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Chef RV Pasta Recipes: Creamy, Meaty & One‑Pan Classics

Filipino family pasta favorites by Chef RV—from creamy carbonara‑style and meaty spaghetti to quick one‑pan weeknight pastas. Practical tips for perfect sauce and texture.

Whether it’s fiesta-style Filipino Spaghetti, garlicky oil-based noodles, or creamy weeknight bowls, these pasta recipes balance comfort, value, and speed—Chef RV style. New and updated recipes under this topic auto-populate below.

Quick picks (choose your vibe)

  • ≤20 minutes: aglio e olio, garlic-butter spaghetti, tuna garlic chili pasta
  • 20–30 minutes: creamy mushroom pasta, smoked carbonara-style, chicken alfredo, pesto
  • 30–45 minutes: meaty red sauce (spaghetti), baked pasta, seafood garlic butter

Pantry & tools

Pasta: spaghetti, fettuccine, penne/rigatoni, farfalle (bow ties)
Sauce base: olive/neutral oil, butter, garlic, onion, tomato paste/sauce, cream, cheese (parmesan/quick-melt)
Umami boosters: anchovies, fish sauce (tiny splash), soy, Worcestershire, mushroom powder
Balance: sugar (pinch), vinegar/calamansi (splash), chili flakes, black pepper
Tools: 5–6 L pot, large skillet/sauté pan, ladle (for pasta water), tongs

Make-ahead & storage (at a glance)

Item / ComponentFridgeFreezerReheat tips
Red/meat sauce3–4 days2–3 monthsSimmer with splash of water; finish with butter
Creamy white sauce2–3 days1–2 monthsWarm gently; loosen with milk + pasta water
Pesto (basil/spinach)5–7 days2–3 monthsKeep oil film on top; stir in cheese when serving
Cooked pasta (underdone)2 daysnot idealReheat 30–60 s in boiling salted water
Baked pasta3–4 days1–2 monthsOven 170°C (340°F) covered; uncover to brown

Tip: Cook pasta 1–2 minutes shy of al dente if you’ll finish in sauce; the starch helps emulsify.

Sauce matrix (Chef RV style)

StyleBaseKey movesBest with
Aglio e Olioolive oil + garlic + chiliBloom garlic on low; add pasta water to create sheenspaghetti, linguine
Creamy (alfredo-ish)butter + cream + cheeseEmulsify off heat; add cheese graduallyfettuccine, penne
Filipino Spaghettisweet-savory red sauceTomato + banana ketchup; small sugar; hotdog/ground meatspaghetti
Pestoherbs + nuts + oilAdd cheese off heat; thin with pasta waterfusilli, penne
Seafood garlic butterbutter + garlic + splash soyToss fast; finish with calamansi/lemonspaghetti, linguine

Shape pairing (why it works)

ShapeGrabsBest for
Spaghetti/Linguinethin oil/seafood saucesaglio e olio, garlic shrimp
Fettuccinecreamy coatsalfredo-style, cream-mushroom
Penne/Rigatonimeaty chunks; bakes wellFilipino spaghetti sauce, baked ziti
Farfalle (bow ties)light creams & vegchicken-and-veg skillet

Techniques that make the difference

  • Salted water matters. 1 Tbsp salt per 2–2.5 L water gives the base seasoning the sauce can’t fix later.
  • Emulsify, don’t drown. Start with less sauce; add pasta water little by little until glossy and clinging.
  • Heat control for cream. Kill the flame before adding cream/cheese to avoid splitting.
  • Tomato depth: caramelize tomato paste 1–2 minutes until brick red; deglaze with a splash of water.
  • Starch timing: Move pasta to the pan wet (with some water) for perfect cling.
  • Finish in the pan. Toss 60–90 seconds so pasta absorbs flavor; adjust salt/acid/sugar to balance.

Common mistakes & quick fixes

  • Sauce won’t cling? Add 2–4 Tbsp pasta water and toss; whisk in 1 tsp cold butter to finish.
  • Split creamy sauce? Remove from heat; whisk in a splash of cold milk/cream and a knob of butter.
  • Too sweet Filipino spaghetti? Balance with 1–2 tsp vinegar/calamansi and a pinch of salt/pepper.
  • Mushy noodles? Undercook by 1–2 minutes next time; for now, toss briefly in hot pan to tighten.
  • Flat flavor? Add umami (anchovy/soy/Worcestershire in drops) and finish with acid.

Serving ideas

  • Party tray: baked meaty spaghetti with cheese cap
  • Weeknight bowl: garlicky aglio e olio with sautéed mushrooms
  • Creamy comfort: chicken-mushroom penne with parsley and chili flakes
  • Seafood night: garlic-butter shrimp linguine finished with calamansi

FAQs

How much pasta per person?
About 85–100 g dry for a main course; 60–75 g for sides.

Can I swap cream?
Yes—evaporated milk works in a pinch; finish off heat and reduce heat exposure to prevent splitting.

Why use pasta water?
Its starch emulsifies fat and liquid, making sauces clingy and glossy without extra cream or cheese.

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