Earlier this month, I jumped the gun a bit on my Recipe of the Month post. I decided to count a variant on a recipe we'd already made as if it were a new recipe, mostly because I wasn't sure we'd actually get a chance to try a brand-new recipe this month. As it turns out, however, my worries were unfounded. On our last trip to Aldi, we found that in addition to their usual weekly sale fliers, they up a copy of their free holiday recipe booklet, which contained several veggie recipes, including this pumpkin sage cream farfalle. And since we also happened to have half a carton of ultra-pasteurized cream in the fridge from our last visit to Trader Joe's, which we had already discovered was more or less useless for whipping no matter how much we chilled it first, this seemed like a reasonable way to use it up.
Normally, the first time I attempt a recipe, I like to conform with the commands exactly as written, given that I are aware of it's been tested that way. Then, after tasting it, I'll make any adjustments I assume it needs for the following time I put together it. In the case of this pasta, but, the recipe as written appeared so ludicrously rich that it regarded low cost to tone it down a piece. First, we scaled the complete recipe down to 3/4 its length, for the reason that we occurred to have 3/four cup of leftover pumpkin saved in the freezer that wanted the usage of up. Then, rather than the usage of a complete cup of cream to this amount of pumpkin, we used the 1/2 of cup we had and eked it out with an equal amount of skim milk. We also scaled returned the amount of cheese within the recipe from 3/four cup to truely 1/3 cup (and substituted Parmesan for Romano, which I do now not like). And we substituted a simple yellow onion for the Vidalia the recipe referred to as for, due to the truth as soon as cooked, the difference in flavor is hardly ever great.