There are over 800 different named pasta shapes. Some of these are just regional names for pretty much the same thing though. Some of their names translate as ‘small bulls’, ‘little muffs’, ‘scruffy hats’, ‘pot bellied’, ‘little worms’, ‘bridegrooms’ or ‘little moustaches’.
That Marco Polo introduced pasta to Italy from China is a plain fabrication. Nobody knows who first made it. The Ancient Romans, Greeks and Etruscans were enjoying pasta long before Marco came along, and the Arabs probably invented the kind of dried pastas we are used to today. They are thought to have introduced it to Sicily in the 12th century.
The word ‘noodle’, sometimes used to refer to pasta, comes from the Latin nodellus (‘little knot’), describing the tangles of pasta on the plate.
Contrary to what some say, pasta cooked al dente is better for you than well-cooked pasta. If it’s slightly tough you chew, which breaks the pasta down and mixes it with digestive enzymes in your saliva.
My favourite brand for dry pasta, fairly commonly available, is De Cecco. Look out for the blue bags and boxes. Their pasta is made using bronze die-cuts, which have irregular surfaces. The defects in the bronze make loads of minuscule cuts in the pasta, leaving the surface rough and able to absorb sauces better than that left smooth and shiny by nylon moulds. De Cecco also dries their pasta at low temperatures which leaves the pasta better able to retain its shape and strength during cooking.
Tips for cooking pasta:
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Buy good pasta, or make your own. - Use loads of water, the more the better. Each pasta piece needs to be able to stick out its arms and rotate in a circle without touching any others.
- Don’t put oil in the water. It’s a myth that this prevents sticking. If anything it will make the pasta greasy and unable to absorb the sauce.
- Put plenty of salt in the water. This does not reduce the cooking time by raising the boiling point, contrary to old wives you may have spoken to. (Well, it actually does raise the boiling point, and therefore also shorten the cooking time, but only by a fraction of a second.) The real reason to use salt is to enhance the flavour. If it boils in salted water the seasoning will penetrate right through and make it even yummier.
- Make sure the water is properly boiling before adding the pasta, and add in batches if needed to ensure that it keeps boiling.
- Drink your Chianti while watching the pot, not in the other room, because the only way to know when the pasta is done is by sight and feel. Ignore the instructions on the packet and just start testing bits of pasta when it starts to plump up. Catch it while still al dente.
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Drain carefully so as not to break the pasta, especially if fresh, and
let it steam-dry for a moment before mixing with sauce. Excess water
needs to evaporate or the sauce will slide off rather than being
absorbed. - Mix with the sauce at the last minute and serve piping hot, preferably straight from the cooking pot.


Hello, Anna,
I'm confused. I have an Italian-American friend who very often says, contemptuously, "egg noodles" - and thereby gave me the impression that there is some more legitimate type of pasta with no eggs.
Is there?
I've made noodles, I liked it. But I was convinced what I was making was something non-Italian.
Thank-you,
amanda
Hi Amanda
Pasta can be made with flour + water, or with flour + eggs, or with flour and combination of eggs + water. All types are legitimate!
Different parts of Italy specialise in different types and shapes and sauces etc. In general, flour + water pasta is more common in the South, whereas flour + egg pasta is more common in the North.
I hope that answers your question. See more here:
http://www.culinaryanthropologist.org/2011/05/basic-fresh-egg-pasta-dough.html
Best, Anna