Spinach and Paprika Funghini Arrabbiata | Funghini agli Spinaci e Paprica all’Arrabbiata

Our pals at Rio Vista Olives sent us the incredible oil that we cook with in this post. Like everything that we recommend on our blog, we use and love their products, and hope that you will too!

The Story

Little Al and I were playing around with cookie cutters, making a lot of mess and noise, when we came up with this week’s shape. It’s kind of close to funghini pasta, so that’s what we’re calling it. We wanted to pair it with a rich, spicy arrabbiata sauce, and this shape allowed us to work in some two-tone laminated goodness of spinach and paprika doughs: one flavour to contrast with the sugo and one to complement. These fun guys were the result. And for something a little different, we separately fried the salami and basil for the sauce, serving it crumbled and stirred through. Nothing too tricky or too fancy, but a little bit interesting and particularly delicious!

The Pasta

If you remember our two-tone lemon zest and squid ink pasta, then this is basically the same process. We recommend that you initially blitz each dough’s ingredients together in a food processor to properly combine everything (and achieve a smooth, uniform colour), before giving it the usual 10 minutes of kneading and 30 of resting. You can of course mix it up by hand in an old flour well, but it might take you longer and the colour may not be as even in the final dough.

flour well with eggs oil and paprika on a chopping board
half balls of paprika and spinach pasta doughs

Then step it through your pasta machine, before laying one pasta on top of the other and passing them back through to laminate together.

To form the funghini, simply use a round cookie cutter to stamp out circles of pasta, before pinching two opposite edges together, and bringing the subsequently formed inner folds together to meet.

close up of two tone laminate spinach and paprika funghini pasta on a chopping board

The sauce is even easier. Just fry the basil leaves until bright green and the sopressa until crispy. Then remove them from the pan, drain, and use the remaining oil to fry up the garlic, adding the chilli flakes shortly before the passata, sugar, and salt. Give it 10-15 minutes on the stove, and you’re good to go.

Cook the pasta in lightly salted water, until al dente, and then drain (retaining half a cup of cooking water in case the sauce needs it). Toss the pasta directly into the frypan with the arrabbiata, and stir through crumbled basil leaves and sopressa before serving. That’s it!

close up of two tone laminate spinach and paprika funghini pasta with arrabbiata sauce and fried basil leaves in a bowl

Give it a go, and don’t be afraid to try out other flavouring and colouring ingredients in your pasta doughs. Buon appetito!

– Al & Al.

two tone laminate spinach and paprika funghini pasta with arrabbiata sauce and fried basil leaves in a bowl

Spinach and Paprika Funghini Arrabbiata

This two-tone pasta of spinach and paprika doughs, served with a smooth tomato and chilli sauce, is quick to make and packed full of flavour.
Prep Time: 40 minutes
Cook Time: 20 minutes
Resting Time: 30 minutes
Total Time: 1 hour 30 minutes
Course: Main Course
Cuisine: Italian
Keyword: arrabbiata, chilli, funghini, laminated pasta, Pasta, salami, sopressa, two-tone
Servings: 2
Calories: 915kcal

Equipment

  • Food processor
  • Air tight container for resting
  • Pasta roller and cutter (if not using a rolling pin and knife)
  • Frypan

Ingredients

Pasta

  • 200 g 00 flour
  • 100 g light rye flour
  • 2 eggs
  • 40 g chopped spinach
  • 3 tsps paprika + 1 tbsp water
  • 2 tsps olive oil extra virgin (we used Rio Vista Olives' Single Variety Koroneiki)

Sauce

  • 2 tbsp olive oil extra virgin (we used Rio Vista Olives' Single Variety Koroneiki)
  • handful basil leaves
  • 4 slices extra hot sopressa
  • 1 tbsp dried red chilli flakes
  • 6 cloves garlic smashed
  • 400 ml passata
  • pinch sugar
  • salt to season

Instructions

  • Place half of the 00 and light rye flours into a food processor, with 1 egg, the spinach, and 1 tsp of extra virgin olive oil. Process until it comes together into a ball, 40-60 seconds. If it doesn't come together, add a small amount of water, 1 tsp at a time; if it's too sticky, add a small amount of flour.
    close up of paprika chopped spinach and olive oil
  • Remove the dough from the food processor and knead vigorously for 7-10 minutes, before sealing in an airtight container and resting for 30 minutes, away from heat or direct sunlight.
  • Place the remaining pasta ingredients into the food processor, and repeat steps 1-2.
  • While the doughs rest, prepare the sauce. Heat 2 tbsp of extra virgin in a medium sized frypan, on medium-high heat, and then carefully fry the basil leaves; remove as soon as they turn a bright green, as little as 20 seconds. Transfer to drain on paper towels.
  • Similarly fry the sopressa in the same oil, until it begins to darken and most of the fat has rendered out, leaving it crispy. This may take up to 1 minute. Transfer to paper towels.
    close up of fried basil leaves garlic chilli and fried sopressa on a chopping board
  • Lower the heat to medium, and fry the garlic for 2-3 minutes until it begins to brown. Add the chilli flakes, and then the passata. Sprinkle in a pinch of sugar and salt and then cook, stirring frequently, for 10 minutes.
  • Once the dough has rested, cut each ball of dough into 2 even pieces, and then roll one at a time through the widest setting on the pasta machine a few times, folding the dough over itself in between passes.
    half balls of paprika and spinach pasta doughs
  • Gradually step each sheet of pasta through the machine thicknesses to a medium-thin setting of 6, and then lay one sheet of each type on a sheet of the other. Run your hands gently over the sheets to remove air bubbles or wrinkles.
  • To laminate, open the machine back up by 2-3 thickness settings, and then pass the paired sheets through, stepping incrementally back up to a setting of 5.
  • Lay the sheets out flat on a lightly floured surface, and use a round cookie cutter to stamp out circular pieces of pasta. Try to keep as little distance between each cut as possible, to maximise the amount of pasta made from each sheet. Be sure to collect up and seal the offcuts as you go, as they can easily be recombined into a sheet or two themselves, and quickly turned into a bit of bonus pasta.
    close up of two sheets of laminated paprika and spinach pasta on a chopping board with circles cut out of it
  • To form our little funghini, fold each circle in half and pinch lightly in the middle of the meeting edges. Then fold it in half again by bringing the outer corners together, and gently pinch the inner walls (not the corners) together to complete.
    close up of two tone laminate spinach and paprika funghini pasta on a chopping board
  • Transfer to lightly floured baking paper lined trays and refrigerate uncovered for up to one week.
  • To serve with our arrabbiata sauce, cook in boiling lightly salted water for 2-3 minutes or until just al dente (no white dough visible when pasta is cut into). Retain half a cup of cooking water before draining and tossing the pasta through the sauce in the frypan, crumbling in the sopressa and basil leaves as you go. If necessary for proper emulsification, add a little pasta water in as you stir.
    close up of two tone laminate spinach and paprika funghini pasta with arrabbiata sauce and fried basil leaves in a bowl

Nutrition

Calories: 915kcal | Carbohydrates: 128.7g | Protein: 32.3g | Fat: 31.1g | Saturated Fat: 6g | Cholesterol: 181mg | Sodium: 345mg | Potassium: 423mg | Fiber: 16.7g | Sugar: 1.2g | Calcium: 101mg | Iron: 8mg
Made this recipe? We’d love to see!Mention @pastaetal or tag #pastaetal!

Related Posts

Striped Ricotta Fagottini with Garlic and Fennel Confit Purée

Striped Ricotta Fagottini with Garlic and Fennel Confit Purée

Working on our book over this last year or so, I’ve focused on pairing more complicated pasta with simpler sauces, and vice versa. It just allows you to save a little time on one element, and use that to create something special with another.

So the dough and pasta is the focus here, although the confit purée is deceptively impressive for its simplicity – you certainly don’t have to sacrifice flavour to save time! This is our Striped Ricotta Fagottini with Garlic and Fennel Confit Purée.

Tomato Day 2023

Tomato Day 2023

Tomato Day this year only happened because I’m notoriously bad at reading and responding to messages. In the space of 24 hours we somehow pulled it all together. My uncle was immediately up for the challenge, and had a guy lined up by the end of the day with probably the last Romas in Australia. My mum grabbed some regular tomatoes and came straight around from work so that we could use them to clean out the machine, my cousin made early-morning plans to turn up with her baby and mum in tow, my brother drove 2.5 hours in the dark in a breaking down car, and my startled father-in-law, by chance visiting from Sydney, found himself swept up in the unstoppable momentum of Tomato Day 2023.



2 thoughts on “Spinach and Paprika Funghini Arrabbiata | Funghini agli Spinaci e Paprica all’Arrabbiata”

5 from 2 votes (1 rating without comment)

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Recipe Rating





As a subscriber to our mailing list, you'll be the first to know when a new post is up, and we'll even send you the occasional bit of exclusive content directly to your inbox!

Thank you! Please check your inbox to confirm your subscription.

Pin It on Pinterest

Share This