yeah, it’s a mouthful, but don’t be impressed, sometimes things don’t go as planned—burnt fillings, overcooked pasta, dry dough… But, boy it works well in the end. So here it is.
Serves: 2 as a main course (makes about 10 large ravioli)
For the pasta:
- 100g fine semolina flour
- 1 egg
For the filling:
- 200g scallop pieces
- 2 Antohi peppers
- 30ml Armagnac
- 10g butter
For the sauce:
- 100ml crème fraîche
- 0.5g saffron threads
- 20g bottarga
- 60ml amaretto
To garnish:
- Small cherry tomatoes
Instructions:
1. Prepare the pasta dough:
- Combine the semolina flour and egg using a dough hook until smooth. Wrap the dough tightly in cling film and refrigerate for at least 1 hour.
2. Make the filling:
- Deseed and finely dice the Antohi peppers into 2–3mm pieces.
- Chop the scallops into small pieces (about 4mm).
- Heat the butter in a pan until lightly caramelized.
- Sauté the peppers briefly, then add the scallops and cook lightly.
- Deglaze the pan with Armagnac for a few seconds. Remove from heat and set aside.
3. Prepare the sauce:
- Finely mince the bottarga and mix it into the crème fraîche along with the saffron threads and amaretto.
- Adjust the consistency by adding a little water to make it slightly more fluid. Stir well to distribute the bottarga evenly—it has a tendency to clump.
4. Assemble the ravioli:
- Roll the pasta into two thin sheets (thickness setting 2 or 3 if using a pasta machine).
- Place spoonfuls of the filling on one sheet, cover with the other, and seal to form ravioli.
Pro tip: If you’re skilled, they’ll look great. If not, embrace a “rustic” aesthetic with overfilled ravioli.
5. Cook and serve:
- Boil the ravioli gently in salted water until tender.
- Plate the ravioli with the sauce. Add a few cherry tomatoes as garnish.
Whether you made it the way it should look or as clumsily as I did, it should still be tasty