Ligurian Pasta with Basil Pesto
Twisty hand-rolled pasta coated in bright, herbaceous basil pesto with garlic, pine nuts, and Parmigiano-Reggiano. A Sicilian classic that celebrates simple ingredients and traditional pasta-making craft.
- Total time
- 45 min
- Servings
- 4
- Calories
- 580
- Protein
- 22g

Ingredients
- 2 cups fresh basil leaves, packed
- 3 cloves garlic cloves
- ½ cup pine nuts, toasted
- ¾ cup extra-virgin olive oil
- 1 cup Parmigiano-Reggiano, finely grated
- ¼ cup Pecorino Romano, finely grated
- ½ teaspoon sea salt
- ¼ teaspoon freshly ground black pepper
- 2 cups all-purpose flour or durum wheat flour
- ¾ cup warm water
- ½ teaspoon sea salt
- 2 tablespoons kosher salt for pasta water
- 1 tablespoon extra-virgin olive oil
- ¼ cup fresh basil leaves
- 2 ounces Parmigiano-Reggiano shavings
Instructions
- 1
Place 2 cups of fresh basil leaves (gently packed, stems removed), 3 peeled garlic cloves, and 0.5 cup of toasted pine nuts into a food processor. Pulse until you have a coarse paste — do not overprocess or the basil will turn dark and bitter. You want texture, not a smooth puree.
- 2
With the processor running, slowly drizzle in 0.75 cup of extra-virgin olive oil in a thin stream. Stop occasionally to scrape down the sides with a spatula. The mixture should be vibrant green and creamy.
- 3
Transfer the pesto to a large mixing bowl. Fold in 1 cup of finely grated Parmigiano-Reggiano and 0.25 cup of finely grated Pecorino Romano using a rubber spatula. Season with 0.5 teaspoon of sea salt and 0.25 teaspoon of freshly ground black pepper. Taste and adjust seasoning if needed. Set aside.
- 4
Mound 2 cups of flour on a clean work surface or wooden board. Using your fingers, create a deep well in the center — it should look like a volcano. This creates a basin for your water.
- 5
Pour 0.75 cup of warm water and 0.5 teaspoon of sea salt into the well. Using a fork, gently beat the water and salt together, then begin pulling flour from the inner walls of the well into the liquid. Work slowly and carefully — if the wall breaks, use your hands to patch it with a pinch of flour.
- 6
Once the dough becomes shaggy and difficult to work with a fork, use your hands to bring all the flour together into a rough ball. Dust away excess flour and knead the dough on a clean surface for 8-10 minutes. It should be smooth, elastic, and slightly tacky but not sticky — if it's too wet, dust with a little flour; if it's too dry, wet your hands slightly and continue kneading.
- 7
Shape the dough into a ball, wrap it tightly in plastic wrap, and let it rest at room temperature for 20 minutes. This relaxes the gluten and makes the dough easier to shape.
- 8
After resting, unwrap the dough and place it on a lightly floured surface. Tear off a piece about the size of a cherry, then roll it between your palms and the work surface into a rope about 3 inches long and the thickness of a thin pencil.
- 9
Place one rope on the work surface and, using your index and middle fingers, roll it toward you with a slight twisting motion — apply gentle pressure so the rope curls into a tight spiral. The finished trofie should look like a small twisted screw, about 2 inches long. Transfer to a lightly floured plate and repeat with the remaining dough. You should have about 60-70 pieces.
- 10
Fill a large pot with 4 quarts of water and bring it to a boil over high heat. Add 2 tablespoons of kosher salt — the water should taste like the sea. Once boiling, carefully add the trofie in batches to avoid crowding, stirring gently to prevent sticking.
- 11
Cook for 4-6 minutes, stirring occasionally. The trofie will float to the surface when they're close to done. Taste one at 4 minutes — it should be tender but still have a slight firmness (al dente). Fresh pasta cooks much faster than dried.
- 12
Reserve 1 cup of pasta cooking water, then drain the trofie gently in a colander without shaking — the water clinging to the pasta helps loosen the pesto. Transfer the warm trofie to the bowl with pesto.
- 13
Toss the trofie gently with the pesto using a rubber spatula, adding 2-3 tablespoons of reserved pasta water to loosen the sauce. The pesto should coat each piece and be creamy, not stiff. Add more pasta water if needed — a little starch from the pasta water helps the sauce cling.
- 14
Divide the trofie among four warm bowls. Drizzle 1 tablespoon of extra-virgin olive oil over the pasta, scatter 0.25 cup of fresh basil leaves across the top, and finish with 2 ounces of Parmigiano-Reggiano shavings. Serve immediately while the pasta is still hot.
Tools you’ll need
- food processor
- rubber spatula
- large mixing bowl
- wooden work surface or pasta board
- fork
- plastic wrap
- large pot
- colander
- measuring cups and spoons
- kitchen scale (optional)
Cook smarter
Get matched recipes for what’s in your fridge
CookSnap is a free iOS app that finds real recipes from the ingredients you already have. No more grocery-list aspirations.



