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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 Sat, 12 Dec 2009 08:50:32 -0500, "Jean B." > wrote:
>Don Martinich wrote: >> In article >, >> "Jean B." > wrote: >> >>> Giusi wrote: >>>> "Jean B." > ha scritto nel messaggio >>>> ... >>>>> My daughter and I ate in Boston yesterday. My entree was a lovely pasta >>>>> dish with lots of roasted veggies. The pasta had a really nice chewy >>>>> texture--this was not just a normal (in the US) pasta cooked al dente. Is >>>>> this texture typical of some brands? Any clue as to what it might be, so >>>>> I can enjoy this at home? >>>>> -- >>>>> Jean B. >>>> Just bite your pasta a minute or so before the cooking time says. It may >>>> be >>>> what you are looking for. Look for a microscopic line or dot of white in >>>> the center. That's real al dente. Many people are pleasantly shocked when >>>> they find out what it really is, and many hate it. >>>> >>>> If making it at home, use hard wheat flour to get a firmer bite, and >>>> stretch >>>> as you knead instead of pressing. >>>> >>>> >>> No, that's not what I am looking for. As I said, this was not >>> like al dente pasta. I think the last part may be more relevant. >>> >>> Are some brands of pasta chewier than others? The brands from >>> Italy are proliferating here, and I have not tried many in recent >>> years. >> >> Look for De Cecco. >> >> D. > >I was thinking about that brand. The ears (I forget the Italian >name) do, indeed, have a different texture. I figured that was >because they were relatively thick. I'll try another shape! Barilla is good too and I see it more often than DeCecco where I shop. -- I love cooking with wine. Sometimes I even put it in the food. |
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In article >,
sf > wrote: > On Sat, 12 Dec 2009 08:50:32 -0500, "Jean B." > wrote: > > >Don Martinich wrote: > >> In article >, > >> "Jean B." > wrote: > >> > >>> Giusi wrote: > >>>> "Jean B." > ha scritto nel messaggio > >>>> ... > >>>>> My daughter and I ate in Boston yesterday. My entree was a lovely > >>>>> pasta > >>>>> dish with lots of roasted veggies. The pasta had a really nice chewy > >>>>> texture--this was not just a normal (in the US) pasta cooked al dente. > >>>>> Is > >>>>> this texture typical of some brands? Any clue as to what it might be, > >>>>> so > >>>>> I can enjoy this at home? > >>>>> -- > >>>>> Jean B. > >>>> Just bite your pasta a minute or so before the cooking time says. It > >>>> may > >>>> be > >>>> what you are looking for. Look for a microscopic line or dot of white > >>>> in > >>>> the center. That's real al dente. Many people are pleasantly shocked > >>>> when > >>>> they find out what it really is, and many hate it. > >>>> > >>>> If making it at home, use hard wheat flour to get a firmer bite, and > >>>> stretch > >>>> as you knead instead of pressing. > >>>> > >>>> > >>> No, that's not what I am looking for. As I said, this was not > >>> like al dente pasta. I think the last part may be more relevant. > >>> > >>> Are some brands of pasta chewier than others? The brands from > >>> Italy are proliferating here, and I have not tried many in recent > >>> years. > >> > >> Look for De Cecco. > >> > >> D. > > > >I was thinking about that brand. The ears (I forget the Italian > >name) do, indeed, have a different texture. I figured that was > >because they were relatively thick. I'll try another shape! > > Barilla is good too and I see it more often than DeCecco where I shop. Your mistake- Barilla cooks faster and flabbier. (I do buy Barilla when it's on slale/; it's not a bad buy for the money.) |
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On Sat, 12 Dec 2009 17:38:25 -0800, Don Martinich >
wrote: >Your mistake- Barilla cooks faster and flabbier. (I do buy Barilla when >it's on slale/; it's not a bad buy for the money.) I'm sorry you don't know how to cook pasta. -- I love cooking with wine. Sometimes I even put it in the food. |
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