Some of the best Italian recipes are barely recipes at all. Almost every restaurant in Rome serves some sort of greens, ripassata in padella. This means boiling the greens (they are usually chicory, but can also be spinach, Swiss chard, broccoletti or any combination of those), draining them, then re heating the cooked greens, in a pan, with olive oil, garlic and a bit of red pepper.
Couldn’t be better.
Except it can.
There is another way of cooking greens that is not only easier, but (in my humble opinion) even more delicious. Rather than employ the two step process described above (and get two pans dirty!) this other way of cooking greens all takes place in one easy pot.
Heat oil, throw in garlic and red pepper, and a few tomatoes. Then add the chopped greens and a bit of water. Cover and let cook until done.
This way is called stufato, which roughly translates as stewed or smothered. I think this way is better mostly because you’re not losing any of the nutrients (and so taste) into the boiling water. It all gets cooked together. Plus, the addition of a few tomatoes makes the minimal cooking water into a kind of sauce that turns simple greens into so much more.
Yesterday I cooked up a big bunch of Swiss chard this way. Thick white stems and dark green leaves: it all went into the pot with a few canned tomatoes. This, plus some bread and a wedge of cheese was lunch.
I’ll write the recipe for you below. But I feel like I’m cheating a bit. Because it isn’t really very much of a recipe is it?
Like I said, this isn’t much of a recipe. Feel free to play around with any greens you want. And if you don’t like things spicy, don’t add the red pepper. Adding a few anchovies is a nice touch, though. Or anything you want, really. But keep it simple. That’s the brilliant thing about this recipe dish.
1 bunch of Swiss Chard
1 cup canned tomatoes (or a few fresh ones if in season)
2 tablespoons olive oil
4 cloves garlic, chopped
1 tsp red pepper flakes
salt
1 cup water
Clean the greens and chop them roughly. Don’t worry about drying them off too well.
Pour olive oil into large saute pan. Add garlic and red pepper flakes. Let cook for a minute, then add the tomatoes, and their juices. Let cook for about 10 minutes. Add the greens, and about a tsp of salt. Add the cup of water, cover, and let cook until greens are well done.
This is not about simply wilting the greens. You really want to smother them, so that all the flavors meld together. This chard took about a half hour to cook.
Lucia from Madison
Bookmarked this one. I wish I could convince my husband that this could be dinner. Well I’ll try it!
Elizabeth Minchilli
Put a pile of pasta beneath it, and it’ll fool him for sure!
paninigirl
I love swiss chard and will absolutely make this-maybe even tonight! Thank you for such a simple and flavorful idea.
Sharli
I love the idea of adding tomatoes. I braise greens the same way, but use anchovy in with the garlic and red pepper flakes, and add some lemon slices in with the greens. I’ll try your tomato way for a change of pace!
Elizabeth Minchilli
That’s the beauty of it, you can put in just about anything and it will turn out delicious.
Simran Sethi
It’s cooking to me! Love it.
Sally Carrocino
Lucia it can be dinner. We make this a meal by adding some beans and Italian sausage. There are so many possibilities to this recipe. I sometimes forget about adding the tomatoes, thank you for reminding me. A little Parmesan cheese grated on top isn’t bad either.
Elizabeth Minchilli
I always forget about the dusting of grated cheese! Thanks for reminding me.
rosaria williams
The magic of Italian cooking!
rosaria williams
p.s. I’m sharing this with friends who are always hungry for that “special” recipe!
Elizabeth Minchilli
Thank you!
thefarmgirlcooks
Mmmm! I have some beautiful chard growing in our greenhouse right now. I think this shall be dinner tonight. When the low temperature is going to be 16 degrees.
This one will warm a body good 🙂
Thanks!
Elizabeth Minchilli
I wish we had a greenhouse. But then again, our temps don’t get nearly as cold as yours. So….I guess we’re luck we don’t need one!
artist
I’ll try this today! Good change from believing our weather where it is -7F now.
Mara Solomon
We eat this way nightly. Only I dont have those amazing Umbrian, home-grown, put-up-in-your-own-kitchen tomatoes to go with. If only….Currently grooving on a combo of savoy cabbage and Cavolo Nero (oddly called ‘Dinosaur Kale’ here). Switch up the sauce (tamari, rice wine vinegar, a splash of maple syrup and a squirt of Sriracha) and you go Asian. Ten-minute, one-pot cooking keeps this working woman happy with a good, fresh dinner every night.
Elizabeth Minchilli
Yes, those tomatoes make anything taste better. They are put up by our friend Paolo in Tuscany. Too good! Like summer in a jar.
Randy DeFrancesco
I am new to your Blog but was very much drawn to it, with all my grandparent coming from Sicily, there was an immediate connection.
This recipe was one I learned to cook very early. The only difference was the addition of a few new potatoes and some diced Romano or Parm which soften into wonderful little bites of flavor. Oh, and a drizzle of olive oil. Dunking the bread in that simple sauce is such a pleasure. Every person that eats this kind stufato, raves about it. As a child it was what the poor ate, now I can hardly think of a more elegant way to glorify chard. I’m look forward to the future, and your recipes.
LA CONTESSA
PERFECT FOR TOMORROW GRAZIE!!!!!!
Kathleen
Making this right now. I took your advice and added the anchovies and also a touch of red wine. I am using broccoli greens because we have an abundance in the garden. Thanks for sharing!
paninigirl
I made this last night -we loved it. Thanks again!