20 Questions with Sara
Sara Hamilton is my first born and she had little choice but to be raised on the kitchen counter. Fortunately she took to it like a baby to bathwater. In her youth, her favorite T-shirt was the Life is Good PB&J, so it’s no surprise what she claims as her childhood comfort food. I have the best memories of Sara’s cooking exploits including the time she decided to make homemade pop tarts late one night in middle school. In high school she would kick us out of the kitchen to host her friends for big dinners or cake pop parties. I can still hear the laughter!
When Sara left home for college, she glanced at the stacks of cookbooks in the kitchen and said, ‘I’m going to miss you!’ She wrote about turning her dorm room into a dinner party and worked in a campus after hours cafe, upgrading the standard grilled cheese. A native of West Virginia, Sara also wrote about the official state food the pepperoni roll describing it as infinitely greater than the sum of its parts. Now that we’ve all moved away from West Virginia, it’s a joy to make pepperoni rolls in our home kitchen! Just as we left for Louisiana, Sara graduated from college, moved to New York then London and is now back in New York where the counter space is premium.
What’s your 20 minute recipe? Noodle Bowls with Broccoli and a creamy sesame sauce.
What’s your favorite city? London. Or New Orleans. Two great cities
What’s your favorite restaurant in your current city? That’s so hard! Most recently I went to Win Son, delicious Taiwanese food. It is sooooo good! I had a noodle bowl and a deep fried scallion pancake filled with beef tartare.
Treasured find in the back of your fridge? Harissa. I found some in the back of my fridge the other day and I put it on a bagel with bacon, egg and cheese. It was so good!
Who taught you to cook? YOU! You taught me how to cook! Thank you!
What’s your go-to dish for company? Fancy pasta. A favorite is all’Amatriciana which can even be a 20 minute recipe so you can make it for friends on a weeknight.
What’s on your cooking playlist? Lately I’ve been listening to a lot of Bad Bunny and Remi Wolf.
Coffee, tea, or Kombucha? COFFEE, though I do love tea!
Most stained cookbook? Salt Fat Acid Heat.
Indispensable kitchen tool? Sharp knife or rubber scraper.
Staple childhood comfort food? Peanut butter and jelly, and grilled peanut butter and jelly for special occasions.
Who would you most like to share a meal with? past, present or fictional? Nina Compton. I love her food and it would be really cool to meet her!
Best thing you’ve ever eaten in an airport? I had some really good Turkish ice cream at the airport in Istanbul. It’s not like regular ice cream, it’s almost chewy. It’s really good.
Date night—at home? or out? Cook at home! Definitely! Listen to some music, drink some wine.
Ideal grilled cheese? Ruth Reichl’s grilled cheese. Can we make it?!
How do you like your toast? Very well toasted with lots of butter and salt.
Favorite pizza topping? Pepperoni, weirdly. Even though that is boring. Or caramelized onions.
Where would you want to take a cooking class? Ballymaloe Cooking School in Ireland.
What’s your Counter Intelligence cooking tip? Salt your pasta water really well.
Three things next to your stove? Salt, olive oil…That’s all that will fit on the counter.
Noodle Bowl with Sesame Dressing
Sara loves this with soba noodles. We’ve made it with ‘what’s in the pantry’ and it’s delicious with any type of cooked al dente long pasta. Couple of keys: Add the broccoli when there’s 4 minutes left on your timer, depending on cooking time for your desired noodle type; and don’t forget to save some pasta cooking water
8 ounces soba or other long noodle
small bunch of broccoli cut into florets
1 cup thin sliced red bell pepper
handful of sliced green onion
handful of rough chopped cilantro
1/4 cup tahini
3 tablespoons soy sauce
2 tablespoons rice vinegar
a few drops of sesame oil, to taste
pinch or so of crushed red pepper flakes
lime wedges for serving
BRING a large pot of generously salted water to a boil and cook the noodles according to package directions for al dente. Add the broccoli for the final 4 minutes of cooking time (Angel hair cooks so quick so you actually start the broccoli then add the noodles).
DRAIN the noodles and broccoli, reserving a mugful of cooking water. Transfer to a large serving bowl or back into your pot to toss with the dressing.
MAKE the dressing while the noodles are cooking. In a small bowl, whisk together the tahini, soy sauce, rice vinegar, sesame oil and crushed red pepper flakes.
TOSS the noodles with the dressing, red bell pepper, green onion, and cilantro.
SERVE warm or at room temp with lime wedges and chopsticks if you like.