Author: Lesley at Lola Rugula

Lamb Burger Sliders with Pesto and Feta Cheese

Lamb Burger Sliders with Pesto and Feta Cheese

I know, I know…another lamb recipe! This one is so easy and delicious that I believe it’s truly a recipe that will make you like lamb if you don’t already. I’ve shared numerous lamb recipes with you over the last few years, including my most 

Chilled Cucumber Soup

Chilled Cucumber Soup

This soup is an ode to summer gardens everywhere, much like my Golden Heirloom Gazpacho recipe and my Summer Garden Gazpacho recipe. This chilled cucumber soup celebrates the summer garden, full of fresh cucumbers, herbs, and heirloom tomatoes. My chilled cucumber soup is made with 

Sausage and Radicchio Fettuccine

Sausage and Radicchio Fettuccine

I always love when I can share a recipe that includes something from my garden and this is an easy pasta dish that can be customized in many ways, which I’ll share with you later.

This recipe involves green radicchio, which is a bitter green. If you’ve ever grown or want to know how to grow radicchio, it can be very easy or a little complicated depending on how you grow it. Of course, most people know radicchio as a gorgeous purple and white green that can be eaten either raw or cooked. To achieve that same radicchio in the garden involves blanching the heads, typically in cool weather, by bundling the heads together or covering them as they grow. If you don’t do these things, you end up with just a bitter, leafy green which is also delicious raw or cooked but completely different than the radicchio most of you know and love.

Here’s a shot of what my Rossa Di Treviso radicchio looks like when it hasn’t been blanched:

lola rugula sausage and radicchio pasta photo 2

Totally not what you think of when you think of radicchio, is it? But I seriously love it like this and I certainly love that it’s maintenance-free in the garden. This pasta dish highlights the bitterness of radicchio by balancing it with savory Italian sausage but also mellows its flavor out a bit with a quick blanching first, which I do via using the pasta water as the blanching water with a colander that fits into one of my large pans with a cover.

lola rugula sausage and radicchio pasta photo 1

Sausage and Radicchio Fettuccine Recipe

  • 5-6 cups roughly chopped green or red radicchio – (or bitter green of your choice)
  • 1 teaspoon kosher salt
  • 1 lb. dried fettuccine (or pasta of your choice, but make it a hearty one)
  • 4 tablespoons olive oil, separated in half
  • 1 lb Italian sausage, cut into 1 1/2-inch chunks
  • 1 shallot, thinly sliced
  • 2-3 large cloves garlic, chopped (I prefer my garlic a little chunky in this)
  • 1 teaspoon crushed red pepper flakes
  • 1 1/2 cups chicken stock
  • 1/2  teaspoon freshly ground black pepper
  • Freshly grated Parmesan cheese
Directions
  • Bring a large pot of water and salt to a boil – you’re going to use this water for blanching your radicchio and for cooking your pasta.
  • When water is boiling, place chopped radicchio greens into a colander and place over/into the water. If your colander sits inside the pan of water, cover pan and steam until all of the radicchio is wilted, about 1-2 minutes. If the colander sits over the pan, steam it, tossing with tongs every 20 seconds or so until all of it is wilted.
  • Drain the radicchio and set aside.
  • Add fettuccine to water and cook for 10 minutes or according to package directions.
  • In the meantime, in a large skillet over medium-high heat, heat 2 tablespoons of olive oil until shimmering.
  • Add sausage chunks and saute until brown, stirring occasionally, about 10 minutes.
  • Using a slotted spoon, remove sausage from pan to a plate and set aside.
  • Drain excess grease from pan but don’t scrape out the crusty bits.
  • Return pan to stove over medium heat and heat remaining 2 tablespoons of olive oil.
  • Add shallots and garlic and stir constantly until golden, about 3-5 minutes.
  • Add chicken stock and stir well, scraping up all of the crusty bits from the bottom of the pan until you have a golden sauce.
  • Return sausage and radicchio to the pan and toss well.
  • Using tongs, add fettuccine straight from the water to the sausage and radicchio mixture and toss the pasta in, coating it with the sauce.
  • Cook 1-2 minutes until pasta is cooked al dente.
  • Remove from heat and plate, topping with freshly ground black pepper and freshly grated Parmesan.

Enjoy!

This is honestly one of my favorite pasta recipes. I switch this up in a number of ways depending what I have on hand. I often substitute the radicchio for arugula or rapini (broccoli rabe) and the sausage can be substituted with ground turkey or chicken if you’re trying to keep things a little healthier.

lola rugula sausage and radicchio pasta pinterest photo 1

If you want to omit the meat altogether and make this a vegetarian pasta dish, you can omit the sausage and double the greens – trust me, it works! I love a spicy or bitter green with pasta.

I hope you all had a fabulous weekend and are well fed for the week ahead. Mangia!

How to Make Homemade Ghee

How to Make Homemade Ghee

I’ve always known ghee as this somewhat obscure, beautiful, rich fat that pairs beautifully with vegetables and roasted meats, along with being a delicious addition to a stir-fry or soup.  Nowadays, it seems to be everywhere and you can even buy it premade. Many people confuse 

Lamb and Couscous Lettuce Cups

Lamb and Couscous Lettuce Cups

What do you make with leftover lamb? If you’re me, you make these delicious butter lettuce cups stuffed with chunks of leftover grilled lamb kabobs and couscous salad and then serve them with tzatziki sauce. Genius, no? It’s rare that I don’t share an actual 

Sticky and Sweet Grilled Pork Shoulder

Sticky and Sweet Grilled Pork Shoulder

Summertime calls for grilling and this is a perfect recipe for it. I use a boneless butt roast for this, which I trim of excess fat and cut into smaller chunks for a faster cook time and more intense meat-to-sauce-to-grill flavor ratio. This is also great with chicken so don’t be afraid to mix up your meat. If you want to use a pork tenderloin you certainly can and the cooking time will be a lot shorter, I just tend to like the shoulder cut for this as it has more flavor and also tends to be more forgiving if the grill gets too hot.

This recipe is my ode to many a Chinese BBQ char siu recipe and has not just sticky and sweet to it, but a little bit of heat, also. It’s perfect when topped with fresh cilantro like I do here, and a side of broccoli rabe adds a bit of barely-bitter balance.

lola rugula sticky sweet grilled pork roast photo 1

Sticky and Sweet Grilled Pork Shoulder (aka Pork Butt) Recipe

  • 18 cloves of garlic, peeled and minced
  • 3/4 cup hoisin sauce
  • 1 tablespoon honey
  • 2 1/2 tablespoons fish sauce (I prefer Red Boat)
  • 2/3 cup white wine (I typically use a pinot grigio but any white wine worth drinking will work)
  • 2 tablespoons Thai chili garlic paste
  • 1/4 cup toasted sesame oil
  • 3 1/2 lb boneless pork butt roast (these smaller roasts are also often called half butt roasts – perfect for 2 people with some leftovers)
  • 2 tablespoons packed brown sugar
  • 1 tablespoon soy sauce
  • Fresh cilantro for serving
Directions
  • Trim pork roast of excess fat and cut into 4-5 equal-thickness pieces (or as equal as you can make them).
  • Whisk together the first 7 ingredients in a bowl.
  • Reserve 1 cup of the marinade and pour the remaining marinade into a gallon-size resealable bag.
  • Add pork roast pieces and toss pork well with the marinade, squeeze out excess air, and seal. Refrigerate for at least 6 hours or overnight.
  • Preheat gas grill to 350º, using just the front and back burners if you have that option.
  • Brush a sheet pan with oil.
  • Pull each piece of pork from the marinade, letting the excess marinade run off, and then place on pan.
  • Put the pan of pork on grill and replace grill cover.
  • Grill on the pan at 350º for about 25 minutes.
In the meantime, finish off the BBQ grilling sauce:
  • Place reserved marinade in a small saucepan.
  • Add brown sugar and soy sauce and stir well.
  • Heat to a healthy simmer, uncovered, and cook for 12-15 minutes until reduced by almost half. You want a nice, thickened, sticky glaze. If you have black vinegar and ever wanted to know what to do with it, add a tablespoon of it while this is reducing…it’s divine.
  • Remove from heat.
Back to the pork on the grill:
  • After the pork has cooked for 25 minutes, brush each piece generously with the barbecue sauce.
  • Flip pork and brush the other side with sauce.
  • Cook for about 10 more minutes and then, using tongs, place pork directly on the grill
  • Turn on the center burner (if an option)
  • Turn all burners on high – this is because you’re going to constantly be opening the grill lid and also to help char the sauce before the meat overcooks
  • Brush with BBQ sauce and flip every few minutes, being sure to move the pieces around if you have hot spots on your grill.
  • Cook until all pieces are well coated and charred; total cooking time is about 1 hour.  Thinner, smaller pieces are going to cook faster than your thicker, bigger pieces so keep on eye on the thin ones and remove them earlier if needed. (if using pork shoulder like I do here, the internal temp should be around 170º but if using pork loin, only cook to 150º)
  • Remove from heat.
  • Let pork rest about 10 minutes, slice, sprinkle with fresh cilantro and serve.

lola rugula sticky sweet grilled pork roast pinterest photo

See? Cutting up the pork roast makes quick time of this and you have lots of pieces covered in sticky, sweet barbecue sauce. This is only part of the pork in the photo, by the way…there were 3 more pieces where that came from. 🙂 Since it’s just the two of us, this grilled pork roast makes for some mean and much-loved leftovers.

The cilantro adds a nice fresh flavor to this but if you don’t like cilantro (or don’t have it on hand), fresh parsley works just as well.

Now you know how to make a sticky sweet glazed pork butt roast on the grill in no time at all!

Oh, and were you wondering how to cook broccoli rabe, also known as rapini? I grow this in my garden every year as, sadly, it’s almost impossible to find in the sticks where I now reside. It’s one of my favorite greens, due to its slight bitterness and deep, green flavor. (If green has a flavor, it’s definitely broccoli rabe)

If the broccoli rabe has thick stems and large leaves, which means it’s mature, it’s best to blanch it briefly in boiling water for a minute or two and then drain it well. Then just saute it up with some olive oil and garlic, with a little salt and pepper thrown in. The batch pictured here was blanched for 2 minutes, drained well, then placed in a foil packet and thrown on the grill for about 15 minutes. You want the stems to be cooked but not so overly-cooked that they’re mushy.

I hope you’ll try this pork roast – and the broccoli rabe – while the weather is warm and the grill is hot.

Enjoy!

Couscous Salad with Citrus Dressing

Couscous Salad with Citrus Dressing

Want a colorful, healthy salad that’s fast and easy? This is it. This will be one of your easy potluck recipes, one of your “what to take to a cookout” recipes, one of your “holiday salad recipes”, and definitely one of your overall go-to easy