There are few things sweeter than an Italian grandmother cooking a pot of fresh cavatelli for her loved ones in the Tuscan countryside. Picture: a table filled with family and friends, laughter, olive oil and a local guanciale (aka cured meat).
For Scott Conant, best-selling cookbook author, judge on Food Networkโs Chopped, and owner of four upscale Italian restaurants, this familiar vision from his own childhood represents the foundation of quality cooking. From braising meat to boiling pasta, he believes that the key to elevating Italian cooking is in the basics. This is his best advice for taking your cooking to the next level.
Learn the Foundation
According to Conant, a good nonnaโs cooking has multiple layers and a soulful, long-lasting quality that fills up your palate. โThe last thing you add to a dish is usually the first thing that you taste, and then it goes backwards from there,โ he says, emphasizing the importance of the โsoffritto,โ or foundation. โIf you donโt have the foundation in place, itโs really hard to identify something to stand on to lift you up,โ he says. Thatโs why itโs so important to truly understand those commodities of the Italian kitchenโsearing, roasting, mixing vinaigrettes, even boiling pasta. โYou really should learn how to do these things the way an Italian grandmother would do it. And then you can evolve and move forward from there,โ Conant advises.
Stock Your Kitchen
In addition to the basics (extra virgin olive oil, crushed red pepper, sea salt, garlic and pasta), Conant always keeps a few extra staples in the refrigeratorโlike bottarga, guanciale, or โa good salume.โ These special ingredients, which can sit in waiting for a few weeks, are often the next step in elevating a simple dishโonce you master the basics, of course. โMaybe that spaghetti aglio e olio is a starting point for what becomes a
spaghetti with clams,โ he says, โor spaghetti with shrimp. [But] you have to know how to make a spaghetti aglio e olio before you know how to make a spaghetti with clams or a seafood pasta,โ he says.

Know Your Oils
Extra virgin olive oil is widely considered the highest quality variety with the most robust flavor, and Conant almost always cooks with it. The exceptions: searing meat and mixing a
vinaigrette. In the case of the former, extra virgin olive oil will likely darken and lose its
flavor, while just the opposite may happen in a vinaigrette. โStraight extra virgin olive could be overwhelming for the rest of your vinaigrette,โ he says, โso cut that with another oil that has a neutral flavor profile.โ That could be avocado, sunflower, canola, or even melted brown butter.
Salt the Water
When boiling pasta, Conant says it is โshockingโ how many people donโt put salt in the water first. โIt sounds simple and it sounds pretty basic, but you should add enough salt to the water that it tastes like broth,โ he says, advocating for a handful or even more. โItโs a lot, but youโre not consuming all that salt. Youโre seasoning.โ
Utilize Mother Nature
When it comes to vegetables, Conant recommends roasting over boiling. Not only does this allow for a tasty seasoning and caramelization, itโs also a way to be more health-conscious.
If youโre roasting carrots, for example, he suggests washing them well but keeping the skin on. โThatโs all nutrients. Thereโs no reason to boil them in water and cook all the nutrients out,โ he says.ย

Avoid Shortcuts
โMake sure that you follow through on the technique,โ says Conant. โIf it says in a recipe to sear the steak well, really get that pan nice and hot.โ Doing otherwise may save a few seconds, but it comes at the expense of flavor (in this case, caramelization). Says Conant: โJust having a broiled piece of meat is very different from having something thatโs been seared off precisely and braised for an extended period of time at a low temperature inside of a heavily flavored liquid. Make sure that you sear that steak really well because everything means something in the end.โ