Pasta Puttanesca
Updated Nov. 4, 2025

- Total Time
- 30 minutes
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
- Salt to taste
- 3tablespoons olive oil
- 3or more cloves garlic, lightly smashed and peeled
- 3or more anchovy fillets
- 128-ounce can whole plum tomatoes
- Freshly ground black pepper to taste
- ½cup pitted black olives, preferably oil-cured
- 2tablespoons capers
- Crushed red pepper flakes to taste
- 1pound linguine or other long pasta
- Chopped fresh parsley, oregano, marjoram or basil leaves for garnish, optional
Preparation
- Step 1
Bring pot of water to boil and salt it. Warm 2 tablespoons oil with garlic and anchovies in skillet over medium-low heat. Cook, stirring occasionally, until garlic is lightly golden.
- Step 2
Drain tomatoes and crush with fork or hands. Add to skillet, with some salt and pepper. Raise heat to medium-high and cook, stirring occasionally, until tomatoes break down and mixture becomes saucy, about 10 minutes. Stir in olives, capers and red pepper flakes, and continue to simmer.
- Step 3
Cook pasta, stirring occasionally, until it is tender but not mushy. Drain quickly and toss with sauce and remaining tablespoon of oil. Taste and adjust seasonings as necessary, garnish with herbs if you like, and serve.
Private Notes
Comments
Sorry, but "using a mortal to crush garlic" is probably my favorite spellcheck correction of all time! Picturing you up on Olympus . . . gotta get that crushed garlic somehow!
Add the crushed red peppers at the beginning, with the garlic and anchovies. It releases the full aroma from the peppers that simply boiling them at the end as the recipe calls for won't do.
"I don't know why people use canned tomatoes." Because most of us don't have easy access to decent tomatoes (i.e., tomatoes that have not been mass produced, bred for shelf life and "perfect shape" rather than flavor, and picked green) The tomatoes used in good quality canned tomatoes are far superior to the cardboard tomatoes sold in most supermarkets.
My God this is good! I added white wine after sautéing the garlic, anchovies, AND red pepper flakes. YES!
I have sweet potatoes growing in my garden. I did a chiffonade of the leaves (VERY healthy) and added them after the garlic was lightly browned. Added a full 28 oz can of tomatoes (chopped them per the instructions) but did not drain them. When the spaghetti was about half done, I added it to the sauce. The pasta absorbed all the wonderful puttanesca.
This was pretty good! The recipe as written doesn’t have anywhere near enough garlic so I doubled that. I also used 50-100% more anchovy. Otherwise I follows the tci
