Skip to main content

Spaghetti With Melon

3.0

(2)

A plate of spaghetti in a cantaloupe cream sauce.
Photo by Joseph De Leo, Food Styling by Drew Aichele

I remember eating with my parents many years ago at a restaurant in Venice that specialized in unusual dishes, none of which were seafood or risotto, the staples of Venetian cuisine. The restaurant is no longer there, and I don’t remember it's name, but I do remember this delicious dish of pasta with cantaloupe. Its flavor is rich and almost tangy—not as sweet as one might imagine. My mother started making it at home, and now I often make it when we have friends over. Once it is cooked, the melon is mostly unrecognizable, and it’s great fun seeing if people can guess what the sauce’s secret ingredient is.

This recipe was excerpted from ‘Giuliano Hazan’s Thirty Minute Pasta' by Giuliano Hazan. Buy the full book on Amazon. Click through for more of Giuliano Hazan’s favorite pastas →

Recipe information

  • Yield

    Serves 4

Ingredients

1 3-pound cantaloupe
3 Tbsp. butter
Salt
Freshly ground black pepper
1 lb. spaghetti (linguine is also good)
2 tsp. tomato paste
1½ tsp. freshly squeezed lemon juice
½ cup heavy cream
½ cup freshly grated Parmigiano-Reggiano

Preparation

  1. Step 1

    Fill a pot for the pasta with about 6 quarts of water, place over high heat, and bring to a boil.

    Step 2

    Cut away the rind of the melon down to the orange flesh. Cut the melon in half, discard the seeds, and cut the melon into ½-inch dice. Put the butter in a 12-inch skillet and place over medium high heat. Once the butter has melted completely, add the melon and season generously with salt and pepper. Cook, stirring often, until the melon begins to break down and most of the liquid it releases has evaporated, about 10 minutes.

    Step 3

    Add about 2 Tbsp. salt to the boiling pasta water, add the spaghetti and stir until all the strands are submerged.  Cook until al dente.

    Step 4

    Add the tomato paste and lemon juice to the melon and stir well. Add the cream and cook until the sauce thickens and reduces by about a third, 2 to 3 minutes. Remove from the heat.

    Step 5

    When the pasta is done, drain well, toss with the sauce and the Parmigiano-Reggiano, and serve at once.

Thirty Minute Pasta—COVER.jpg
Excerpted from Giuliano Hazan's Thirty Minute Pasta by Giuliano Hazan (Stewart, Tabori and Chang). Copyright © 2009. Photographs by Joseph de Leo. Buy the full book from Amazon.

See Related Recipes and Cooking Tips

Read More
A quick-fix dinner thanks to store-bought tortellini and chicken broth.
In this wafu pasta recipe from author Sonoko Sakai, the only cooking involved is boiling spaghetti.
In this lasagna, soft layers of pasta and béchamel are interspersed with a rich tomato sauce laden with hearty Mediterranean vegetables.
A family-friendly dinner even the littlest ones will love.
This comforting cheeseburger-inspired pasta from Kiano Moju is bolstered by berbere spice.
Mexican pasta probably isn’t something you’ve thought about before, but this poblano sauce may have you rethinking your devotion to the red variety.
On this melty toast, the burrata comes in at the end, but it’s most definitely the star.
This Campari-spiked galette features the herbal aperitif, tart cherries, and floral citrus zest and is perfect for those who prefer bitter to sweet.