• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Post Punk Kitchen - Isa Chandra Moskowitz

  • Home
  • Recipes
  • Books
  • Restaurants
  • Contact
  • About
  • Navigation Menu: Social Icons

    • Facebook
    • Instagram
    • Twitter

Quinoa Puttanesca

November 15, 2007 80 Comments

The first time I had pasta puttanesca I was waitressing at a restaurant in Park Slope. A fellow waitress told me that it was the pasta that Italian whores ate. She was always saying things like, “I spilled ketchup all over my tits,” and pronouncing “mimosa” in a really suggestive way. I just figured she was telling me that so she could say the word “whore” while slurping down linguine, but it is actually true, pasta putanesca is the pasta of whores. And I can see why.

If you’re anything like me you always have a gigantic thing of capers and olives in your fridge (not to mention great bone structure and an impressive unicorn collection.) Puttanesca is a really quick way to put together a complex tasting – passionate even – dish with pantry staples. Succulent, salty and a little spicy, the ingredients and method are simple enough that you can prep it, cook it and clean up after yourself in a leisurely 30 minutes, and then get back to the matter at hand, whether that be sex with strangers for money or updating your blog.

I’m always on the look out for ways to incorporate quinoa and other grains into my lunches, so it’s pretty brainless to just make a traditional pasta sauce and toss it on a grain instead. I like to make a big batch of quinoa at the beginning of the week and store it for a few days. If you don’t have a few cups of cooked quinoa around then see directions below* and start your quinoa before starting your sauce.

Quinoa Puttanesca – The Quinoa of Whores

Serves 4

2 to 3 cups cooked quinoa

For the sauce:

1 tablespoon olive oil

3 cloves garlic, chopped

1 teaspoon thyme

1 teaspoon crushed red pepper flakes

generous pinch each tarragon and marjoram

1/4 cup white wine

1/2 cup kalamata olives, roughly chopped (sliced in half is great)

1/2 cup capers

20 ounce can crushed tomatoes

fresh black pepper

Preheat a sauce pot over medium heat. Add the oil and garlic and stir for about a minute, being careful not to burn the garlic. Add herbs, spices and wine; cook for about a minute.

Add olives, capers and tomatoes. Cook for about 15 minutes. You can serve either by scooping quinoa into individual bowls and pouring the sauce over it, but my way is to just mix everything into a bowl together and reserve a little sauce to pour over my serving, because I like it extra whore-y. There is no rosemary in the recipe, but my food porn was looking a little naked so I garnished it with some.

For some reason, Jason Das named all the capers in the photo on my FlickR, so if that thought entertains you then you can go check that out.

*Mix one cup dry quinoa with 2 cups water, bring to a boil then lower heat and cook uncovered for about 15 minutes, stirring occasionally, until grain is tender and water has been absorbed.

Filed Under: Entrees, Recipe Tagged With: capers, olives, Quinoa

GET PPK IN YOUR INBOX!

Previous Post: « Peruvian Purple Potato Soup
Next Post: Latkes (Potato Pancakes) »

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. AsstroGirl

    November 15, 2007 at 1:58 pm

    I’m working on liking quinoa… maybe this will help.

    Reply
  2. jd

    November 15, 2007 at 2:34 pm

    I am soooo buying olives for this. Me and marinara sauce and quinoa work well together.

    Reply
  3. Gwenlet

    November 15, 2007 at 3:21 pm

    So, this’ll make people want to pay me for sex, right? I could use a side hustle.

    Reply
  4. pattrice

    November 15, 2007 at 3:23 pm

    Kalamata olives!?! No, no, no! True puttanesca is made with oil-cured olives. They are what give it its characteristic and unique flavor. Change the olives to kalamata and you’ve just got another spaghetti sauce.

    Reply
  5. pattrice

    November 15, 2007 at 3:24 pm

    Omigod I can’t believe I just challeged Isa on a matter of food. The chutzpah! But, really, I feel very strongly about puttanesca.

    Reply
  6. Jason

    November 15, 2007 at 3:48 pm

    Don’t feel bad, pattrice!! Isa has no respect for accuracy or authenticity in ethnic food. She is the Wes Anderson of vegan cooking.

    Reply
  7. Village Vegan

    November 15, 2007 at 4:08 pm

    I love puttanesca. I really, really, really love it. I was sick the other day and the only think I could eat was a big bowl of it. No pasta, just the sauce. Um, yeah.

    And I’m so glad that you use 1/2 cup of capers, too, not 2 tbsp like some of those namby pamby recipes out there.

    Reply
  8. Steph

    November 15, 2007 at 4:20 pm

    when I was a kid my grandma told me that puttanesca was italian for ‘prostitute’. it always makes me laugh now.

    Reply
  9. IsaChandra

    November 15, 2007 at 4:35 pm

    Ouch, Jason! That hurts to the core of my being.

    Pattrice, I get what you’re saying but most of us don’t have oil cured olives laying around our boudoirs.

    Reply
  10. kim

    November 15, 2007 at 4:53 pm

    ILLUSIONS, Isa. Tricks are what whores do for money.

    Reply
  11. Jason

    November 15, 2007 at 5:01 pm

    I’m sorry that I hurt you.

    Also, this looks delicious. Puttanesca is already one of my favorite things to make (though I’m sure yours is better). I’ve used kalamatas to make mine but will pick up some oil-cured olives to try next time.

    I like how the quinoa has absorbed all the red cause you premixed. I would’ve just sauced on top.

    Reply
  12. pattrice

    November 15, 2007 at 5:42 pm

    Even since learning about puttanesca, I always have oil cured olives — so easy to find, Cento or Sun of Italy brand in the grocery store — on hand. It’s the interplay between them and the capers that is so distinctive. Kalamata olives are much closer in nature (taste and texture) to the capers, so you wouldn’t get the same complex contrast of two salty bits that are similar but completely different.

    And, I’ve since discovered when working them them into other dishes, the oil cured olives provide an intense burst of the umami taste that people find in meat/cheese and often miss in vegan food.

    Reply
  13. Carla

    November 15, 2007 at 5:47 pm

    Looks yummy, and would go nicely on top of Millet too I would think.

    Reply
  14. urbanvegan

    November 15, 2007 at 5:54 pm

    I think you should rename it Quin-HO-a

    Reply
  15. IsaChandra

    November 15, 2007 at 6:06 pm

    Jason – shove it

    pattrice, we can’t all live in rural Maryland, cured olive capital of the world.

    Carla – it would and it does!

    uv – g1

    Reply
  16. pattrice

    November 15, 2007 at 7:22 pm

    Seriously, are oil cured olives hard to find in Brooklyn? I grew up in Baltimore, which has a big Italian-American population and Sun of Italy brand products in every grocery store. But I learned about puttanesca while living in Michigan and found oil cured olives in every grocery store there. And, yah, they’re in just about every grocery store here in rural Maryland too. Quinoa, on the other hand…

    Reply
  17. Lauren

    November 15, 2007 at 10:42 pm

    Isa-
    I love you. Someday, I hope to have a unicorn collection that rivals yours. This is maybe my favorite post ever.

    Reply
  18. IsaChandra

    November 15, 2007 at 11:37 pm

    pattrice – they aren’t hard to find, but the are hard to find jarred so i don’t ALWAYS have them.

    Lauren- you can’t “have” a unicorn collection, you have to earn it.

    Reply
  19. Bo-naners

    November 16, 2007 at 12:37 am

    Is there another name for kalamata olives? I can’t ever seem to find them at my grocery.

    Reply
  20. Bo-naners

    November 16, 2007 at 12:38 am

    (And this puttanesca looks phenomenal, by the way.)

    Reply
  21. bazu

    November 16, 2007 at 1:34 am

    HOW? how do you pronounce mimosa suggestively??

    Reply
  22. Lauren

    November 16, 2007 at 2:46 am

    Mimoooosssssa, while rubbing an ice cube over your lips and down your cleavage.

    Reply
  23. IsaChandra

    November 16, 2007 at 11:17 am

    ^Bingo.

    Reply
  24. FootFace

    November 16, 2007 at 1:18 pm

    Wait. It doesn’t mean “pasta of whores”? I always thought, you know, puttanesca was like “puta” in Spanish.

    Well, not “always,” maybe.

    Or ever.

    Reply
  25. has no tatoos

    November 16, 2007 at 1:58 pm

    I never cared for capers (taste reminiscent of some dental work chemical) UNTIL I had Puttanesca. Now I crave it all the time. I have been using kalamata olives… will look for oil cured.

    Reply
  26. B.A.D.

    November 16, 2007 at 4:57 pm

    olives are gross, what do non-Italian whores eat? I need a contingency plan for when this Bac falls through.

    Reply
  27. wingraclaire

    November 16, 2007 at 10:56 pm

    Looks delicious and I’ll definitely make it!

    Just a note to anyone who’s going to run out and buy the sauce in the jar as a convenience food…. the commercial stuff is made with anchovies! (Found out the hard way….)

    Reply
  28. DEBT

    November 17, 2007 at 12:00 am

    Now I crave it all the time.

    Reply
  29. foof

    November 17, 2007 at 2:30 pm

    Isa I made it through life AND Vcon testing and have still never had a caper.

    Reply
  30. sockbuttons

    November 17, 2007 at 6:24 pm

    I want to make this real bad. Do you think if I sub red wine for the white that it would taste as raunchy?

    Reply
  31. Jody (vegchic)

    November 18, 2007 at 12:19 pm

    Looks awesome Isa. Sometimes I make quinoa in sauce instead of pasta too!

    Reply
  32. IsaChandra

    November 18, 2007 at 10:45 pm

    sockbuttons – red wine would be really yummy. I just always have white so it shows up more often in my recipes.

    Reply
  33. debya

    November 19, 2007 at 1:52 pm

    I take umbrage with you making a dish with two of my least favorite things in the world: olives and capers. I appreciate you not making dishes with double-parkers and pocketless pants, though.

    Reply
  34. raspberrycomplaint

    November 19, 2007 at 5:14 pm

    I was quite entertained by the naming of the capers. And I like puttanesca. And unicorns. So I guess I just like this post in general.

    Reply
  35. smoothie

    November 19, 2007 at 10:56 pm

    i have everything to make it! wooohooo! i know what i’m gonna have for lunch tomorrow!

    Reply
  36. Felix

    April 3, 2010 at 12:58 am

    This a little bit funny. I found your site via search engine a few moment ago, and luckily, this is the only information I was looking for the last hours.

    Reply
  37. Rachel

    January 7, 2011 at 3:33 am

    I made this tonight with whole wheat linguine (out of convenience) for my parents. I try to go to their house and cook a vegan meal once a week. Recipe was delicious! My mom LOVES capers, pretty perfect. And my dad even commented about the Italian way of cooking the sauce, and then dumping in the pot of noodles and tossing it around. Thank you! Another successful/impressive vegan meal.

    Reply
  38. Priya Mahadevan

    January 20, 2011 at 10:36 pm

    I made a a stir fry ish with Quinoa not too long ago – http://priyasnowserving.blogspot.com/2010/11/great-qu-stir-fry.html
    I am very excited to try this one!

    Reply
  39. Radish

    February 2, 2011 at 5:11 am

    What kind of caper name is Lithophayne? For an olive, maybe, but a caper? I think not.

    Reply
  40. TofuRocks

    February 4, 2011 at 1:06 am

    This sounds awesome and I will try it for dinner.

    BBQ Pomegranate Tofu (Vegan w/ a Vengeance) also goes with quinoa beautifully.
    This is one of my all time favorite recipes and a major comfort food for me. THANK YOU, ISA for teaching me how to prepare tofu and sharing all these awesome recipes. You are my hero.

    Reply
  41. Melissa

    February 9, 2011 at 3:26 am

    This is so easy, so good, and definitely one of my favorites meals! Thank you!

    Reply
Newer Comments »

Trackbacks

  1. Vegan Recipe Monday: Quinoa of Whores « riddlebiddle says:
    November 26, 2007 at 10:35 am

    […] goddess herself, Isa Chandra Moskowitz. You can head on over to the Post Punk Kitchen blog for the official recipe of this dish. She took a much clearer, prettier picture of it, in all its Puttanesca glory, but here’s my […]

    Reply
  2. Quinoa, Capers, and Whores « Fiction was too banal for her… says:
    December 20, 2007 at 3:13 pm

    […] http://theppk.com/blog/2007/11/15/quinoa-puttanesca/ […]

    Reply
  3. Isa’s Quinoa Puttanesca « stellatex says:
    November 1, 2009 at 9:47 pm

    […] made Isa’s Isa’s Quinoa Puttanesca (The Quinoa of Whores). Aside from the reference to whores, it fit the bill perfectly, and was […]

    Reply
  4. Friday Feast: Quinoa Puttanesca « Eco Lesbo Vego says:
    June 25, 2010 at 10:53 am

    […] 26, 2010 I found this recipe on the Post Punk Kitchen Blog, and I knew I just had to try it! I’m all for figuring out new […]

    Reply
  5. Blog Challenge: Week 1 and Banana Cookies « Vegan Awakening says:
    August 13, 2010 at 11:43 pm

    […] Challenge. I tried 2 recipes from the PPK blog this week- “Edamame Pesto” and “Quinoa Puttanesca.” The pesto was good and reminded me a lot of the “Pasta with Pea Pesto” recipe I […]

    Reply
  6. Project Tasteless: Passionate Carb Loading « Queer Vegan Runner says:
    October 24, 2010 at 8:03 pm

    […] a vegan recipe for the dish since many recipes call for anchovies (gross) and I found a recipe for Quinoa Puttanesca on the PPK blog. However, as much as I love quinoa, I love pasta even more and with a race the next […]

    Reply
  7. Tomato, Solanum lycopersicum | Pedagogy of the Plants says:
    December 18, 2010 at 2:47 pm

    […] Quinoa Puttanesca […]

    Reply
  8. Whore Food (Literally) « Vegan Whore says:
    January 5, 2011 at 1:26 pm

    […] Isa. Isa, Isa, […]

    Reply
  9. Appetite for Reduction cookery « Vegan Awakening says:
    February 4, 2011 at 12:57 am

    […] con Broccoli, Red Thai Tofu, Goddess Nicoise Salad, and Chickpea Piccata. I have also made the Quinoa Puttanesca and Linguine with Edamame Pesto last year when Isa posted them on her […]

    Reply

Leave a Reply to Bo-naners Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Recipe Rating




Primary Sidebar

  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Twitter

Hey I'm Isa, welcome to The Post Punk Kitchen. Let's cook some vegan food!

postpunkkitchen

Was anyone ambitious enough to make Madame Beefing Was anyone ambitious enough to make Madame Beefington for the holidays? #fakemeat
I saw that lasagna soup was trending and I was lik I saw that lasagna soup was trending and I was like “WHAT I HAVE A RECIPE FOR THAT” So here it is! Lasagna Bolognese Stew. A meaty concoction made with lentils and bursting with veggie goodness🥬🫒🥕 Recipe on the site. Photo by @_kate_lewis #veganlasagnasoup
Just in time for the Puppy Bowl! My copycat recipe Just in time for the Puppy Bowl! My copycat recipe for the OG of vegan wingz…Kate’s Buffalo Tofu Wings! Tag someone who remembers Kate’s Joint🌶️ And if you don’t know, well, try them anyway. Juicy tofu wings BURSTING with flavor and a bonus ranch recipe. These are from my new cookbook - FAKE MEAT - out this week! LMK if you have it already and what you’re cooking! Recipe link in bio. #veganwings #fakemeat #fakemeatcookbook
There are TWO vegan eggnog recipes on the site. On There are TWO vegan eggnog recipes on the site. One is oatmilk and coconut based. It’s nice for serving warm with rum. The other is avocado based and incredibly rich and unique, kinda like a milkshake. I think you should try them both.  #veganeggnog
Going all out with seitan turki this vegan Thanksg Going all out with seitan turki this vegan Thanksgiving? Or eating a casserole right out of the dish by yourself in your underwear? Either way, you need this Green Bean Casserole. It’s, like, the best. Link in bio or just search “green bean” and ye shall find. #veganthanksgiving #greenbeancasserole
First of all, my new cookbook - Fake Meat - is ava First of all, my new cookbook - Fake Meat - is available for preorder! Check it out on the site (link in bio) when you check out this recipe for Bouef Bourguignon! This is the exact recipe that will get you through winter.
🥣
If you think of Bouef Bourguignon you might automatically think Julia Child. But is Julia Child smiling down on us for this one? Probably not. But damn it’s still delicious. All the wine-kissed smoky satisfaction that you want in beef stew. 
👩🏻‍🍳
It’s from the Beef Stew chapter of Fake Meat and it’s the recipe that finally got me to embrace jackfruit! Go see why💫 #veganbeefstew #veganrecipes
Follow us

Copyright © 2025 Isa Chandra Moskowitz