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POTUSโ€™s Lucky Pasta

By June 5, 2018June 12th, 2018213 Comments


Since Iโ€™m sure youโ€™veย all spent the weekend poring over my summer cookbook rundown in Sundayโ€™s book review, you know that one of the books I was most enthusiastic about this year was Eat a Little Better, by Sam Kass, who cooked for theย Obama family when they were in the White House.ย The bookย is filled with insider anecdotes and (notย surprisingly) the kinds of recipes that ground and nourish busy families. It was also one of those cookbooks that was as satisfying to read as it was to cook from. Exhibit A on that claim? This story he wrote about the Presidentโ€™s โ€œlucky pasta.โ€ Itโ€™s an excerpt from the book, in Kassโ€™s words.ย 

Even if you werenโ€™t following politics during the 2012 election, you probably heard about the first presidential debate. The president faced off against former Massachusetts governor Mitt Romney in Denver, and letโ€™s just say it didnโ€™t go as planned. One of President Obamaโ€™s weaknesses, as he readily admits, was his impatience with the show of politics. In that debate, he delivered a sober, detailed discussion of policy. And he paid the price. His performance was universally panned in the media and Governor Romneyโ€™s poll numbers surged. The pundits declared that if Obama tanked another debate, he would probably lose the election. Needless to say, the pressure was on.

I was on food and hangout duty during debate season, traveling with the president and helping to feed him in the run-up to all three. After the unfortunate first contest, his staff spent three days holed up at a hotel in Virginia as he battled through grueling practice sessions. Practically the only breaks he took were to eat. Finally, the day of the second debate arrived. The plan was to head to Hofstra University, on Long Island, around lunchtime. By late morning, I still hadnโ€™t gotten word on whether the president, whoโ€™d eaten a late breakfast, would want food on the plane ride, so just in case, I started cooking. In the hotel kitchen, I prepped and packed the makings of a simple lunch: I cooked a chicken breast, whipped up a classic pesto, and boiled mini penne just shy of al dente. I grabbed some raw spinach and Parmesan, then loaded into the motorcade with the rest of the presidentโ€™s staff, all of us wearing our best โ€œWeโ€™re totally relaxed and confidentโ€ faces, but all of us nervous.

When Air Force One took off, I stopped by the planeโ€™s conference room to see if the president wanted something to eat. In the middle of a game of Spades, he hemmed and hawed a bit, then said, โ€œSure, just nothing too heavy.โ€ I had my marching orders, so off I went to the kitchen to prepare the first and only meal I cooked on the presidentโ€™s plane.

The kitchen on Air Force One is surprisingly tiny and intimidatingly immaculate. When I got there, it was crammed with the two Air Force chefs prepping to serve lunch to the hundred-plus peopleโ€”including White House staff, Secret Service, and pressโ€”onboard. They stopped work when they spotted me, as they did whenever the boss needed to eat. I wedged my way in, turned on one of the four induction burners, and got to work. I resuscitated the penne in a pan with a little olive oil and water, tossed in the chicken, and then the spinach. I hit it with some pesto, trying my best to avoid defiling the pristine stove with green spatter, threw on a handful of grated Parm, and hustled a plate to the president, who was both deep in Spades mode and reviewing a stack of papers.

After a few minutes, I popped back in to see if he was happy, assuming Iโ€™d get a simple โ€œsolid.โ€ Instead, he beamed at me. โ€œSam, itโ€™s perfect!โ€ he raved. โ€œSometimes you donโ€™t know what you want until someone gives it to you, and you realize, โ€˜Thatโ€™s exactly what I wanted.โ€™โ€

I had never seen him react quite like that to anything Iโ€™d cooked. After heโ€™d finished, I returned to hang out and he delivered another round of praise for the pasta. Later, just before he took the stage at Hofstra, I bumped into my friend Pete Souza, the presidentโ€™s photographer, who told me, โ€œI donโ€™t know what you put in the pasta but the president has been talking about it all afternoon.โ€

He did well that night, dominating the debate and making his case to the American people with clarity and passion. He shifted the electionโ€™s momentum and all of us in the administration had a rare restful nightโ€™s sleep. Before I turned in, I sent him an email: โ€œIt doesnโ€™t get better than that! One more left.โ€ He replied with one line: โ€œIt was the pasta!โ€

From then on, it became known as โ€œLucky Pasta.โ€ I made it for him again before the third and final debate, and he turned in a stellar performanceโ€” no thanks Iโ€™m sure to rigorous prep and a firm command of the subjects of foreign policy and national security. Come on, it was the pasta! Because Iโ€™ll tell you what: I also made it on Election Day.


Lucky Pasta
Serves 4-6
From Eat a Little Better: Great Flavor, Good Health, Better World, by Sam Kass

You may not have an election or debate coming up, but we all need a lucky charm, or at least a meal that comes together in minutes. Feel free to cook the chicken, boil the pasta, and even make the pesto the night before. If you do, undercook the pasta slightly or reheat it in just a little water in a saute pan. Store the pesto in the fridge with plastic wrap pressed against the surface to keep natural discoloration at a minimum.ย Serves 4-6.

1 pound mini penne or any pasta shape you like
Kosher salt
ยฝ garlic clove
2 cups packed fresh basil leaves
ยผ cup pine nuts or pecans, toasted
ยนโ„โ‚ƒ cup finely grated Parmesan cheese, plus more to finish
ยฝ cup extra-virgin olive oil
2 roasted chicken breasts (see below), cut into bite-sized pieces, warm or room temperature
ยฝ pound baby spinach

Cook the pasta in boiling salty water until al dente. Drain, reserving 1 cup of the water.

While the pasta cooks, drop the garlic into a food processor with the motor running and process until the garlic is finely chopped. Add the basil, nuts, cheese, half the oil, and ยฝ teaspoon of salt and pulse to a coarse puree. With the motor running, add the remaining oil in a slow stream and keep processing until pretty smooth.

Toss the hot pasta with the pesto, chicken, spinach, and โ…“ cup of the reserved pasta water. Gradually add more of the pasta water if the dish seems dry. Season with salt to taste and top with more grated or shaved parmesan.

Simply Roasted Chicken Breasts

2 skin-on chicken breasts, about 6 ounces each
1 tablespoon extra-virgin olive oil
Kosher salt

Preheat the oven to 450ยฐF. Put the chicken breasts on a parchment-lined baking sheet and coat with the oil. Season generously all over with salt, about 1 teaspoon total. Roast them skin-side up until lightly browned and fully cooked but still juicy, about 20 minutes. Let them rest on a cutting board for a few minutes, then cut into bite-sized pieces.

Thanks Sam!

Reprinted from Eat A Little Better. Copyright c 2018 by Sam Kass. Photographs copyright c 2017 by Aubrie Pick. Published by Clarkson Potter/Publishers, an imprint of Penguin Random House, LLC.

Giveaway winner has been chosen. (Congrats Kati!) Thanks for playing everyone.

213 Comments

  • Avatar Kathleen says:

    Yum, thatโ€™s just about how we make pesto, except we toss with cherry tomatoes instead of spinach, but spinach is a good idea too.

  • Avatar Julie says:

    I just ordered this from the library, because Iโ€™ve already exhausted my cookbook budget for the year. I would love my own copy of Samโ€™s book that can absorb a few spills! Haha!

  • Avatar Jen says:

    A cookbook and history book all in one? I want it so badly! Plus, pesto is my absolute favorite, I canโ€™t wait to try this recipe.

  • Jennifer says:

    I canโ€™t wait to try this recipe!

  • Avatar Maggie H. says:

    This recipe sounds delish, and the cookbook sounds like a balm for our crazy-making weeknights. (Iโ€™ve loved your cookbooks too!)

  • Avatar Andy says:

    Thatโ€™s a great story โ€“ I love cookbooks that are good reads!

  • Avatar Ashley-Dior Thomas says:

    What a great story and recipe! Thatโ€™s what cooking does: reminds you of things thatโ€™s happened in your life.

  • Avatar ND says:

    My mom used to make something just like this but she also added raisins and pine nuts, which was great. I wish my kids would eat this! Love to read this bookโ€ฆ..

  • Avatar Kati says:

    On the one hand, this is an awesome (and well-told) story and I love it. On the other hand, Iโ€™m in tears because itโ€™s a window to a time when we werenโ€™t all experiencing the current collective trauma. And on another foot (since Iโ€™m a parent, we have to use all the tools at our disposable- two hands are never enough), I know what Iโ€™m bringing picnic style for that absurdly short period of time between when aftercare ends and soccer practice beginsโ€ฆ

    • Shar says:

      Kati, I was also in tears. You hit the nail on the head, โ€œa window to a time when we werenโ€™t all experiencing a collective traumaโ€ my god, I miss hope.

  • Avatar Meaghan says:

    This sounds like the perfect lucky dish to me! I canโ€™t eait to make it for my family.

  • Avatar Lauren says:

    oh my goodness, that Lucky Pasta sounds incredible! And as a full time working mom, with a preschooler who still has an early bedtime, easy nourishing meals are exactly what my busy family needs.

  • Avatar Becca says:

    Thanks for sharing this story! Reason 832987938573987 we miss President Obamaโ€ฆ.and, the pesto sounds perfectly prepared. Would love to add this cookbook to our collection

  • Avatar Marina says:

    Would love to win this book!! This pasta looks amazing.

  • Avatar Joanna says:

    Oh, I have to try this. If Obama liked it that much I bet I can get my kids to at least taste it ๐Ÿ˜‰

  • Avatar Bethany says:

    This recipe sounds delicious!

  • Nicole Correia says:

    Oooh I love cookbooks in which recipes are accompanied by stories โ€“ itโ€™s why Iโ€™ve always loved your cookbooks. And being in an ongoing stay of Obama-stalgia, this sounds perfect.

  • Avatar Christina says:

    Sounds delish! Excited to try this recipe.

  • Avatar Sarah G says:

    I love this! Sounds like a great summer book to cook-thru with family!

  • Avatar Emma says:

    In the current political reality weโ€™re living in, itโ€™s so lovely and soul refreshing to be reminded that weโ€™ve had presidents who treat others with kindness, dignity, and respect โ€“ even in extremely stressful times. Can pasta change the world? Unclear, but when coupled with kindness even a simple bowl of pasta can remind us that anything is possible.

  • Avatar Robin says:

    Without knowing the background to the story, my girls would call this โ€œlucky pastaโ€ because they feel like itโ€™s their lucky day when we make pesto! It started years ago when their daycare/pre-school had a garden. At the end of the growing season, I would buy all the basil that they hadnโ€™t sold at their little farmerโ€™s market (to parents). They always felt lucky to get all of the extra basil and to know we had several months of pesto stockpiled!

  • Avatar Tama says:

    I sure miss Obama. This cookbook looks great!

  • Avatar Tina says:

    This looks easy and tasty. Iโ€™d love to win and read this book!

  • Avatar erin says:

    sometimes simple is best! definitely going to have to check out this book!

  • Avatar Nuria says:

    I read your article and thought it would be a great read (as I sometimes donโ€™t have the time to spend much time in the kitchen now that I have two little ones, and I use cookbooks as a way of daydreaming of what Iโ€™d lile to eat or cook). Besides, this one it will make a super present for my 40th birthday !!

  • Alyssa Cantarutti says:

    Yum! Who WOULDNโ€™T love a fresh pesto pasta?! Delish. Thanks for sharing!

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