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General Cooking (rec.food.cooking) For general food and cooking discussion. Foods of all kinds, food procurement, cooking methods and techniques, eating, etc. |
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On Mar 13, 7:32 pm, "Curt Nelson" <X> wrote:
> Hi everybody: > > So I spent this weekend doing homemade fresh pasta experiments and finally > found a use for my Cuisinart Mini Prep processor. I've had the thing for > about eight years and have only used it a handful of times for occasional > salsa or chopping larger quantities of garlic. > > I started out making pasta with the "well method" with reasonable success, > but found it to be messy and made way too much dough for a single guy. After > some Internet research, I finally figured out that pasta can be made very > well in a food processor... except that it still makes too much for a single > guy. > > Enter my previously useless Mini Prep. It turned out to be the perfect size > for making a single portion of the good stuff. Here's what I ended up doing: > > _________________ > 2/3 cup flour > 1 extra large egg > > Pulse until you achieve a cornmeal-ish texture and then run the damn thing > full blast until the dough comes together and forms a ball. If it refuses to > come together, add 1/2 tsp H2O slowly until the dough cooperates. > > Knead for a minute or so and wrap in plastic and rest for 30 - 60 minutes. > > Proceed as usual with whatever pasta-making implements you like to use. I > use my KitchenAid attachments. > _________________ > > I've read, and found to be true, that dough done in a food processor needs > less kneading than making it by hand. For me, the dough was ready in less > than a minute and made virtually no mess. > > Finally (!) I have a way to make small quantities of pasta whenever I want. > To hell with the "well method" and tradition. These results have certainly > worked best for me. > > And now, here's my favorite and extremely simple dish. > > _________________ > > CPN's 30-second pasta > > Ingredients: > Cast Iron Skillet (mandatory) > Kitchen Tongs (also mandatory) > Pasta > 3 tbs. Good Butter > Black Pepper (in a grinder) > Parmigiano Reggiano cheese in a rotary grater > Fresh Basil, chiffonade > > While your pasta is boiling, heat a cast iron skillet over medium heat. The > pan should be damn hot, but not ridiculously hot. After you've drained the > pasta, get ready, because this literally takes about 30 seconds. > > Plop the butter into the pan and use your tongs to move the butter around > quickly to melt and brown it as fast as possible. At the exact moment your > butter is browned properly, drop your cooked pasta into the skillet and > start turning with the tongs. The residual water on the pasta will cool the > pan and prevent the butter from burning. In about 10 or 15 seconds, the > pasta will be evenly coated with the browned butter. > > Plate it and hit it with some fine black pepper and top it with the Reggiano > and your basil chiffonade. > > Serve to your date with a good wine and go have some sex. Bask in the > afterglow the next morning. > Bag the basil. Instead deep fry some sage leaves and use those. And Curt - remember *all* wine is good wine if you're on a date. Susan B. |
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