Pasta e fa*gioli: The Authentic Recipe (2024)

Pasta e fa*gioli, or pasta and beans, which goes by the amusing nickname ‘pasta fazool‘ in Italian-American slang, is one of the most internationally famous dishes in the entire Italian repertoire. It is a victim of its own success, however, too often made badly—very badly—which is why I would never order this dish in a restaurant outside Italy. The real thing, however, is not at all hard to make at home. In fact, it is a great standby for weeknights where you don’t have much time and need to whip up something quickly. And the results are really wonderful on a cold winter night.

There are lots of authentic variations on the dish—the recipe varies from area to area and, I would dare say, from family to family—but here is the way I like to make it:

Ingredients

For 4-6 servings

  • 100g (4 oz.) pancetta
  • 2 or 3 garlic cloves, slightly crushed
  • A sprig of fresh rosemary
  • A peperoncino (optional)
  • Olive Oil
  • 3-4 canned tomatoes, plus a bit of juice
  • 500g (1 lb.) (or one large can) cannellini beans, pre-boiled dried or canned, drained
  • Water or homemade broth
  • 500g (1 lb.) ditali or other soup pasta (see Notes), parboiled
  • Salt and pepper, to taste
  • Grated pecorino cheese

Directions

If pre-boiling the beans, pre-soak them overnight in abundant water. Simmer them the next day until tender, about an hour or so depending on how old your beans are, seasoning with salt towards the end of cooking. (If you like, you can add a garlic clove and a sprig of parsley.)

Fry the pancetta, cut up into cubes or lardons, in olive oil until just beginning to brown, then add the garlic cloves and rosemary. (You can also add a peperoncino at this point if you like some spice.)

When you start to smell the garlic and rosemary, add the canned tomatoes, which you should crush in your hands as you add them to the pot. Simmer until the tomatoes have separated from the oil.

Then add your cannellini beans, allow them to simmer for a minute or two to insaporire (absorb the flavors of the tomato and other ingredients) and then add water (or broth) and partially cooked pasta (see below). The amount of liquid depends on how ‘soupy’ you like your pasta e fa*gioli, but I would add at least enough to cover the ingredients by 5cm/2in, as the pasta will absorb quite a bit.

Continue simmering, squashing some of the beans against the side of the pot so that they ‘melt’ into the liquid and thicken it, until the pasta is fully cooked. Add more liquid if things begin to dry out.

I like to mix in a bit of grated pecorino cheese to enrich the soup before serving. Serve topped with you choice of additional grated cheese, freshly ground pepper and/or un filo d’olio.

Notes on Pasta e fa*gioli

Cannellini are the classic choice for pasta e fa*gioli, but you can use other kinds of beansif you like. In fact, just about any legume could do, although the most typical alternatives would be pintos or cranberry beans. By the way, canned beans are perfectly acceptable, but do remember to drain and wash them well before adding them to the pot. The canning liquid would otherwise give the dish an ‘off’, artificial taste. One legume that I would not try this way are peas; their flavor is too delicate to stand up to such a robust, rustic treatment. Try instead this delicate pasta e piselli dish with just onions, parsley and broth.

And, of course, the choice of pasta can vary, although small, stubby pastas work best. I personally like ditali (as shown above) but small shells or ‘elbows’ would work well. In Italy, it is very common to use the odds and ends of different pastas you have around, called pasta mista or pasta spezzata. It’s a great way to use up those last few pieces of pasta at the bottom of the box. Collect them in a towel or bag, then smash them with meat pounder or the back of a skillet until they’re all about the same small size.

Some recipes call for adding the pasta directly to the soup pot without pre-cooking them. If you do that, however, be careful; I find that the pasta inevitably sticks to the bottom of the pot and can burn. And be sure to add quite a bit extra water as the pasta will absorb it readily as it cooks.

The variations are (almost) endless

There are nearly endlessvariationsfor pasta e fa*gioli, beginning with the proportions. You can add more or less of each ingredient according to taste. This is why measurements for this thing are almost senseless, except as a starting point. The dish can be made in bianco, or entirely without tomato. Other recipes call for just one or two tomatoes for color, others add lots of tomato.

If you prefer a vegetarian dish, you can omit the pancetta, which I often do. And if you wish to ‘veganize’ it, don’t use cheese either. Or you can use crumbed sausage meat instead of the pancetta. Salt pork also works well, as does something called ‘country ham’. Regular cooked ham, however, does not give you the right flavor for this dish, IMHO. You can make the soup even meatier by using broth. Personally, I find that with all the other flavors going on, water is not only acceptable but preferable. If you’ve made the beans yourself, do use the cooking water from the beans, which have wonderful flavor.

You can make a milder, more ‘refined’ version of this dish by starting off with a flavoring base of onion, carrot and celery rather than garlic, rosemary and red pepper. In this case, you could also substitute parmesan for the pecorino. Personally, I prefer this heartier, earthier version.

But…

But even if this dish can be highly personalized, there are some limits beyond which you are killing the ‘spirit’ of the dish and, as I mentioned, this soup is all too often subject to culinary abuse abroad. An authentic pasta e fa*gioli should not be brothy, as you will often see when this and other pasta and legume dishes (including minestrone) are made outside Italy. Rather, you should end up with a thick soup that is almost a stew. Ignore recipes that use this soup as a dumping ground for all sorts of extraneous dried herbs or overwhelm the other flavors with too much tomato. For example,this recipefor pasta e fa*gioli, supposedly from the Olive Garden restaurant chain, is a true monstrosity, more of a bad chili than an Italian soup.

Print

Yum

Pasta e fa*gioli: The Authentic Recipe

Total Time: 45 minutes

Yield: Serves 4-6

Ingredients

  • 100g (4 oz.) pancetta
  • 2 or 3 garlic cloves, slightly crushed
  • A sprig of fresh rosemary
  • A peperoncino (optional)
  • Olive Oil
  • 3-4 canned tomatoes, plus a bit of juice
  • 500g (1 lb.) (or one large can) cannellini beans, pre-boiled or canned, drained
  • Water or homemade broth
  • 500g (1 lb.) ditali or other soup pasta (see Notes), parboiled
  • Salt and pepper, to taste
  • Grated pecorino cheese

Directions

  1. If pre-boiling the beans, pre-soak them overnight in abundant water. Simmer them the next day until tender, about an hour or so depending on how old your beans are, seasoning with salt towards the end of cooking. (If you like, you can add a garlic clove and a sprig of parsley.)
  2. Fry the pancetta, cut up into cubes or lardons, in olive oil until just beginning to brown, then add the garlic cloves and rosemary. (You can also add a peperoncino at this point if you like some spice.)
  3. Just when you start to smell the garlic and rosemary, add the canned tomatoes, which you should crush in your hands as you add them to the pot. (I just add one or two plus a little juice, just enough to lightly color the soup and add a little flavor) and simmer until the tomatoes have separated from the oil.
  4. Then add your cannellini beans, allow them to simmer for a minute or two to insaporire (absorb the flavors of the tomato and other ingredients) and then add water (or broth) and partially cooked pasta (see below).
  5. Continue simmering, squashing some of the beans against the side of the pot so that they 'melt' into the liquid and thicken it, until the pasta is fully cooked.
  6. I like to mix in a bit of grated pecorino cheese to enrich the soup before serving. Serve topped with you choice of additional grated cheese, freshly ground pepper and/or un filo d'olio.

Schema/Recipe SEO Data Markup by Yummly Rich Recipes

https://memoriediangelina.com/2013/01/10/pasta-e-fa*gioli/

(c) Frank Fariello

Pasta e fa*gioli: The Authentic Recipe (1)

Related

And you might also like...

Minestrone alla genoveseWedding SoupSalsicce e fa*gioli (Sausage and Beans)Farinata di cavolo nero (Tuscan Kale and Polenta Soup)Lampi e tuoni (Neapolitan Style Pasta and Chickpeas)Pasta e patate (Pasta and Potatoes)Cicoria e fa*gioli (Chicory and Beans)Zuppa alla canavesana (Piedmontese Bread and Cabbage Soup)fa*gioli e tonno (White Bean and Tuna Salad)Le virtù (Abruzzese “Seven Virtues” Minestrone)Zuppa di orzo (Italian Barley Soup)

Pasta e fa*gioli: The Authentic Recipe (2024)

FAQs

Did Olive Garden discontinue pasta fa*gioli? ›

Love the Olive Garden. Never disappoint!! fa*gioli has been taken off the menu.

What does fa*gioli mean in Italian? ›

Beans! In Italian, beans are called fa*gioli for soup's sake. My mother loves bean soups and their cousin minestrone – vegetable soups that can also contain beans.

What is pasta e fa*gioli soup made of? ›

Pasta e fa*gioli, sometimes shortened to pasta fa*gioli (or pasta fazool if you're a Sopranos fan), is a classic Italian soup. Its name literally translates to “pasta and beans,” and it consists of tiny pasta, creamy beans, and tender vegetables in a fragrant tomato broth.

What is the difference between pasta fa*gioli and pasta fazool? ›

To sum it up, pasta e fa*gioli feels more like a vegetable and bean soup, whereas the Italian American pasta fazool created by southern Italian immigrants features a "broth" that's more like a marinara sauce (made with crushed tomatoes, olive oil, garlic, onion, and seasonings), along with ample helpings of white beans ...

What is the most popular soup at Olive Garden? ›

Zuppa Toscana – Olive Garden Copycat (VIDEO) Zuppa Toscana is Olive Garden's most popular soup. This one-pot, homemade Zuppa Toscana recipe is hearty and loaded with Italian sausage, kale, bacon and potatoes.

Does pasta fa*gioli contain meat? ›

Pasta e fa*gioli, meaning “pasta and beans”, is a traditional Italian favorite. Usually meatless, my version of Pasta fa*gioli Soup includes lean ground beef for extra protein and iron.

What does the word zuppa mean in Italian? ›

(ˈzuːpə, Italian ˈtsuːppɑː) noun. Italian Cookery. a soup or chowder. [1960–65; ‹ It: soup]

Why do people say fazool? ›

This is a soup with white beans and pasta, but the lead role is played by the beans, rather than the pasta. Here in the US, this soup is often referred to as pasta fazool, where fazool is derived from the Sicilian or Neapolitan dialect for beans.

What is the difference between minestrone and fa*gioli? ›

Pasta fa*gioli and minestrone are both Italian soups with similar flavors that make use of whatever vegetables you have on hand. The main difference is the beans in the pasta fa*gioli that result in a thicker soup than minestrone, which is traditionally very brothy.

What was Dean Martin's favorite Italian dish? ›

“When the stars make you drool just like a pasta fa*gioli, that's amore,” Martin croons. The pasta and bean dish is more than just an apt rhyme for “drool,” Martin is actually singing about one specific version of pasta fa*gioli that he loves: his mother's.

What pairs well with pasta e fa*gioli? ›

The best side dishes to serve with Pasta fa*gioli are garlic bread, grilled chicken, garden salad, roasted vegetables, parmesan crisps, italian sausage, bruschetta, antipasto platter, green beans, avocado fries, bagel bites, butter lettuce salad, rosemary bread, chicken lettuce cups, and cauliflower rice.

Does Progresso make pasta fa*gioli soup? ›

And he told me another gratifying tidbit of information: Pasta E fa*gioli was the third Progresso soup to ever be made, followed by Escarole.

Who created pasta e fa*gioli? ›

One popular theory about the origin of pasta e fa*gioli is that it was created by Italian sailors who would use the ingredients they had on hand while at sea, such as beans and pasta, to make a hearty and filling stew.

What part of Italy is pasta e fa*gioli from? ›

Pasta e fa*gioli
Alternative namesPasta fa*gioli, pasta fasul, pašta fažol, pasta fazool
TypePasta dish
Place of originItaly
Region or stateCalabria Campania Emilia Lazio Lombardy Piedmont Tuscany Veneto
3 more rows

Why did Olive Garden get rid of mushroom ravioli? ›

Stuffed Pasta On Limited Supply

The promos and the discontinuation of Olive Garden's giant stuffed shells are part of the chain tweaking its menu. In 2023, it discontinued its stuffed mushroom ravioli -- another stuffed pasta causality of the chain-shifting focus.

When did Olive Garden start never ending pasta? ›

Olive Garden offered its first Never Ending Pasta Bowl promo in 1995, when each bottomless bowl cost $6.95. Either way, we're not sure those mid-80s Minnesota newscasters could've handled that – they're probably still buzzing from the idea of unlimited breadsticks.

How many calories in a bowl of pasta fa*gioli from Olive Garden? ›

Olive Garden Pasta E fa*gioli (1 serving) contains 21g total carbs, 17g net carbs, 6g fat, 9g protein, and 180 calories.

References

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Aracelis Kilback

Last Updated:

Views: 5977

Rating: 4.3 / 5 (64 voted)

Reviews: 87% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Aracelis Kilback

Birthday: 1994-11-22

Address: Apt. 895 30151 Green Plain, Lake Mariela, RI 98141

Phone: +5992291857476

Job: Legal Officer

Hobby: LARPing, role-playing games, Slacklining, Reading, Inline skating, Brazilian jiu-jitsu, Dance

Introduction: My name is Aracelis Kilback, I am a nice, gentle, agreeable, joyous, attractive, combative, gifted person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.