“Come on Friday night when we’ll have Spaghetti Puttanesca with added Pesce Spada,” cajoled Aldo, the waiter, host, and sometime cook of the old Abruzzo Club. Aldo ran that vast dining room floor like a master of ceremonies. He conned all the kids with tricks and riddles, charmed the coiffed Nonne with flirtatious compliments that only Italian men do so well, and had a ready risquĆ© jokeĀ for the tables of older men. For us nonĀ Abbruzzese, he tantalised us with the promise of authentic Italian cuisine, future dishes, specials from the kitchen that weren’t yet listed on the menu. When Aldo and his son left the Abruzzo club, we never returned. The soul and life of that place left with them. Nothing would ever taste the same again. Good food is more than the sum of its ingredients.
When I came across a small slab of Swordfish at my favourite little market recently, I thought of Aldo and how he might make this dish. It’s a substantial pasta dish and requires a little more preparation than that required by a busy Puttana.

Aldo’s Spaghetti Puttanesca with Ā Swordfish.Ā For 2 greedy serves, 3 regular.
- 200 gr swordfish or pesce spada
- 200-220 gr spaghetti
- a small bunch of oregano
- a pinch of sea salt flakes
- 3 Ā cloves garlic
- EV olive oil, a goodly amount
- 1 can of tomatoes, drained of juice, large pieces roughly chopped.
- a small handful of pitted black olives, halved
- 2 teaspoons of salted capers, soaked in water
- black pepper
- finely chopped parsley
Method
- Make the marinade for the fish. Using a small mortar and pestle, add the garlic and salt and begin pounding, then add the oreganoĀ leaves, around 2 tablespoons, and continue pounding till a green paste is formed, then add around three tablespoons of olive oil.
- Cut the swordfish through the centre, ie horizontally, to make two thinner pieces. ( most swordfish is usually sold in very thick slabs- by slicing horizontally, you should have two equal portions of around 1 cm in thickness). Chop these into small chunks of around 2 cm. Place in a small bowl and mix in half of the marinade. Leave for around 1/2 hour on bench.
- Bring a large pot of water to the boil, salt well. Add the pasta and cook according to packet directions.
- Meanwhile, heat a large frying pan to medium-high and add the remaining marinade to the pan. When hot, add the cubes of swordfish and toss around until just cooked. Don’t let the fish overcook as it tends to become quite tough.
- Remove the fish and set aside. Add the chopped tomato pieces to the same pan, add a little juice to get the sauce moving but don’t flood it with juice as this dilutes the flavour of the other ingredients. Add the chopped olives and drained capers. Sir about until hot, then add the cooked fish. Add a little pasta water to loosen the sauce if necessary.
- When the pasta is cooked justĀ al dente, drain, then add to the sauce, tossing about to amalgamate the ingredients. This second cooking in the pan makes the spaghetti really hot and brings the all the elements together. Add the chopped parsley and serve in a preheated pasta serving dish.
The Abruzzo club, Lygon Street East, Brunswick is now called 377 On Lygon. The restaurant has had a makeover. If you’ve been there recently, let me know how it went.
Oh this looks so good. Puttanesca is one of my top pasta recipes!!! Great post!
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Thanks Mimi. This one is More Sicilian in style.
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Yes! I really want to go to Sicily. I have a few cookbooks… my biological father is from there but I’ve never been.
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Oh Just to think Mimi, you are half Siciliani. You must go there, it is so beautiful.
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I can’t wait. According to my DNA, I’m actually way more Italian than French, which I don’t understand yet. But my mother is French, my father came over here from Sicily at age 14. Became a citizen, went to war, met my mother in France, and they moved to the US in 1954, 2 years before I was born. Then they divorced.
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Amazing Mimi. Maybe there’s more italian in your mother’s background. Do you have her family tree?
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No, she gets depressed talking about her time during the war, so it stops there. I’m surprised I’m not part german, with my Alsatian grandfather.
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There is something about DNA and x chromosomes inherited by females and not Y chromosomes. Females cannot access parts of their ancestral male genetic information through DNA tests. I was surprised when someone recently explained this to me. I can’t access info regarding my maternal grandfather. He didn’t have brothers, so I can’t find this through male cousins or uncles….I am still learning about this oddity so excuse my rather poor explanation.
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That’s interesting!
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Simple & flavourful!!
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Thanks Shy
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Wonderful – I’m in Calabria at the moment and have been enjoying swordfish from the Straits!
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Hi Karen, enjoy your late Spring and summer in Calabria and fresh spada .
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Sounds good, very good!
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Thanks Sue, it’s a substantial meal with the added swordfish.
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Yes, I can see it would be
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“a busy Puttana” – oh Signora you kill me!
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Glad you enjoyed that.
But some may not know that the famous dish, Spaghetti alla Puttanesca was so named because the puttana was so busy ( bonking her customers) that she threw in a few store cupboard ingredients ( tomatoes, olives, anchovies, capers) into a pot to make her sauce. Lazy prostitute’s sauce.
On a similar note, speaking of puttane, I used to teach with a gorgeous lady, Paola, and every morning before class we’d greet each other affectionately with ‘ Ciao Troia, Buongiorno Troia. Nice, off, but nice.
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Awesome Sound, Great blog
John Pellow
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Puttanesca is my husband’s favorite, I like this version.
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Thanks Liz, try it with Spada for a Sicilian touch as well as that knocked up marinade. I am sure he will like it.
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I’ve pinned it and will remember it around his birthday. It is his most requested dish.
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Ooh I’m liking the look of this dish a lot Francesca! We usually eat swordfish as steaks but this sounds great.
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Thanks Lorraine, it’s a substantial meal.
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I adore Puttanesca .. I love mine with pork and fennel balls š
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