Interview by Holly O'Neill 

Angela Hartnett’s secret ingredient – peperoncino

These dried Italian chillies have a real kick and are great in everything from tomato sauce to salads
  
  

Peperoncino

Peperoncino is the generic word for dried chilli in Italy. They’re great for throwing in anything to give it a little bit of a zizz. Unlike some of the dried chilli flakes you buy in UK supermarkets, these have a kick; when you flake them up on your hand you can feel the heat.

If I’m making a classic tomato sauce for pasta, I’ll fry off the onions and garlic, then crush in peperoncini, then add the tomatoes so they get that heat through.

In stews, ragus, soups – you can even put them in your salad to add a kick. We make a dish called Sunday-night chicken, to use up anything in the fridge that needs to go. We cut up all the vegetables, joint a chicken, put the pieces on the veg and crumble up a few peperoncini over that, then put it all in the oven.

I buy them dried - whole, tiny ones, in markets over in Italy and bring heaps back. The ones I like come loose, and I just keep them in their paper bags from the market. I quite like that.

Angela Hartnett is the chef-patron of Murano and Cafe Murano; cafemurano.co.uk

 

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