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Making Artisan Pasta PDF

177 Pages·2011·12.99 MB·English
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MMMAAAKKKIIINNNGGG AAARRRTTTIIISSSAAANNN PASTA PPAASSTTAA MMMAAAKKKIIINNNGGG AAARRRTTTIIISSSAAANNN PASTA PPAASSTTAA HOW TO MAKE A WORLD OF HANDMADE NOODLES, STUFFED PASTA, DUMPLINGS, AND MORE I dedicate this book to the pasta artisans of the world, who create delicious art with their hands daily. CONTENTS Foreword........................................8 Introduction.....................................10 PART I: THE BASICS CHAPTER ONE: CHAPTERTHREE: PASTA INGREDIENTS 14 FLAVORING PASTA DOUGH 48 Water..........................................18 RoastedRedPepperPasta Dough....................50 Eggs ..........................................19 AsparagusPasta Dough ...........................52 Wheat .........................................22 SpinachPasta Dough (Pasta Verde) ..................53 Red Beet Pasta Dough.............................54 CHAPTERTWO: SquashPasta Dough..............................55 MAKING PASTA DOUGH Red Wine Pasta Dough ............................56 FROM WHEAT AND OTHER FLOURS 28 Porcini Mushroom Pasta Dough......................57 Basic Egg Pasta Dough by Hand.....................30 Saffron–White Wine Pasta Dough....................58 Basic Egg Pasta Dough Using a Heavy-Duty Stand Mixer..33 SquidInkPasta Dough ............................59 Basic Egg Pasta Dough Using a Food Processor.........35 ChocolatePasta Dough............................60 Using Other Flours to Make Pasta Doughs..............37 Lemon-PepperPasta Dough ........................61 Whole Wheat Pasta Dough..........................37 BuckwheatPasta Dough...........................38 RyePasta Dough.................................38 Cornmeal-ChipotlePasta Dough.....................39 SemolinaPasta Dough ............................39 Methods for Forming Pasta.........................40 Hand-StretchedPasta Dough ....................42 RollingPasta Dough with a Sheeter................45 PART II: THE PASTA CHAPTER FOUR: DUMPLINGS 64 PotatoGnocchi ..................................66 SemolinaGnocchi (Gnocchi alla Romana)..............69 RavioliGnudi....................................72 Matzo Balls.....................................74 Spaetzle........................................76 Passatelli ......................................78 CHAPTER FIVE: PASTA SHEETS 80 Maltagliati......................................82 LaminatedParsleyPasta...........................84 Lasagna .......................................86 Cannelloni......................................91 CHAPTERSIX: MAKING CUT PASTA 94 A World of AsianNoodles...........................96 Hand-RolledAlsatianNouilles.......................98 Cappellini.....................................100 PorciniTagliatelle...............................102 Straw and Hay..................................104 Pappardelle and Tagliolini.........................106 CHAPTER EIGHT: STUFFED PASTA 134 Pasta alla Chitarra..............................108 BuckwheatPizzoccheri ...........................110 MakingRavioli Using a Plaque.....................138 Japanese Udon Noodles...........................112 Tortelloni......................................141 Tortellini ......................................143 CHAPTERSEVEN: Caramelle.....................................146 SPECIALTY HAND-FORMED PASTA 114 Pierogi........................................148 Ricotta Cavatelli from Puglia ......................116 ChinesePotStickers.............................152 Sardinian Malloreddus ...........................118 UkrainianSour Cherry Vareniki .....................154 Genoese Chestnut Corzetti.........................120 GenoesePansotti................................156 Garganelli.....................................122 GiantAsparagusRaviolo with Soft-Cooked Egg ........158 Chinese Cat’s Ear Noodles (Mao Er Duo)..............124 Turkish Manti...................................162 Pugliese Orecchiette.............................126 SiberianPelmeni................................164 Umbrian Ombrichelli.............................128 GreekTrahana..................................130 Glossary.......................................166 Resources.....................................168 Flour and Grain Weight and Volume Equivalents........170 Index.........................................171 Acknowledgments...............................175 About the Author and Photographer..................176 8 MAKING ARTISAN PASTA FOREWORD I FIRST MET ALIZA GREEN when One of my earliest memories she was working on a new edi- is learning from my grandmother tion of her book, The Bean Bible. A how to hand roll tordelli, a tradi- fellow mangiafagioli (bean eater— tional pasta from my home town also a nickname for people from of Lucca. I can still practically Tuscany, my home), she contacted do it in my sleep. Follow Aliza’s me to learn more about the heir- detailed instructions, accom- loom Tuscan beans that I import panied by Steve Legato’s clear, for my company, The Republic of attractive photographs, and even Beans. if you don’t have an Italian grand- We hit it off immediately mother, you can learn to make because we share a love of rustic, excellent hand rolled pasta for unpretentious food with strong tagliolini, tortelli (another name roots in tradition and contempo- for ravioli), and tortelloni. A per- rary creativity. She understands sonal favorite is pappardelle, the cooking from both the heart and wide ribbon-shaped pasta that the intellect. As a lifelong food has been a Tuscan specialty for explorer, voracious reader, and hundreds of years, always served accomplished self-taught chef, with a slow-cooked, herb-scented Aliza is flexible and curious, and meat or game ragù. she’s a relentless researcher. In Italy, we eat pasta as just I don’t know many chefs who one of five courses: would spend five years studying (cid:1) ANTIPASTI(appetizers such Italian just to be able to cook more as marinated vegetables, olives, authentic food! thin-sliced cured meats—or Aliza spent many years devel- pimzimonio or raw vegetables oping her pasta skills, preparing dipped in extra virgin olive oil) traditional and creative fresh pasta for customers in the res- (cid:1) PRIMI (first course, pasta, soup, taurants where she established polenta, or risotto) a well-deserved reputation as (cid:1) SECONDI (meat course, not a one of Philadelphia’s top chefs, gigantic steak) at a time when few thought of that city as a culinary center. To (cid:1) CONTORNI (side dishes, veg- research Making Artisan Pasta and etables) hone her pasta techniques, she (cid:1) DOLCI (sweets, not too much worked with chefs, artisan pasta and not too sweet). makers, and home cooks in Italy and elsewhere. 9 Because the meat is surrounded describes how the three main by other foods, we Tuscans, ingredients in fresh pasta dough— though meat is important to us, flour, eggs, and water—work, not eat it in smaller portions. This was just taste. If your potato gnocchi originally because of economics, taste more like “potato bullets” but now we also consider environ- (an old Italian name for gnoc- mental and health concerns. We chi translates to this), through don’t drown our pasta in sauce, Aliza’s techniques you’ll succeed and we cook it so it is quite chewy, in making light, tender gnocchi which is both more healthful and anyone would be proud to serve. more fun. Perhaps you’ve wanted to try pas- I’m not a purist. I don’t think satelli, garganelli, or cavatelli? everything has to be done the Don’t settle for mediocre indus- same way it was one hundred trial “fresh” pasta, and don’t be or two hundred years ago, with intimidated by lack of experience. specific ingredients and pre- Follow Aliza’s instructions and sentation. If anything, it’s the you’re sure to succeed. opposite. I love taking traditional Aliza’s pasta is a delicious dishes from Veneto, Puglia, even combination of authentic and ancient Rome and translating traditional, creative and seasonal them into something new. I like hailing from many parts of the “free-range” cooking that takes world. In Making Artisan Pasta, inspirations from all periods and she makes the techniques easy all of Italy. In Making Artisan Pasta, to understand and recreate for Aliza includes classic Italian reci- home cooks working in home pes like tortellini from Bologna, kitchens in the real world, though ombrichelli from Orvieto, and professionals will gain valuable corzetti from Genoa, as well as knowledge from this book. Aliza’s manti from Turkey, pierogi from genuine love of pasta shines Poland, and nouilles from Alsace here, encouraging readers to try so readers can learn and experi- it for themselves and even learn ment freely. to make the ultimate: their own Aliza teaches us why some hand-stretched pasta. flours yield dough that stretches And, I even use Aliza’s books easily and others yield dough that to teach my staff about their star snaps back like a rubber band; ingredients. why some flours yield meltingly tender pasta and others yield —CESARE CASELLA chewy pasta with a bite. She Dean of the Italian Culinary Academy, New York City 10 MAKING ARTISAN PASTA INTRODUCTION MAKING YOUR OWN PASTA is a the quality of ingredients, their satisfying way to work with your proportion, technique, and combi- hands to create something beauti- nation is essential. ful and delicious from ingredients I had the privilege of learning that you choose. Handmade to make fresh pasta from Marcella artisan pasta (especially hand- Hazan, who was responsible stretched dough) is full of for introducing the cuisine of character: silky, chewy texture; Bologna to the United States in full, fresh flavor; and pure, bright the late 1970s, as well as by work- color. You can roll the dough to ing with skilled pasta artisans any thickness and cut it in any from Southern and Northern Italy. shape. For stuffed pasta, you can Bologna is known as La Grassa, create your own fillings from the fat, because of the copious top-quality ingredients, without amounts of eggs, aged cheese, preservatives—local and seasonal and fine salumeria (cured meats) if you desire—and seasoned to used there in the heart of Italy’s your taste. fresh pasta belt. Back then, I spent To make most of the pastas time in the kitchens of several in this book, you’ll need only a Bolognese restaurants where few well-made tools, reasonable the pasta was made every day kitchen skills, and some upper from deep red-orange eggs and body strength. I share helpful tips ultra-silky 00 flour finely milled from many years of experience, especially for pasta and hand- some of the pitfalls, and how to stretched into enormous sheets, fix your mistakes. Remember: thin and large as a tablecloth. The project that doesn’t work out Over time, new frozen “fresh” teaches you the most. pasta companies grew, so chefs no Pasta is fun for all ages, too. longer needed to make their own Ridged bronze pasta cutting wheel Children love cranking out the pasta. Soon, everyone was serving sheets of dough, then using a ravi- “homemade” ravioli, and it was oli plaque to fill their own ravioli. no longer special. But there is no Adults love sampling new shapes, doubt that for each step you take flavors, fillings, and sauces, and away from the handmade prod- everyone can enjoy the many uct that is made fresh every day, flavors, shapes, and textures of something subtle but important pasta. As with all simple foods is lost. such as bread and ice cream,

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I dedicate this book to the pasta artisans of the world, who create Basic Egg Pasta Dough Using a Heavy-Duty Stand Mixer 33. Basic Egg Pasta
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Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.