Wednesday, April 25, 2012

Pasta

This is the most basic pasta recipe I know. It's ridiculously simple and easy to memorize. I highly recommend doing so.


  • Three large fresh eggs. (Fresh matters.)
  • 1 1/2 cups flower, separated
  • 1 teaspoonful of salt
  • 1 tablespoonful of olive oil

One a clean smooth surface, make a mound with one cup of flower. Create a well in the middle of the mound, about six inches in diameter. Separate two of the eggs and add the yolks to the well. You can save the whites for cocktails or throw them out. Crack the entire third egg into the well. Add the salt and oil, then whisk the eggs, slowly incorporating the flour as you go. Keep whisking until a dough forms, then kneed dough until smooth. form into a ball, cover with plastic and let rest for a half hour. 

From here you have a few choices. If you have a pasta roller, you probably already know how to make pasta and aren't reading this. If you don't, get out your best rolling pin and get to work. I like to half the rested dough, but if you don't work quickly you will want to cut it into thirds. Keep the dough you aren't working with covered so it doesn't dry out.  Flour your work surface and pin. The thinner the better as they will plump slightly when you cook them. Cut into the appropriate size ribbons. 

Cooking fresh pasta is very very different than cooking dry or even supermarket "fresh" pasta. Salt four quarts of water with about a tablespoonful of salt, maybe more. Bring it to a roiling boil but then back it off to a light boil, barely more than a simmer. Add the pasta and watch it! Do not crowd the pot and do not let it over-cook. Taste at 30 seconds and see if its done. If you walk away you will over-cook it. Two minutes is usually too long, but you will get a feel for it.  


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