I love making things the way my grandmother Philomena taught me. There's something so satisfying about taking her basics and bringing modern flavor combinations to marry into a new creation. If she could be here, she would have loved it along with my other two angels, my grandpa George and daddy Gee!
2 cups AP flour
2 whole eggs
2 egg yolks
Pinch good salt
1 T good olive oil
Place the flour in a mound in a bowl or on a board and make a well in the center. Add the eggs, salt, and olive oil in the well. Use a fork to break up the eggs and mix into the flour from the center out until the ingredients are incorporated. Turn the dough out onto a board and begin to knead. You may need more flour or some of the reserved egg whites depending on the humidity. Knead until the dough is shiny. About six minutes or so. Make two balls with the dough and cover in plastic wrap to rest at room temperature for at least 45 minutes. You could refrigerate the pasta dough at this point also. Just make sure you let it set at room temperature for at least an hour before you try to roll it. Using a pasta machine, roll it into sheets for ravioli.
1-2 pie pumpkins
Canola or Vegetable Oil for brushing the pumpkin
1 tsp pumpkin pie spices
Pinch onion powder
Salt and Pepper TT
Preheat the oven to 375 degrees F. Half the pumpkin(s) and scoop out the seeds and stringy stuff, then quarter the pumpkin(s). You can reserve the extra roasted pumpkin for soup, custard, pie, cupcakes etc.. You will have plenty even from little pumpkins to make some other fantastic recipes (you can freeze it after it's roasted and puréed). Place the pumpkin quarters flesh side up on lined baking sheets and brush with a light coating of oil. Roast in the oven for about 45 minutes or until the flesh is soft and cooked thru. Remove from oven and allow to cool before scooping out the flesh.
In the meantime, rinse the pumpkin seeds and dry them on a kitchen towel. Place them in a bowl and toss with a tablespoon of oil (olive is fine). Spread them evenly over a baking sheet and sprinkle them with salt. Roast them for 20 minutes or until light golden in color.
Scoop out the cooled pumpkin flesh from the skins and place in a food processor. Pulse until a smooth texture is achieved. Reserve one cup of pumpkin purée and freeze the rest or use it for something else. Add the pumpkin pie spices and onion powder along with salt and pepper to taste. You can taste it for seasoning (the pumpkin is cooked). Put the pumpkin purée into a piping bag for easy ravioli assembly.
Fresh Pasta
1 cup seasoned pumpkin purée
4 oz goat cheese at room temperature
1 egg beaten with a pinch of salt
Roll the pasta into sheets. Pipe small rounds of pumpkin filling onto half of the pasta sheets. Approximately 1 1/2 tsp for each ravioli. Top with a small amount of goat cheese (1/4-1/2tsp). Brush around the filling with egg wash and top with another sheet of pasta. Cut into desired shapes. Cook in salted boiling water for 3-4 minutes or until they float nicely. Remove with a slotted spoon and add to sauce. Recipe follows.
4 T unsalted butter
Bunch fresh sage leaves
4 T maple syrup (the real kind)
Fresh ginger TT (grated using a micro blade)
1/4 tsp pumpkin pie spices
Salt and Pepper TT
In a small saucepan over medium heat, place the butter and sage and heat until the sage starts to curl up. Remove the sage and allow to drain on a paper towel. Add the maple syrup, grated ginger and spices. Cook until the sauce bubbles.
Remove from heat and toss with ravioli. Serve topped with the crispy sage and roasted pumpkin seeds.