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| Pasta
Recipes NZ - easy pasta recipes! |
We all know
what pasta is. What we don't all know is how to cook
it properly. The first mistake people make when cooking
pasta is the size of the pan to use. Pasta needs a lot
of space to move around in while it cooks. If it doesn't
have this space, then there is a good chance that the
pasta will stick together or to the sides of the pan,
with disastrous consequences for the finished dish.
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HOW
TO COOK PASTA
Pasta:
1 packet of your favourite pasta
(penne, spaghetti, rigatoni, fettuccine, macaroni)
1 tablespoon oil (for cooking)
1 tablespoon oil (for tossing)
1 teaspoon salt
- Fill the largest
pot you have with water.
- Add 1 tablespoon
vegetable oil.
- Place it on
the cooker top. Stir to combine.
- Turn the knob
to high.
- When the water
starts bubbling up at the surface (the technical
term for this is "boiling"), add up to a handful
of salt anywhere. Most Americans do not add salt,
whereas Italians add about a handful.
- Dump the container
of pasta into the pot.
- Agitate it
slightly with a long serving spoon, preferable one
with slots or holes in it.
- Keep your
eye on it as it continues to boil and stir it just
enough to prevent the pasta from sticking to the
bottom every 1-2 minutes.
- When it's
been boiling for about 10 minutes (check the package
for suggested cooking time), take a piece of the
pasta out and taste it.
- If it's too
hard to bite or tastes funny when you bite it, it
needs to cook a little longer. Also, if you see
white in the center, your pasta needs to cook a
little longer.
- When it's
chewy but firm in the center, it's ready. This is
referred to as al dente in Italian.
- Empty the
entire pot of pasta into a colander.
- Shake out
the excess water and then pour back into the pot.
- Add the remaining
tablespoon of vegetable oil. Toss.
- Cover with
your favorite sauce and shake it (inside the hot
pot).
- Serve it!
Tips
- Use plenty
of water. The most common cause of "sticky" pasta
is cooking with too little water. Use at least 4
quarts of water for each pound of pasta(4 liters
for each one-half kilogram). No oil or other additives
are required.
- Add salt to
the water. Salt enhances the pasta's flavor and
allows the sauce flavors to "blend" better.
- Add some of
the pasta water to your sauce. If you're making
your own sauce, add a bit of the water used to cook
the pasta if you need to adjust it's thickness.
The dissolved starches will thicken and enrich it's
texture. Note that the "right" amount varies according
to recipe, batch size and preference.
- Italians adopt
a "leave it alone" or "don't mess with it" policy
when cooking pasta. Don't agitate or stir it too
much. This goes for the sauce as well.
- Different
pastas cook for varying times. Thin linguine, for
example, cooks much faster than rigatoni.
- For a hotter
boil, cover your pot. Just be sure to remove it
once you put the pasta in.
- When your
pasta is ready, the outer edges will begin to lighten
in color.
- Some people
prefer to rinse their pasta in the colander to wash
away the starches. Do not do this! In addition to
the sauce adhering better because of the starch,
if you rinse it, you will be cooling the pasta before
you add the sauce. Instead, drain the pasta, add
it back into the pot you cooked it, turn on the
heat and add the sauce, stirring until well-mixed
and hot. The pasta will be thoroughly coated by
the sauce and the pasta will stay hot when you serve
it.
- If you make
spaghetti and they are not submerged at beginning,
do not break them. Wait 30 seconds and gently use
your fork to bend them and submerge them.
- I'm sure you've
heard the old wives tale that if it sticks to the
ceiling, it's done cooking. This isn't true. A barely
cooked piece of pasta can still stick to your ceiling.(It
actually depends on what kind of material your ceiling
is made out of).
Warnings
If
the bubbles look like they're about to spill out of
the pot, lower the heat to medium-high.
Never add anything to reduce this. This may be prevented
by shaking.
When emptying the pasta into the boiling water, do it
slowly so the hot water doesn't splash out of the pot
and burn you. |
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