20 Questions with Cosima
Half a dozen women convened on the phone for Molly O’Neill’s Cook N Scribble, an online food writing workshop. A chime announced someone new on the line. “HI! It’s Molly! Did everyone get their pieces done?” For this inaugural call, the assignment was a taste memory, one single taste. A voice said, “this is Cosima” (the ‘s’ sounding like a soft ‘z’) and she read her piece, describing a melon she ate in Italy every summer when she visited her relatives, honey sweet and not available in any grocery store in the U.S.
When the six-week session ended, Molly hosted an in-person food media bootcamp and I cleared my calendar to attend. Thrilled to meet my idol, I wasn’t sure who else would be there. It was the phone calls coming to life! Cosima Amelang, Judy Allen, Kim Dolan, Cathy Branciaroli and me. Molly ushered us around her upstate New York town, visiting the who’s who of farmers, beekeepers and potters. Then the experts arrived at Molly’s barn-turned-kitchen to teach us photography, food styling, recipe formatting and cooking with the season’s bounty. it was a blissful weekend for food lovers and aspiring bloggers. Cosima and I dream about perpetuating the writing, gathering and inimitable networking that Molly initiated.
Visit her blog for more of Cosima in the kitchen and beyond.
What’s your 20 minute recipe? My go-to is sort of spaghetti with pantry sauce. Extra virgin olive oil, smashed garlic, red pepper flakes, capers, canned tomatoes/crushed or whatever I have in the pantry. Cook that super simple sauce and boil the spaghetti, that’s my kind of comfort food when I don’t want to think. It hits the spot! I don’t even strain it, just pick it up with a pasta fork with some of that salty water clinging to the spaghetti and put it over in the sauce. Maybe if I have some parsley I’ll put it on top. If you like cheese and you have it, grate some Pecorino or Parmigiano.
What’s your favorite city? This is so hard! I’m gonna say Montreal. I went to McGill for four years. Those were some of the best years. If Minneapolis and Paris had a baby, it would be Montreal. It was cool before other places became cool. Tons of good music and tons of good bars. I love the history of the city! It’s very diverse, all the layers upon layers. It’s a great three day weekend spot.
What’s your favorite restaurant in your current city? These are all hard! That’s tricky, I don’t know if I can pick a favorite. I haven’t even gotten takeout at all lately except for this one place. Lucy in Silver Spring, Maryland. I love Ethiopian food! I love how tasty it is and no nonsense. I got the vegetarian combination because I can’t decide on just one thing. It is so good! They make this really fresh salad with tomato, cucumber, onion and jalapeno. It packs really well for takeout. I miss going in person, too.
Treasured find in the back of your fridge? Laughing! Good question! Capers are definitely one of them, and miso. Anchovy, miso and capers. I’m more of a salty girl than a sweet girl.
Who taught you to cook? My mom for sure. You cannot take the Italian out of her. She’s a good effortless cook. Oh and the relatives in Italy! Growing up we went every year to see my grandpa. A lot of my food memories are attached to him. A lot of my love of food comes from him. It was really great to have a male presence in the kitchen. His gnocchi alla bava (translates to ‘drool gnocchi’) with tomato sauce and Fontina cheese!
Surf? or Turf? SURF! I do love blue crabs, I’m from Maryland. I also love octopus and squid, all that fun stuff.
What’s on your cooking playlist? I love listening to soul music. The Staple Singers, Otis Redding. I just see where Spotify takes me.
Coffee, tea, or Kombucha? I definitely need a coffee to get started in the morning. I make an espresso on the stove in my Moka pot.
Date night—at home? or out? Depends. Half and half.
Most stained cookbook? The Silver Spoon, one of the Phaidon books. It’s one of the Italian bibles, sort of. The recipes are written in paragraph form. And do you remember Ian Knauer who we met at Molly’s? I LOVE his cookbook The Farm.
Indispensable kitchen tool? My big skillets, I have a big All Clad nonstick and a cast iron. I would be lost without them.
Staple childhood comfort food? Gnocchi, with peas, tomato sauce and Fontina cheese.
What’s your go-to dish for company? Depends on the season. Risotto is a fun one. It’s special and luxurious. You can do it while your guests are there having a glass of wine. Serve it with a nice salad or fresh vegetable side.
Who would you most like to share a meal with? past, present or fictional? There’s so many people! I’ll say Padma Lakshmi. I’d love to just chat with her. Have you seen her new show Taste the Nation? It’s fascinating!
Best thing you’ve ever eaten in an airport? You know what I eat at airports? Caesar salad. I crave something healthy when I travel and it’s not really healthy food, but it makes me feel like I’m being healthy.
Ideal grilled cheese? Very simple. Sourdough with Gruyere. I don’t want much in it and then I love to dunk it in tomato soup.
Favorite pizza topping? Mozzarella. The fresh fresh kind. It’s so good!
Where would you want to take a cooking class? I would love to learn more about Japanese knife skills, so maybe I’ll say Tokyo. Everything is so well executed and intentional.
What’s your Counter Intelligence cooking tip? Maybe people know this already? I don’t really drain my pasta. I don’t use a colander with pasta at all. I have a horrible memory and I never remember to save this bit of pasta water you need to thin out your sauce. I just lift the pasta out and the water is clinging to the noodles when I add them to the sauce.
Three things next to your stove? A hand painted fish plate from Italy, it’s my spoon rest. I have a catch all vase thing for all my utensils and I have a quartet of olive oil, balsamic vinegar and salt and pepper.
Cosima’s Super Simple Spaghetti with Pantry Sauce
A recipe in paragraph form. Freestyle for your taste and number of diners.
Boil a pot of salty water for your spaghetti. Heat some good olive oil in a skillet large enough to hold the sauce and cooked spaghetti. Add a couple of anchovies, as many smashed fresh garlic cloves and red pepper flakes as you like. When the garlic is just golden, stir in some canned tomatoes and a spoonful or so of drained capers. Let this sauce simmer enthusiastically while the spaghetti cooks to al dente. Lift the cooked noodles from the pot with some of the salty water still clinging and add to the sauce. Give it a nice stir and serve with chopped fresh Italian parsley and/or fresh grated Pecorino Romano or Parmigiano Reggiano.