a preceding course of cold meats and bread, or a salad. Pasta is usually served as a course by itself.

If unable to locate papparadelle pasta, use tagliatelle pasta instead, which is easily available online or in grocery stores.

Al dente means 'to the tooth' or pasta that has a bite to it. Packets of pasta usually have their cooking time listed on them. To make a pasta al dente, subtract one minute or 1½ minutes from the regular cooking time.

This is a fairly rich pasta, but to make it slightly healthier opt for a whole wheat pasta, use only extra virgin olive oil instead of butter and skip the cream. And go slow on the cheese.

For a vegan version, use vegan cheese, skip the cream and substitute the milk with almond milk, the butter with cashew butter.

For a Jain version skip the garlic and substitute the onions with the chopped greens of leeks.

ZELDA PANDE
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