COOKING TIP: Pasta
For your information: Fresh pasta is No better
than dried pasta. Each is used with different sauces. Fresh pasta is best
served with creamy, butter- based sauces which allows the texture of the pasta
to shine and be the star of the dish. Dried pasta is more versatile using a
wider variety of saucing to be used depending on the shape of the pasta. See
table below.
Never add oil to the water in which you are cooking
pasta. Adding it does not prevent sticking. However, it coats the pasta not
allowing sauce to cling to it and just wastes the oil. Pasta does not have to
be cooked in huge volumes of water. Enough water to cover the amount of pasta
you are cooking by an inch or two is enough. This plus a few stirs during
cooking time will prevent sticking. Do, however, add salt (Kosher, not iodized)
in the ratio; 1 tsp of Morton or ½ tbsp Diamond per quart of water. The salted
water is absorbed by the pasta and flavors it while cooking.
Do not break long pasta into strands. There are
numerous short pasta shapes to use if your dish calls for short pasta. Each
pasta shape is made for a specific type of saucing. Use the appropriate sauce
for the type you are using.
Never overcook pasta. Nobody likes mushy
pasta. Prepare each to its al dente (Italian
- to the tooth) consistency; it should have a little “resistance” to your teeth
when you bite into it. Cook according to the directions on the box. Taste
frequently while cooking. When it is
cooked about two or three minutes from the recommended cooking time or from the time
your tasting tells you the texture is almost at the point you would like it to
be, drain the pasta and put it into the sauce to finish cooking. This will
allow the sauce to be absorbed into the pasta in the last phase of cooking.
Further, the addition of a few tablespoons of the starchy pasta cooking water
to the sauce will help bind the sauce to the pasta.
RMEMBER, sauce judiciously, NEVER overpower the
pasta with sauce. The pasta should be the star of the dish, not the sauce. Use
just enough to fully coat all the pasta without leaving a pool of sauce under
it on the plate.
PASTA SAUCE
Long and Thin olive oil, herbs and spices, tomato,
Capellini, Vermicelli,
Angel Hair
Long and Flat cheese
or cream based
Fettuccine, Linguini,
Pappardelle
Tubular robust tomato, frequently with minced
meat
Penne, Cappelletti,
Ziti
Large and Flat baked in sauce with meat,
cheese. and/or vegetables
Lasagna
Pasta with filling olive oil or butter sauces, thin soups,
broth, light tomato
Ravioli, Tortellini,
Cappelletti
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