Pizzoccheri della Valtellina!
PIZZOCCHERI DELLA VALTELLINA TIME
The pasta’s origin lies in Valtellina, a part of the Lombardy region in northern Italy and while some people may immediately be intimidated by this recipe’s amount of butter and cheese, don’t be, it’s worth every bit of it: love at first sight

A word on the used ingredients. The traditional recipe calls for buckwheat pasta, which provides a completely different mouth feel than the conventional pasta we normally use and therefor is key for this dish. It wasn’t easy to track down , but found a package of Pizzoccheri!If push had come to shove, with a little extra effort, I would have probably tried this recipe by Giorgio Locatelli (famous North Italian Tv Star Chef) for homemade buckwheat pasta.

Cheese-wise there is a broader repertoire suitable for this pasta dish, most recipes ask for a mix of grated Bitto, Fontina, Parmesan or mountain cheese, key however, is that the cheese melts quite easily under the hot butter in the final step. The dish is best presented in a huge serving bowl, from which everyone helps themselves, adding to the dish’s character of a rustic cottage meal.

- In a small pan, melt the butter together with the cloves of garlic and the sage leaves. Keep on low heat while continuing with the next steps. The butter will have plenty of time to simmer and get infused with garlic and sage, but keep an eye on it, to avoid burning it (it should not get dark!). Crush or slice the cloves if you’re in for an extra garlic kick.
- Meanwhile turn to the other ingredients: Wash, peel and cube (about thumb size) the two raw potatoes, wash the chard and grate the cheese (I used Parmegiano Reggiano and Fontina).
- Bring a large pot of water to a boil and add a generous pinch of salt. The only possibly tricky thing about this recipe is the cooking process as such, as it is done in one single pot. Depending on the ingredients you use (fresh pasta versus dried pasta, chard versus baby chard versus savoy cabbage, big potato cubes versus thin slices) you should spend a thought or two about the order you add them to the boiling water. In the end, everything should be cooked to the point without any ingredient overcooked.
- Since it wasn’t my first Pizzoccheri attempt, I already knew that the buckwheat pasta takes a bit longer (15 to 17 minutes) than the packaging instruction suggests (12 to 15 minutes). So I started off by adding the potato cubes to the boiling water, shortly followed by the pasta itself. Occasionally stirring, I waited until the pasta was almost done before I threw inthe chard – baby chard is so delicate, it only needs to be cooked a very short amount of time (1 to 2 minutes).
- Drain the cooked vegetables and pasta and layer them with the mixed grated cheese in a huge serving bowl, ending with a layer of sprinkled cheese.
- Discard the garlic and sage from the hot butter and – now this is my favorite part – pour this sinfully rich concoction over the layers and see everything melt together under the butter’s heat.
- Add some freshly ground black pepper and a pinch of freshly ground nutmeg (if desired) – serve immediately and get some comfort!

Ingredients (serves 3-4 comfort seekers):
125g butter
5 large leaves of fresh sage
2 cloves of garlic, peeled
2 mid-sized potatoes, peeled, cut in cubes (~thumb size)
300g Pizzoccheri (dried buckwheat pasta)
2 handful of baby chard, washed (or regular chard, savoy cabbage)
200-250g freshly grated cheese, mix 2 different ones (Bitto, Fontina, Parmesan or mountain cheese)
sea salt and freshly ground black pepper
optional: a pinch of freshly ground nutmeg