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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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Hi - for those who might now what I am talking about....is there
an equivalent of the "semola di grano duro" flour here in the US? Thanks, Carlo |
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"Carlo Morpurgo" > wrote in message >...
> Hi - for those who might now what I am talking about....is there > an equivalent of the "semola di grano duro" flour here in the US? > > Thanks, Carlo You can get "semolina flour" from specialty stores, or the real thing imported from Italy. As mainstream US flour goes, unbleached bread flour is a pretty close equivalent, if a bit coarser; I recall the Italian grind as being extremely fine, like US "pre-sifted". All-purpose flour is softer. In any case, I'd stick with unbleached: I don't favor bleached flours for making pasta; the way they take liquid just feels wrong to me. -- Chris Green |
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"Carlo Morpurgo" > wrote in message >...
> Hi - for those who might now what I am talking about....is there > an equivalent of the "semola di grano duro" flour here in the US? > > Thanks, Carlo I think you're talking about semolina - 100% durum wheat flour for pasta. You should find it in any good grocery store. Try the "health food" section if all else fails. Lynn from Fargo . . . North Dakota - where most of the world's durum wheat comes from! |
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"Carlo Morpurgo" > wrote in message >...
> Hi - for those who might now what I am talking about....is there > an equivalent of the "semola di grano duro" flour here in the US? > > Thanks, Carlo You can get "semolina flour" from specialty stores, or the real thing imported from Italy. As mainstream US flour goes, unbleached bread flour is a pretty close equivalent, if a bit coarser; I recall the Italian grind as being extremely fine, like US "pre-sifted". All-purpose flour is softer. In any case, I'd stick with unbleached: I don't favor bleached flours for making pasta; the way they take liquid just feels wrong to me. -- Chris Green |
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"Carlo Morpurgo" > wrote in message >...
> Hi - for those who might now what I am talking about....is there > an equivalent of the "semola di grano duro" flour here in the US? > > Thanks, Carlo I think you're talking about semolina - 100% durum wheat flour for pasta. You should find it in any good grocery store. Try the "health food" section if all else fails. Lynn from Fargo . . . North Dakota - where most of the world's durum wheat comes from! |
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