Penne with sun-dried tomato cream sauce is fast enough for a weeknight dinner but fancy enough for a special dinner for two.
It’s rich and creamy and loaded with flavour. You can even make it a vegetarian dish by just leaving out the chicken.
This is the type of pasta you get in a restaurant. It’s all about taste. It’s unapologetic. There’s no consideration whatsoever given to anything but taste in fact.
Butter, cream, cheese and pasta. Little bits of sun-dried tomatoes and chicken to mix it up. Fresh crushed black pepper, fresh basil and chili flakes to finish it off.
But it’s simple too. Straight-forward. Not too fussy. Great for family dinners.
Sun-dried tomatoes and cream are a killer combo
And the sun-dried tomatoes add a little something special. A burst of tomato flavour. It takes what could be an otherwise heavy dish and lightens it.
Butter, cream and cheese. That’s pretty much an Alfredo. But when you add the tomatoes everything changes. And that opens up the door for the basil.
Two simple ingredients and all of a sudden it’s penne with sun-dried tomato cream sauce. Completely different.
Finish cooking the pasta in the sauce
One mistake that people make a lot. You need to finish cooking your pasta in the sauce. That’s pretty much a rule. It’s a seemingly trivial extra step. But it’s critical. Do this and everything comes together.
When you pour sauce overtop pasta you are making pasta with sauce. They sit in two layers. Even if you mix them up they aren’t really melded.
Cook them together and it’s pasta and sauce. You don’t know where one ends and the other begins.
There’s a big difference. If you’ve never tried this technique you should try it.
Penne with sun-dried tomato cream sauce is not something you should eat every day. But it is something you should treat yourself to every now and then.
penne with sun-dried tomato cream sauce
Ingredients
- 3 chicken breasts or 6 chicken thighs - boneless and skinless
- 2 cloves garlic crushed
- 2 Tbsp butter
- 1/2 cup chicken stock or pasta cooking water
- 1 cup heavy cream
- 2/3 cup sun dried tomatoes in oil sliced thinly
- 1 cup parmegiana reggiano grated
- salt to taste start at about 1/2 tsp and adjust from there. You'll be surprised how much it takes.
- 1/2-1 tsp red chili flakes
- 12 oz penne
- fresh ground black pepper
- a few basil leaves shredded
Instructions
- Heat a large pot of water and salt it well. Well salted means it tastes like the sea.
- Cook the pasta per package instructions. Use a timer.
- Drain the pasta and reserve a cup of the pasta cooking water.
- Melt the butter in a pan large enough to hold all the cooked pasta with some room to spare.
- Add the chicken and cook until it starts to brown. This will take about 5 minutes.
- Mix in the garlic and cook for another minute.
- Add the chicken stock or pasta water and salt. Cook until the chicken is almost done. This will take another three minutes or so. Some of the water will evaporate.
- Add the sun-dried tomatoes and cream. Bring to a simmer.
- Stir in the parmigiano reggiano, Taste and adjust for salt then add the pasta.
- Simmer the pasta for a minute, stirring constantly to thoroughly coat the pasta with the sauce and distribute the tomatoes.
- To serve, divide into four portions and garnish with black pepper, a bit more parmigiana reggiano and the shredded basil.
Notes
I cooked this dish some days ago, it was absolutely delicious. The only issue was the consistency of the sauce before I added the pasta: it was too runny. I guess it had to do with the conversion of the cups to European formats. So I decided to use some cornstarch to thicken it up, which turned out very well. However, it was a yummy and tasteful dish, the whole family loved it! Thanks and up to another glebekitchen-recipe. Regards, Daniel.
Daniel, sorry it didn’t work out exactly right. I’m in Canada so a cup is 237 ml. Very glad to hear you were able to adapt. Sign of an accomplished cook!
Making this as I type, Romain. I have company and am thinking they will love it. Is there a brand if dry pasta you prefer? Also, your pic looks like rigatoni. That would work too, right? (I know certain pastas work better with certain sauces.)
Making it for company the first time you try a recipe. I like the way you roll! I actually used a pasta shape called elicoidali for this dish the day I took the pics but I didn’t figure anyone would be able to find it. My local Italian deli was out of penne that day. Rigatoni is bigger than elicoidali is so it would work well – but would be pretty big.