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Venice isn’t really pasta country. As Hedy Giusti-Lanham and Andrea Dodo put it in their lovely 1978 cookbook The Cuisine of Venice and Surrounding Northern Regions, now sadly out of print, “In and round Venice, a series of polenta dishes will be mentioned first, then some rice dishes and at the end a couple of pasta dishes. It is really from Bologna southward that pasta is king”. That said, Venice does boast at least one iconic pasta dish the locals dub bigoli in sauce.
Bigoli is Venice’s signature pasta, a kind of thick spaghetti, sometimes made fresh and sometimes dry. Some rather dubious local lore has it bigoli is the pasta that Marco Polo brought back from China. True or not, they have a unique chewy texture that catches sauces beautifully.
To make bigoli in sauce, you dress these long stands with a simple sauce of onion, simmered low and slow in olive oil so as to coax out its inherent sweetness to the full, to which you add a good dose of anchovies. The onion and anchovy cook together until they melt into a creamy and intensely savory sauce. A sprinkle of fresh parsley can add a bit of color if you like.
Don’t let the rather monotonous look of the dish fool you. The sweetness of the onion and the intensely briny flavor of the anchovies deliver a veritable explosion of favor in your mouth.
Be aware, however, that this is definitely a dish where you will taste the anchovies. They’re not just there for their umami as in so many other dishes, but for their own unique assertive flavor that is admittedly not for everyone.
The main challenge for the home cook is sourcing the bigolia regional pasta that can be hard to find outside the Veneto, let along Italy. But you can buy them online or, in a pinch, substitute similar long pastas. Honestly, this sauce will be equally delicious no matter what pasta you pair it with.
Bigoli in sauce it was traditionally a dish for meatless holidays like Christmas Eve, Ash Wednesday and Good Friday, but today it is enjoyed year round. And it’s a good thing, too, as it’s too tasty to limit to just a couple of days a year.Ingredients
Serves 4-6- 400g (14 oz) bigoli (see Notes)
- 1/2 large or 1 medium white onion, about 300g (10-1/2 oz), minced or thinly sliced
- 100g (3-1/2 oz) anchovy fillets, or to taste
- Water or dry white wine, to taste
- Olive oil
- Salt and pepper
- A few springs of fresh parsley, finely. minced
Directions
In a large braiser or sauté pan, gently sauté the onions until they are very soft, adding a few drops of water or wine from time to time to help them along and prevent any browning. Take your time. The process should take about 15-20 minutes.
Add the anchovies fillets and let them melt completely and melt with the onions into a kind of creamy sauce.
Meanwhile, bring a large pot of well salted water to the boil, then cook your bigoli until al dente.
Add the bigoli to the onion and anchovy sauce, along with most of the minced parsley if using and a small ladleful of the cooking water. Toss the pasta in the sauce over medium heat until the sauce reduces and clings to the pasta. Serves right away, topped with the remaining parsley.
Notes
Bigoli in sauce it’s so simple to make, you can rarely go wrong. The only thing I’d say is to make sure you take your time with the onions. They should cook very gently and for as long as it takes so they get very soft, almost falling apart. And make sure they don’t brown at all. Keep the flame low and add that water or wine from time to time.
About bigoli
Bigoli as in various types. They can be made with or without eggs. They can be made with 00 flour or durum flour. Or with buckwheat flour, in which case you call them dark bigoli (dark bigoli) or bigoli mori (Moorish bigoli).
But what makes bigoli unique is the way you make them. Traditionally you employ a curious extrusion device called a press bigolar. It’s so large you need to attach it to a bench, which you sit on as you rotate a lever on top that slowly presses the dough through a cylinder onto a bowl placed on the floor below. The process sound rather tedious to me, but evidently it can be rather fun. You can buy a bigolaro online. But you need to be a die hard bigoli aficionado, as the contraption costs nearly $400. I like it bigolibut not quite that much…
They also sell at more reasonably priced pasta machine attachment for making bigoli. But frankly based on my own experience I don’t recommend it. Among other things bigoli are by definition extrudednot rolled. And while they also sell machines for extruding pasta, or course, none that I know make bigolijust regular spaghetti. (And I’m not a fan of these machines anyway.)

Long story short, if you don’t want to dish out the cash to buy yourself a bigolaryou need to buy yours bigoli. Where I live, bigoli they are basically impossible to find in stores. But I found the bigoli pictured at left from the Venetian pasta maker Borella on amazon.com. As pasta goes, these bigoli aren’t cheap. They cost about $12 for a 500g package, and I find it fairly maddening that the same pasta sells for about a €2 in Italy. Highway robbery!
There are some acceptable substitutes for bigoli. Perhaps the closest pasta are pici from Tuscany, but they can be equally hard to find and, in any event, they are rolled not extruded. And although they lack the same chewiness, the easiest substitution would be spaghetti (thick spaghetti). Or even regular spaghetti. You will find recommendations for bucatini as a substitute, though to my mind they are a bit too thick.
Anchovies
Traditional recipes for bigoli in sauce call for anchovies (or sardines) packed in salt. These need to be rinsed of their excess salt, then cut down their undersides to gingerly remove the two fillets from the backbone. (See this post for an illustration of the technique.) The operation is rather finicky but purists will tell you it’s worth the effort.
Well, for today’s post I decided to put that bit of conventional wisdom to the test. I compared salt packed anchovies imported from Italy (Scalia brand) with two quality brands of jarred anchovy fillets in olive oil, Agostino Recca and Delfino Battista. To me, the differences among them were very subtle. In fact, I liked the Delfino Battista the best. Of course, any of these options will be better than the kind of canned anchovies you’ll usually find in supermarkets. And the less said about anchovy paste the better.
Variations
The main ingredients for bigoli in sauce pretty much don’t vary much among recipes. Onion, anchovy and pasta. And sometimes parsley. Some recipes call for adding water, others for white wine, to the onions as they simmer. And more traditional recipes call for sardines packed in salt instead of or as alternatives to the anchovies. That said, as with so many iconic dishes, the measurements can vary quite a bit, particularly the amount of anchovies. So if you are a bit anchovy shy, then feel free to use less than called for here.
The technique, on the other hand, can vary a fair bit. In some recipes, you mince the onions and anchovies together and then sauté them. In others, you add a bit of water or wine to the onions and anchovies to form a thick sauce even before adding the pasta. I tend to doubt these variations make much difference in the end. One variation that does, however, is a fancier version of the dish, where you cover the sautéed onions and anchovies in water and let them together simmer for at least an hour, until they completely melt into a thick, dark sauce which is sometimes puréed .
Some recipes for bigoli in sauce will have you add some breadcrumbs to the sauce, saying it will help the sauce to cling to the pasta. In yet others, you sauté breadcrumbs in olive oil and use them as a topping, in the manner of many southern Italian pasta dishes.
The origins of bigoli and the Marco Polo myth
As mentioned at the top, according to some local lore, bigoli is the pasta that Marco Polo brought back from China, along with the first press bigolar. But this legend is dubious at best.
The origins of pasta
To start, let’s remember that pasta existed in Italy long before Marco Polo. As we’ve discussed before, the ancient Romans had pasta they called laganumthe modern descendants of which they are lagane and laganelleribbon shaped pastas still popular in southern Italy today.
The origins of pasta are hotly disputed. My own hunch is that it developed independently in various parts of the world, including both China and the ancient Mediterranean basin. After all, the idea of mixing flour and water and then drying it in various shapes to preserve it isn’t exactly rocket science. I agree with food historian Anna Maria Pellegrinowho says
“[e]since the birth of agriculture, man has learned to hone crop techniques and shape these to his needs, thus mixing grains with water was an automatic step which happened across all civilizations at some given point in time, probably simultaneously.”
Moreover, as I understand it, the Chinese traditionally made their noodles by hand pulling or rolling rather than extrusion. And as far as I have been able to figure out, the ancient Chinese didn’t employ a contraption like the bigalaro to make their noodles. They also had very different methods for cooking and serving noodles, suggesting that the two culinary traditions developed separately.
Polo already knew about pasta
More to the point, in his account of his travels, variously known as The Book of Marvels of the World, A Description of the Worldor (usually in English) The Travels of Marco PoloPolo recounts that he ate “[foods] like lasagna and the other pasta dishes” in Italy—obviously meaning that he was already familiar with pasta. The notion he brought spaghetti to Italy seems to have started in the US in the early 20th century as a marketing ployin a story titled “A Saga of Cathay” which appeared in the October 1929 issue of the Macaroni Journala trade magazine of North American pasta makers. The 1938 movie “The Adventures of Marco Polo” starring Gary Cooper, who depicted the great traveler bringing spaghetti to Italy for the first time, brought the myth into the mainstream.
Another more probable story…
So if Marco Polo didn’t bring bigoli to Venice in the 13th century, where did they come from? A less romantic but more plausible story is that they were invented centuries later by a pasta maker from nearby Padua named Bartolomio Veronese. who patented his Bigular press with local authorities in 1604.
Bigoli in sauce
Venetian Thick Spaghetti in Onion and Anchovy Sauce- 400 g (14 oz) bigoli
- 1/2 large or 1 medium white onion about 300g (10-1/2 oz), minced or thinly sliced
- 100 g (3-1/2 oz) anchovy fillets, or to taste
- Water or dry white wine to taste
- Olive oil
- Salt and pepper
- A few springs of fresh parsley finely. minced
- In a large braiser or sauté pan, gently sauté the onions until they are very soft, adding a few drops of water or wine from time to time to help them along and prevent any browning. The process should take about 15-20 minutes.
- Add the anchovies fillets and let them melt completely and melt with the onions into a kind of creamy sauce.
- Meanwhile, bring a large pot of well salted water to the boil, then cook your bigoli until al dente.
- Add the bigoli to the onion and anchovy sauce, along with most of the minced parsley if using and a small ladleful of the cooking water. Toss the pasta in the sauce over medium heat until the sauce reduces and clings to the pasta.
- Serves right away, topped with the remaining parsley.