
This is a pretty simple dish where you can use any string pasta, be it angel hair, bucatini, spaghetti, and not just the linguini mentioned. It calls for three simple ingredients: scallops, lemon and basil. Think of it as a variation of pasta with white clams sauce. Except you’re using scallops instead of clams. If you can’t find small bay scallops, you can use large sea scallops, just cut them in half. So, whatcha waitin’ for? Go at it.
LINGUINI WITH LEMON,BASIL AND SCALLOPS
Ingredients:
1 pound small l bay scallops
½ cup olive oil
2 teaspoons grated lemon zest plus 1 cup juice (2 lemons)
1 clove garlic, peeled and minced
Salt an freshly ground black pepper to taste
1 tablespoon fresh chopped oregano or 1 teaspoon dried
1 cup grated Romano cheese ( or substitute Parmesan)
4 tablespoons unsalted butter, softened
1 pound linguine or other string pasta
¼ cup shredded fresh basil or 1 tablespoon dried
Instructions:
- Wash scallops under cold running water and pat dry with paper towels.
- In a small bowl, whisk together the oil, lemon zest and juice, garlic, salt and pepper. Stir in Romano cheese until thick and creamy.
- Melt 2 tablespoons butter in a large nonstick skillet over medium heat. Add scallops and cook in a single layer until scallops are firm, about 3 minutes. Transfer to a bowl and cover.
- Meanwhile, in a large pot, bring 4 quarts water to a boil. Add linguini and cook, stirring often until al dente or preferred tenderness. Drain pasta and return it to pot, but reserve ½ cup cooking water. Stir in olive oil mixture, scallop and their juices, remaining 2 tablespoons butter. Add basil and toss to mix. Add reserve cooking water as needed to adjust consistency. Season with added salt and pepper, if desired, and serve.
Yield: 4 servings.











Some recipes come out of necessity: see what you have available in the cupboard or fridge and then crate something. Sometimes it happens by accident: you recall an old recipe and tweek it.
This recipe is very similar to that Nuyorican favorite, Pernil, or roast pork shoulder. But it differs in terns if ingredients. It’s termed Pork Adobo or Adobo Pork, yet the adobo seasoning has a definite Asian motif—it includes soy sauce, rice vinegar, and scallions. It brings to mind more of a Filipino adobo. Also, the recipe calls for lots of garlic, which we love. Vampires don’t stand a chance against us. The final result is heavenly. My wife, who is a tough critic, states that this recipe is one of the best she’s ever encountered. That says a lot.
I love garlic, and I love shrimp. That should be obvious from the previous posts I’ve had on what we call Camarones con Ajo , or Garlic with Shrimp (10/2717 and 03/01/18). In both case it was shrimp cooked the Nuyorican way, with the usual condiments: garlic, salt, pepper, oregano, and a touch of brandy. This is a different garlic shrimp recipe. It comes from the Solera restaurant, now closed, that was on East 53rd Street in New York. The restaurant offered Iberian style cuisine, and tapas. among them Garlic Shrimp tapas.
I posted a stuff peppers (pimientos rellenos) dish back on 09/18/13. I got remarks back about the whole scenario of crushing peppercorns, garlic, oregano, salt and other ingredients in a mortar. What I was told was, Is there an easier way of doing it? I realize that not everyone is a purist when to comes to Nuyorican cooking. So, for those who want a simpler method of making pimientos rellenos, this is it.