Beer And Food Tuesday: Carbonara Alla Morana 9


For those of you that have just joined the craft beer scene in the last couple of years, it’s worth pointing out that Bar Volo wasn’t always a beer bar with a light menu. At one point in the late 80’s, it was an Italian restaurant. After a while it became an Italian restaurant with beer. It further evolved into a beer bar with Italian food. Then came the nanobrewery and, with kitchen space at a premium, an expanding audience and wait times for food frequently outstripping forty minutes (about two pints, for those of you who tell time by pints), it became Bar Volo as it currently stands.

They changed with the times, somewhat to the chagrin of the regulars. Roger Pettet would sometimes ask me if I could write a blog piece about how the bar was changing, probably with the aim of stopping it from changing overmuch. The problem is that with Bar Volo being a leader in craft beer in Ontario, change was inevitable. It was not a bad thing, necessarily. People seem much happier getting fed quickly. So it goes.

The only issue that I had with the change is that Volo was responsible for a truly great pasta dish in their Carbonara. Periodically, when people wax nostalgic, the Carbonara comes up as one of the only examples of something they wish could come back. (The Puttanesca is also mentioned, as is the Pepperonata (at least by me)).

This is what Carbonara looked like when Volo used to cook it.

One day a couple of weeks ago, I realized that I could rectify that problem for people who missed the Carbonara. Since the Moranas aren’t using it anymore, they were pretty quick to supply me with it. I had tried to get the recipe previously, but it had been a long night and I discovered, after having it explained to me at great length, that I had no idea how the sound recorder on my Blackberry worked.

I emailed Ralph and he gave me the recipe, which I now impart to you:

Two Stages :
1. In a stainless steel bowl add
2 egg yolk
T parmigiana cheese
T Italian parsley
tsp salt
tsp pepper
tsp mixed dried herbs – basil & oregano
Pinch of chilli flakes (optional)
4T of 35% cream – (I just drizzle the cream in. You do not want too much because this is a dryer version of the Carbonara)
Add al dente spaghetti noodles (portion for one person)
Whisk all the ingredients.
Put aside until needed.

2. Heat a pan on medium low heat.
Add half of red onion medium thin slices.
Within 3 minutes add 2 diced smoked bacon.
When the onion and bacon are 3/4 of the way cooked raise the temperature to medium and add the mixture in the bowl.
Toss until all the ingredients are mix.
At this point I add a pinch of salt, pepper from a pepper mill and I grade ricotta salata cheese( asiago also works). I usually add about 2T of cheese and 2 diced fresh sage leaves.
Toss
Taste ( add more salt or pepper if needed)
Pasta is ready pending on how you like it. i like it on the crisp side.
I also like to add pancetta on top of the pasta.

I should point out that there are three things you need to know here.

My version doesn’t look nearly as good, but I don’t have a white plate or a DSLR Camera or any ability to plate food in an aesthetically pleasing way or the inclination to do so when I’m just ripping hungry and want to get to it already. Jeez.

1)      Since you’ve tempered the egg yolks with cream and the other ingredients prior to adding them to the pasta, you’re probably not going to scramble them. This is good news. It is still worth removing the pan from the heat to be safe.

2)      While ½ a red onion seems like a whole big bunch of red onion, it’s actually more or less right as long as you don’t choose the biggest one in the display.

3)      This is a restaurant size portion. At home, this could probably feed two, since it’s quite rich and very filling. I am slipping into food coma territory at the moment.

But what to drink?

Things people have sent me. I’m not sure where the one on the right came from, actually.

Well, people send me things. The fridge is so full that baking soda has developed agoraphobia.

GRANVILLE ISLAND LIONS WINTER ALE

When the folks at Creemore sent this stuff over, I was more excited about the Hops and Bolts. Call me a skeptic, but I haven’t really liked much of the Granville Island stuff I’ve tried. The Pale Ale is lodged squarely in the 80’s. The Hefeweizen is fair to middling.

The Lion’s Winter Ale is surprising in that it contents itself with a healthy bill of dark malts, a relatively creamy texture and a strong hit of vanilla. It is actually mildly reminiscent of Dieu Du Ciel Aphrodisiaque. I was a little shocked that the pairing works here. The sweetness of the malt and the vanilla actually play with the caramelization that the onions have gone through and there’s enough carbonation to lift the fat off the palate and refresh for the next bite. Oddly enough, the texture is the big thing. It’s creamy enough to play to the sauce while stripping it off your tongue.

I shouldn’t be surprised given that the Granvillers provided this recipe for pairing.

CAMERON’S RPA

It is always good to choose appropriate glassware. In this case, I’ve chosen branding over propriety.

As I think we’re all aware, Cameron’s RPA is one of the better IPAs available in Ontario at the moment. It’s going into year round production soon. It has five malts, seven hop varieties and at least one hand picked variety of water. It’s delicious. It may not have a whole lot of noticeable rye character, but who cares when the overall product is this good? Caramel Malt and Pine and Citrus and Tropical Fruit and Joy.

It paired terribly. The hops just blew the Carbonara out of the damn water. It’s too big. It’s too bitter. It somehow fails to cut the fat in the cream sauce and the bitterness coats the tongue. If there was a single ingredient it might have had some interplay with it was the oregano. Not enough.

Don’t get me wrong. Love the beer, but this application was a loser. It was a bad choice on my part.

AECHT SCHLENKERLA RAUCHBIER

I was dreading this one.

Ralph suggested a smoked beer. I haven’t ever really liked this beer, but it was the smoked beer that I had on hand. Sometimes I’ll use it to braise a pork shoulder.

I don’t know if it’s ingredient creep, but the smoked malt doesn’t seem as pronounced as it once did. Probably, a slight whiff of smoke in Imperial Stouts is acclimatizing me. What it manages to do very nicely is accentuate the bacon and the smoke there, and in turn the salt content. There’s enough malt character to hold its own against the onions.

While it worked nicely as a pairing, I still didn’t quite manage to finish the bottle, although I admit that in the proper culinary application, this works. It’s just that I wouldn’t drink it without food.

WHAT DID WE LEARN

Oddly, the winner here in terms of pairing was Granville Island Lions Winter Ale. The shocking thing is that it might work even better if you throw a pinch of nutmeg at the cream sauce. I’ve seen that in some carbonara recipes.

Also, we learned that it is good to be friends with Ralph Morana. He’s the Godfather of the Ontario Craft Beer Scene. If you go against the Morana family, you might wake up with the neck of a bottle of Rolling Rock next to you.

 

 


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9 thoughts on “Beer And Food Tuesday: Carbonara Alla Morana

  • Ben

    Honestly, the thought of a creamy, bacon pasta paired with a vanilla and chocolate beer is making me feel a little sick right now. I believe you that you thought it worked, but I’m going to have to take your word for it, because I ain’t trying it. I tried to pair some of the winter ale with a Canadian pizza one night, and I did not finish that beer.

    This pasta though, that I might try.

    (Rolling Rock because there’s a horse on it, right?)

    • admin Post author

      I know it sounds weird, but when you consider that the recipe they sent over to pair the Granville Winter Ale was a Porkchop with cream sauce and mushrooms, it’s maybe not all that crazy.

  • lister

    Thanks for the recipe. Every time we visited Volo I always had the carbonara. I’ve missed it with the menu change and soon further changes to Volo.

    • admin Post author

      It turns out that part of learning about pairing beer and food is sometimes finding out that two things you like don’t go together. Like marmite and chocolate.

  • Roger's rap.

    “They changed with the times, somewhat to the chagrin of the regulars. Roger Pettet would sometimes ask me if I could write a blog piece about how the bar was changing, probably with the aim of stopping it from changing overmuch.”
    Whilst purely a lead-in to Jordan’s article on Carbonara, and yes I did indeed suggest to him that an article on the changing face of Volo might make an interesting piece, he is quite wrong to suggest that my purpose was to resist the changes that have taken place at my local watering hole.
    Of course change is inevitable, and drinking at Bar Volo and a number of our other craft/cask beer serving establishments today, is a far cry from having a tray-full of weasal piss slammed down in front of you by a surley waiter at The Red Lion on Jarvis Street back in 1966-as well as being generally a lot more enjoyable!
    This not mean however that the simple pleasure of suppin’ a few pints of a fresh,well-balanced and flavourful session beer in good condition along with good conversation in convivial company being being replacedd with having to shout to make oneself heard over thumping “house music” whilst nouveau beer fashionista’s sup wine sized glasses of frequently over-priced, high abv,often un-balanced craft brews is something should be unequivocally condoned.

    No,I was attempting to suggest to Jordan that Bar Volo provided the perfect template to illustrate and discuss in a positive, but also hopefully critical way,the rapid changes that we are witnessing on the beer scene here in Toronto as well as in Europe and the U.S.
    Much of it is extremely exciting and positive, reminicent of the cultural explosion that I was fortunate enough to be part of in London in the early sixties. The experimenting young musicians of this period, some icons and those still alive in their late sixties and still producing good music understood their their musical history, respected it and built on it.
    It is to be hoped that todays young brewers in their rush to impress with
    their combinations of hops, different flavours and high strength beers do not delude themselves into thinking that they invented beer, and that today’s young drinkers realize that there is more to beer than the latest ten per cent brew placed in front of them.
    The social aspect of beer drinking is,in my opinion, almost as important
    as the beer itself and it’s significance never to be under-estimated. It is what makes a “local.”
    I first met Ralph, whom I consider a good friend, at Volo some ten years ago and we talked about Cask beer which Ralph was considering getting into. In it’s early days I recall it was available one night a week-usually a Friday-and Ralph was often complaining about the money it cost him money as he had to throw so much away. It was a learning experience for him and a delicate balance between how many days he could realistically serve it without his customers complaining and having to, reluctantly I’m sure, pour what was left down the drain. Fortunately a group of like-minded aficionados began to come to the bar and support his efforts. Before long and in no small part due to the efforts of dear friends Sid and Ally-now alas living in Edmonton-this community of beer lovers expanded with wonderful out of town characters like “Chicago Dave” and “Barrow Bob” knowing that they would always be warmly welcomed when they visited and could enjoy some spirited conversation whilst quaffing their favorite brew.
    This sense of community perhaps best exemplified itself when a young member of our group suddenly and tragically died several years ago and eveyone came together in a shared display of mutual grief at Volo and later turning up on masse at the Funeral Home to pay our respects to our dear friend Tim and his family.
    Along with educating himself, expanding his knowledge of beer and brewing and becoming in my opinion Ontario’s ambassador for good beer Ralph was continually tinkering with Bar Volo and making changes in an attempt to keep it as a viable business. Inevitably, over the past couple of years he has handed on much of the reponsibility to his two sons, teenagers ten years ago, who had then shown little interest in their father’s business.
    They are fortunate to have been handed the reins at a time when craft beer is one of the hottest social trends out there and a growth industry.
    It is true that a number of former “regulars” disliked some of the changes
    and felt that they no longer mattered. You can’t please everyone but let’s hope Tom and his brother respect their current patrons, since trends can come and go, fashionista’s are fickle and at the end of the day it’s the atmosphere and the company as much as the beer you are drinking that brings you back.

  • Jonas Kuhnemann

    Thanks for posting the recipe Jordo! I definitely had in mind to whip up a good carbonara, and hey – Ralph’s Sicilian so I think he well knows!
    Far as ‘surprising’ food pairings, that’s not too wild a match at all I think. My gut us the dish flvorings calls for roundness of beer flavors not bitterness – like half the Trois Mousquetaires line… anyone for LTM Oktoberfest or Weizenbock?
    * bookmarked *

    • admin Post author

      If I recall correctly, the weizenbock is a touch smoky, so that could work pretty well. I think the difficulty you might face there are the fruity malt notes, but that might work with the onion. Give it a shot and report back.