Showing posts with label pasta type. Show all posts
Showing posts with label pasta type. Show all posts

Do You Know Your Pasta?

Friday, September 12, 2008

By Michael Russell


Have you ever noticed that when you go out to eat at an Italian restaurant, or even to your favorite grocery store, the choices of pasta is nearly limitless? There is every kind of different shape and size of pasta that you can imagine. Truly, it can be overwhelming at times trying to figure it all out. What are all these different kinds of pasta for? How can you determine what is what? Let's take a closer look at all the various kinds of pasta and what they are used for.

Spaghetti. This is an easy one. It's one food that we all know and love. Spaghetti comes in a box, or a bag, in long thin strands. You cook it in boiling water and mix it into your favorite spaghetti sauce recipe.

Ravioli. Here is another pretty easy one for everybody. Ravioli is a small, square shaped pasta that is stuffed with several different fillings like meat, cheese, mushrooms, sausage, etc. Ravioli can be topped with tomato sauce and can even come toasted.

Macaroni. One of the all-time favorites! Macaroni is a small, hollow tube pasta. It is used mainly in cooking macaroni and cheese.

Cannelloni. Cannelloni is also a hollow tube pasta, but it is much larger than macaroni. Cannelloni is stuffed with different meat sauce mixtures and also will have various cheeses baked in the middle.

Linguine and Fettuccine. These pastas are know as ribbon noodles due to the fact they are long, stringy and flat. They can come in many different lengths. These noodles are a delicious food with creamy sauces mixed onto them such as Alfredo sauce.

Tortellini. Tortellini is yet another type of stuffed pasta. They come in half circle pieces that are folded over and stuffed with meat, cheese, sausage, or other ingredients. You can also pour your favorite sauce over the top of this delicious food.

Vermicelli. Vermicelli is a very fine, thin string of pasta. It is also known as "angel hair" pasta. It can be used with a creamy sauce of your choice, or used with other items such as crab, or shrimp. Many times vermicelli is formed together to form a type of nest that will hold the crab, or shrimp on top of it.

Conghiglie. This pasta is shaped like small shells. There are many different sizes of conghiglie. From tiny pasta shells that are good for using in soups, to larger sizes that can be stuffed. This type of pasta is a favorite food in pasta salads.

Farfalle. Farfalle is a pasta that is bow shaped and also used mainly in different pasta salads.

Fusilli. Fusilli is a thin spiral shaped pasta that is good in pasta salads. It is also good with different styles of sauces.

Lasagna. Lasagna is perhaps the best of all the different pastas. These are long, wide strips of pasta that are layered with fillings between them. These fillings can include meat, sausage, cheese, mushrooms and about anything else you can think of. More cheese is piled on top and then baked in the oven.

This list should help you the next time you see a pasta that you're unfamiliar with. No matter what shape or size, pasta is a favorite on everyone's list of great tasting foods!

Michael Russell Your Independent guide to Food

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Pasta Variety

Saturday, September 6, 2008

By Jonathon Hardcastle

Pasta has to be Italy's greatest contribution to world cuisine. Most people usually associate pasta with noodles, but pasta actually refers to a wide assortment of flour and grain concoctions that come in a variety of shapes. Macaroni is one such pasta that is not in noodle form. The word pasta comes from the Italian word for paste or dough.

Pasta also refers to dishes that have pasta as the main ingredient and which are usually spruced up with sauce or a type of seasoning.

There are two ways to cook pasta- by extrusion and by lamination. Extrusion mashes the ingredients through a die, which is a plate with holes. Lamination calls for the dough to be kneaded and folded, later rolled to achieve a thick mixture before it is cut with the use of slitters. Fresh pasta is easy to cook and is ready quickly but it spoils easily as well since its content is mostly water. Dry pasta lasts longer because it has only around 10% moisture.

There are now Italian pastas as well as American pastas. The Italian pasta, which has a yellow color and a chewy texture, comes from durum wheat semolina. American pastas are made from farina and semolina, with a texture and flavor that are inferior to Italian pastas and are used mostly in casseroles. There are also Asian noodles, which are thinner than pasta and come from wheat flour.

The most popular pastas are certainly the noodle-type pastas such as spaghetti and vemicelli. Macaroni is the most popular short tube pasta, followed by penne. Fettucine and linguine are pasta that are shaped like ribbons. There is also pasta made from tiny grains such as couscous and orzo as well as pasta made from large sheets like lasagna. Ravioli, tortellini and manicotti are an entirely different pasta group, as they are hollow pasta that is filled with stuffing.

Here's a little known fact about pasta. Did you know that it was Thomas Jefferson who first brought macaroni to America? Upon returning to the US in 1789 after a stint as the ambassador to France, Jefferson brought with him a macaroni machine, which was the first such recorded contraption in the United States.

Jonathon Hardcastle writes articles on many topics including Cooking, Home Improvement, and Outdoors

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Pasta, one of Italian cuisines

Friday, September 5, 2008

When we hear the term Italian cuisine, the first name that comes in our mind is pasta. Though it was originated in Italy, it is famous worldwide. Pasta is like noodles, made from certain grain flours with water and/or eggs mixtures. Among the different shapes and forms of pasta there are string shaped pasta called spaghetti and vermicelli. There are also ribbon shaped fettuccine and linguine, short tube shaped elbow macaroni and penne, tiny shapes like couscous and orzo and large shapes like lasagna. There are hollow pastas also like ravioli, manicotti and tortellini.

You can have them stuffed with fillings. The paste is kneaded to give different shapes and forms. Pasta can also be the dishes where pasta is an important ingredient and served with sauce or different seasonings. Gnocchi is one of these pasta dishes. But here different ingredients are used and cooking process is also different.

You can also find frozen pasta all over the world. More varieties of pastas are mainly found in the places where the Italians and their culture have deep impact. There are companies that produce packed pastas that can be fresh for 7 weeks. According to FDA (Food and Drug Administration) of US, half cup of cooked pasta per day helps a person to meet the necessary folate level per day with an extra amount of 220 micrograms or more folate. Boiling pasta is the basic of recipes of all the pasta dishes. The sauces and the other ingredients make all the differences. There are obviously some exceptions like soups, gnocchi, lasagna and manicotti. But, as you know, exceptions cannot be the examples. There are some secrets for cooking pasta like cooking in salted water, adding the paste after the water starts boiling, stirring occasionally and fast draining and serving. Pastas do not need undercooking or overcooking. If there is any assistance that you need, always remember our website is only a click away.

Dave Fooder runs a premiere exchange recipes network online. Visit his site http://www.cookscentral.com for Fast Free & Easy Cooking Collections and enjoy exchanging recipes.

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Pasta Shapes Chart

Wednesday, August 20, 2008

Source: CNN.Com

PASTA SHAPES & SIZES

Long, straight pasta noodles

TYPE:

SHAPE:

BEST USED:

SERVED:

Capellini (Angel hair)

Long, rounded, very thin

Hot

With light sauces, or tossed with olive oil and fresh steamed vegetables

Vermicelli

Long, rounded, thinner than spaghetti

Hot, can be used cold

With light sauces, or tossed in pasta salads

Linguine

Long, flat, narrow

Hot

Large enough to hold slightly thicker sauces, for example a marinara sauce

Spaghetti

Long, rounded, average thickness

Hot

With tomato-based sauces or baked in casseroles

Fettuccine

Long, flat, wider than linguine

Hot

Thick sauces, especially creamy sauces

Lasagna

Long, very wide, may be flat-edged or have curled edges

Hot

Baked, in lasagna and other casserole-type dishes

Curly pastas

TYPE:

SHAPE:

BEST USED:

SERVED:

Rotini (Spirals)

Fairly short spirals

Hot or cold

With thick/chunky sauces or in pasta salads

Fusilli

Long, corkscrew-shaped spaghetti

Hot or cold

Very versatile, good with most sauces, in soup or in pasta salad,

Tagliatelle (Egg noodles)

Same width as fettuccine or linguine, but not flattened

Hot

Baked dishes, soups, stroganoff

Tubular pastas

TYPE:

SHAPE:

BEST USED:

SERVED:

Ditalini

Small, very short tubes

Hot or cold

Soups or pasta salads

Elbow macaroni

Curved tubes

Hot or cold

Baked dishes, or in pasta salad

Perciatelli (Long macaroni)

Long, thin, straight tubes

Hot

Use in place of spaghetti

Ziti

Slightly curved tubes, wider and longer than elbow macaroni

Hot or cold

Baked, in pasta salads, with thick sauces

Penne

Straight, medium-length tubes, often ridged instead of smooth, cut on diagonal

Hot

In soups, baked, with a wide variety of sauces

Rigatoni

Straight, short tubes, wider than penne, also ridged

Hot

Variety of sauces; ridges hold thick or creamy sauces well

Cannelloni

Large, long tubes

Hot

Stuffed

Manicotti

Longer and wider than penne, may be ridged

Hot

Stuffed

Other shapes

TYPE:

SHAPE:

BEST USED:

SERVED:

Alphabets

Letters of the alphabet

Hot

In soups

Anelli (rings)

Small, O-shaped

Hot

In soups

Bow Tie Pasta

Squares pinched in the middle to form bow-ties

Hot

In soups and with grains, like buckwheat, in side dishes

Conchiglie (Shells)

Shells with one long, narrow opening

Hot or cold

In soups, baked, in pasta salads

Conchiglioni (Jumbo shells)

Like regular shells, but much larger

Hot

Stuffed

Orzo

Size and shape of grains or cooked rice

Hot

As side dish

Radiatore (Radiators)

Ruffled and ridged, like a radiator

Hot; can be used cold

With thick or creamy sauces, in soups, in salad

Ruote (Wheels)

Wagon wheels

Hot

In soups, casseroles, with thick sauces

Filled pastas

TYPE:

SHAPE:

BEST USED:

SERVED:

Agnolotti

Small, crescent-shaped, may be filled with a variety of meats or cheeses

Hot

With variety of sauces

Gnocchi

Dumplings, may have cheese, potatoes or spinach in dough

Hot

As side dish

Tortellini

Small, filled, ring-shaped pasta

Hot

Good with a variety of thick or creamy sauces

Ravioli

Usually round, with cheese or beef filling

Hot

Baked or boiled, with thick sauces

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