Bucatini Recipe - Red Wine Garlic Bucatini Pasta Recipe (2024)

This red wine garlic bucatini recipe is cooked in wine and then sautéed in a red wine garlic sauce. Top it with a soft boiled egg for a stunningly simple dinner.

*This post is sponsored by Barilla®Bucatini Recipe - Red Wine Garlic Bucatini Pasta Recipe (1)

If there’s one food out there that epitomizes comfort for me, it’s pasta.

Memories of early Sunday night dinners at my grandparents’ house, walking into a kitchen with sauce bubbling away on the stove, meatballs being rolled on the counter and bottles of wine flowing among the adults, pasta etched it’s way into my heart early on.

These days, a house made pasta on a good restaurant’s menu is nearly impossible for me to pass up and while nothingreally compares to the pappardelle my great aunt in Italy made by hand and served to us alongside some wild boar bolognese a few years back, I love almost every single shape, type and size it comes in.

Bucatini Recipe - Red Wine Garlic Bucatini Pasta Recipe (2)

My reaction to finding Barilla’s® bucatinion the grocery store shelf recently was probably a little out of line on the excitement scale but I simply couldn’t help myself.

Family dinners were pretty much always the staples: penne, rigatoni, linguine (never spaghetti, my family has a strange aversion to linguine’s rounder cousin for some bizarre reason) and maybe sometimes farfalle if someone got a little crazy that week.

So as an adult, I’ve come to love the more artisanal, less popular shapes, bucatini being one of them.

Bucatini Recipe - Red Wine Garlic Bucatini Pasta Recipe (3)

Like spaghetti, but with more chew to it (and a fun hole in the center!), bucatini holds up really well to thick sauces and the like. Although it’s just as delicious tossed in a simple white wine sauce too.

I immediately imagined it with a hearty bolognese (or something like this simple bucatini pasta with garlic shrimp) and a full glass of red wine but then my brain went on a tangent when it got to the wine part.

Would the bucatini turn red if Icooked it IN wine?

Bucatini Recipe - Red Wine Garlic Bucatini Pasta Recipe (4)

Google told me it would and this simplistic yet elegant red wine garlic bucatiniwas born.

The red wine gives the pasta a deep, almostsweet taste to each bite and adds an element of savory-ness to the meal that goes perfectly with the soft boiled egg served on top.

The yolk drips down onto each garlic bucatini strand as you twirl it around your fork and it’s pasta magic at its best.

Bucatini Recipe - Red Wine Garlic Bucatini Pasta Recipe (5)

As an affordable pantry staple, pasta can easily transform into a quick dinner alongside healthy fats, vegetables and protein.

If dying the pasta with wine sounds too complicated (it’s not) or just not how you want to use a bottle of red wine (I get that), definitely don’t give up on making a bucatini dish altogether. Try this bucatini cacio e pepe recipe instead with it’s simple five ingredient list. It’s classic Italian peasant food at its best.

Bucatini Recipe - Red Wine Garlic Bucatini Pasta Recipe (6)

Love this red wine garlic bucatini recipe?

Looking for more pasta recipes? Try one of these:Pasta Checca with Burrata,Creamy Tomato Ranch Pappardelle with Caramelized OnionsandSplit Pea Pesto Gemelli with Crispy Pancetta.

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Red Wine Garlic Bucatini

By: Gina Matsoukas

Servings: 4 servings

Prep: 5 minutes mins

Cook: 15 minutes mins

Total: 20 minutes mins

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Bucatini Recipe - Red Wine Garlic Bucatini Pasta Recipe (7)

This red wine garlic bucatini recipe is cooked in wine and then sautéed in a red wine garlic sauce. Top it with a soft boiled egg for a stunningly simple dinner.

Ingredients

  • 3 cups + 1/3 cup, about 1 bottle red wine
  • 3 cups water
  • 12 ounces bucatini
  • 2 tablespoons extra virgin olive oil
  • 1 1/2 tablespoons minced garlic
  • 1/2 teaspoon red pepper flakes
  • 1/4 cup chopped parsley
  • freshly grated parmesan
  • 4-6 soft boiled eggs

Instructions

  • Pour the 3 cups of red wine and water into a large sauce pot and bring to a boil.

  • Add bucatini, reduce heat slightly and cook until al dente, about 8 minutes.

  • Reserve 1/2 cup cooking liquid then drain the pasta.

  • Place olive oil in a large skillet over medium heat.

  • Add garlic and red pepper flakes and sauté for 1 minute.

  • Add the reserved wine and cooking liquid to the skillet and cook an additional 1 minute.

  • Transfer the bucatini to the skillet, toss until fully coated with the red wine, olive oil, garlic mixture.

  • Garnish with the chopped parsley and grated parmesan.

  • Serve each portion with a soft boiled egg.

Nutrition

Serving: 1SERVINGCalories: 217kcalCarbohydrates: 19gProtein: 10gFat: 10gSaturated Fat: 2gPolyunsaturated Fat: 7gCholesterol: 187mgSodium: 86mgFiber: 1gSugar: 1g

Nutrition information is automatically calculated, so should only be used as an approximation.

Additional Info

Course: Main Dishes

Cuisine: Italian

TRIED THIS RECIPE?COMMENT + RATE BELOW!

This is a sponsored conversation written by me on behalf of Barilla. The opinions and text are all mine.

Gina Matsoukas

Founder and Writer at Running to the Kitchen | About

Gina Matsoukas is an AP syndicated writer. She is the founder, photographer and recipe developer of Running to the Kitchen — a food website focused on providing healthy, wholesome recipes using fresh and seasonal ingredients. Her work has been featured in numerous media outlets both digital and print, including MSN, Huffington post, Buzzfeed, Women’s Health and Food Network.

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Bucatini Recipe - Red Wine Garlic Bucatini Pasta Recipe (2024)

FAQs

What is bucatini pasta best for? ›

Where spaghetti or linguine get coated with sauce, bucatini gets coated and filled with sauce. It's the ultimate delivery vehicle for velvety pasta sauces like cacio e pepe or carbonara. That hollow center gives you more sauce with each bite, and around here, we subscribe to the “More Sauce, More Life” lifestyle.

How long do you cook bucatini for? ›

For dried bucatini, add the pasta to the boiling water and stir. Cook for 8 to 12 minutes depending on the brand of pasta and the desired doneness, stirring occasionally to keep the strands from sticking together. Drain well and use immediately. Boil fresh bucatini for just 3 to 5 minutes before draining.

What does red wine add to pasta sauce? ›

The alcohol present in wine actually triggers the release of flavor molecules in the sauce, making every ingredient the wine contacts taste even better. The red wine will also dissolve fats, empowering the sauce ingredients to release nuanced flavors.

Is bucatini better than spaghetti? ›

Bucatini is similar to spaghetti except for its hollow core. Tradition has it that this enables pasta sauce to coat both the outside and the inside of the noodle. Chefs, tired of serving the same pasta cuts available in local supermarkets, embraced bucatini for being unique (but not too unique).

How do Italians eat bucatini? ›

In Italian cuisine, bucatini is served with buttery sauces, guanciale, vegetables, cheese, eggs, and anchovies or sardines. One of the most common sauces to serve with bucatini is the amatriciana sauce, bucatini all'amatriciana. It is traditionally made with guanciale, a type of cured meat taken from the pork jowl.

Do you break bucatini in half? ›

Don't Break the Pasta

Let the ends stick out until the submerged sections soften, about 1 minute. Then stir to bend the pasta and push it underwater. You don't want short strands. Pasta should be long enough to twirl around your fork.

At what point should you add wine to pasta sauce? ›

Red wine gives the sauce added richness and robustness, while white wine imparts a fruity flavor. Incorporate the wine early in the cooking process, just after the vegetables have softened. Then, let the wine cook down and reduce almost all the way.

Do Italians put red wine in spaghetti sauce? ›

The acidity of the wine will instead be very useful if you want to give a sour, astringent flavor to the dish. This is the reason why in Italian cuisine it is not common to add wine to a tomato sauce, where the tomato already has a strong acidity.

Why would you cook pasta in red wine? ›

Red Wine Spaghetti

Cooking with red wine is a fast and easy way to impart rich and luscious flavor to all sorts of recipes with very little effort, like spaghetti!

Why is it so hard to find bucatini? ›

I had confirmed that the bucatini shortage was real and understood that the bucatini shortage was a combination of factors: the pandemic's pasta demand, how hard it is to make bucatini because of its hole, De Cecco's strange and untimely barring from the U.S. border.

What is a fun fact about bucatini pasta? ›

Substantial, versatile, and fun, this straw-like pasta is shaped like thick spaghetti with a hollow center. The name bucatini comes from Italian: buco, meaning “hole”, while bucato means “pierced”. The hollow center in bucatini allows it to be fully coated and filled with sauce, letting bold, flavorful sauces shine.

What does bucatini mean in Italian? ›

Bucatini pasta is thicker than spaghetti, with a straw-like hole running through the middle - bucatini means 'little hole'.

What is bucatini pasta served with? ›

Although Bucatini was popularized by Rome it was most likely created in Sicily. The shape allows for more even cooking of the pasta as well as room for sauce to nestle. This pasta can be found most often served with Amatriciana sauce, but is also heavenly served with butter sauces.

Is bucatini good for spaghetti sauce? ›

Bucatini is one of our top favorite pastas! It's a long thin noodle just like spaghetti, but with hole through the middle. It's extra thickness gives it a better bite and holds up to a rich tomato sauce.

How do you eat bucatini? ›

Ideal with sardines, all'amatriciana, or cuttlefish ink, as Neapolitan tradition dictates, bucatini is also perfect for original and unexpected combinations. And if cooked very al dente, it's also great for stuffing vegetables, as it can absorb the sauce and flavor while baking in the oven.

Why do people like bucatini? ›

Well, before the current bucatini shortage, the tubular pasta was a favorite among chefs and noodle aficionados. Whereas other long pastas get coated in sauce, bucatini gets both coated and filled with sauce so the flavors have a chance to fully soak into each strand.

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