Sunday, September 20, 2009

Homemade Pasta

My husband enjoys cooking. In fact, he probably cooks more often than I do. More and more I notice that he makes simple dishes more in line with those he grew up eating.He always says, "We had pasta EVERY Sunday, then again on Tuesday and likely one more night during the week." He recalls that there was some sort of meat floating in the sauce more for flavor than for sustenance. Often, the meat was rabbit caught by one of the uncles.

His Grandmother would sit at the kitchen table with a cup of coffee and hand press 1,000's of handmade cavatelli at a time for Sunday dinner. She made it look so easy, and they would all be gone by evening's end! We have never been able to master cavatelli. Dom has tried making eggless pasta but the method eludes him.

We make homemade pasta with a little Atlas hand crank machine which is quite good and well worth the mess it makes of the kitchen. We have made ravioli with the hand cranked pasta sheets as well. Homemade ravioli is SO much better than anything you can buy, but it is a labor of love. Here is our recipe:

Homemade Pasta
3 large eggs
5 cups flour
1 Tablespoon olive oil
1 cup cold water

On a clean counter top or pastry board, form a mound of flour. Make a well in the mounded flour and break in eggs and add oil. Slowly add in water. With hands (or a fork) gently start mixing together working from the inside out until all flour is incorporated. If dough feels to dry and a few drops of water if dough feels too sticky add a small amount of flour until the correct consistency is achieved. If using a pasta machine, divide the dough into thirds add start feeding through the machine. Follow the directions for your pasta machine. If making by hand, roll out dough with a rolling pin onto a floured surface until pasta is about 1/8" thick. Slice into “noodle” lengths with a knife or use cookie cutters to make fun noodles. To cook pasta, plunge noodles into boiling water and check 30 seconds after water returns to a boil. Do not cook for more than a minute.

Yum

1 comment:

Deb DeMarinis Lodico said...

They say the sense of smell is most closely tied to memory, and nothing brings me back to walking into the back door of Grandpa (Lou) and Grandma (Ang)'s house then the wonderful smell of a large pot of sauce simmering on the stove and the floury, earthy homemade pasta (cavatelli, of course) drying on the cutting board.

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