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Pasta
Pasta is a type of food made from flour, water, and sometimes eggs, which is mixed, kneaded and
formed into various shapes, and boiled prior to consumption. While the name comes from Italy, pasta is very popular
all over the world. The English word pasta generally refers to noodles and other food products made from a flour
and water paste, often including also egg and salt. Less frequently, the term macaroni (written as maccheroni in
Italian) is used for the same products. Pasta can also denote dishes in which pasta products are the primary ingredient,
served with sauce or seasonings. The word comes from Italian pasta which means basically "paste", and
by extension "dough", "pasta", or "pastry" as in "small cake". As recently
as 1918 the English word "paste" was used instead of or alongside the Italian pasta[1]. Today the word
"pasta" is reserved for Italian-style noodles in English-speaking countries, while the word "noodle"
has a more general meaning.
Dried Italian-style (genuine) pasta is made from durum wheat semolina or flour, which gives it a light yellow color
and a slightly bitey texture when properly prepared. Certain American pastas are produced from a mixture of Farina
and Semolina. Such pastas often have an inferior texture and flavor and are only usable in a casserole or other
dish where texture is less important. Asian-style noodles as well as most fresh noodles are made from regular (non-durum)
wheat flour. Some pasta varieties, such as Pizzoccheri, are made from buckwheat flour.
Gnocchi are often listed among pasta dishes, although they are quite different in ingredients (mainly milled potatoes)
and mode of preparation.
Pasta is made either by extrusion, where the ingredients are forced through holes in a plate known as a die, or
by lamination, in which dough is kneaded, folded, rolled to thickness, then cut by slitters. Fresh Pasta cooks
quickly and has a delicate taste, but spoils quickly due to its high water content. Dry Pasta generally contains
about 10% moisture, which makes it shelf stable for about three years. Dry Pasta is considered by most experts
to be a superior product as it has essentially the same taste as Fresh Pasta and can easily be prepared to the
proper al dente texture.
Most people today like pasta because of its easy and fast preparation, as well as tastiness. Pastas only need to
be boiled and topped, a process that can take as little as fifteen minutes. There are a number of ways to flavor
pasta, many of which are commonly used cooking ingredients. Pasta is very versatile and almost impossible to ruin.
History
Tubular pasta, strung together, at a store in Porto Venere, Italy.Pasta was developed independently in a number
of places around the globe (though some anthropologists dispute this). In each of these places, locally available
grain was the primary starch source in the diet. Grains had, before the invention of pasta, been consumed as a
gruel or grain paste, or rendered into flour and eaten as bread. Pasta noodles were likely developed as an alternative
to gruel or bread. Pasta noodles can be created even where there is no oven, or not enough fuel to support an oven.
In contrast, bread requires a great investment in time and effort to create. In terms of outcome for the effort,
pasta is therefore significantly simpler than bread, as any place that something can be kept dry, one can have
pasta noodles.
The earliest known records of noodles in Europe are found on Etruscan tomb decorations from the 4th century BC.
Recently noodles dating back to about 2000 BC has been found near Lajia at the Huang He in Western China. The site
was devastated by an earthquake followed by a flood. The yellow noodles survived in an upside down clay pot underneath
a thick layer of loess. Archeologist Houyuan Lu discovered the noodles and was able to take some photos. Analysis
showed that the noodles with a length of ca. 1/2 meter and a diameter of 3 mm were produced from millet.
Utensils that are thought to have been used to make pasta were also found in the ruins of Pompeii, where other
Chinese objects were found, the silk road having extended to Rome in 30 BC. Thus, we know the popular legend of
Marco Polo bringing back pasta to Italy from China is absolutely false. Note, however, that Chinese noodles before
the age of industrialized food production were always used fresh, and they are comprised of one giant noodle mass
through the cooking process because it is considered bad luck in China to cut noodles before serving them to eat.
Thomas Jefferson is credited with bringing the first macaroni machine to America in 1789 when he returned home
after serving as ambassador to France. The first commercial pasta manufacturer in America was Antoine Zerega, a
Frenchman of Italian descent who began making pasta in Brooklyn, NY in 1848.
Accompaniments
Common pasta sauces in northern Italy include pesto (a green sauce, made from basil, pine nuts, olive oil, garlic
and parmesan cheese) and also bolognese (a ground beef sauce); in central Italy tomato sauce (a red tomato-based
sauce), and amatriciana (a red tomato/wine based sauce, usually including onion and bacon strips). Pasta sauces
that are rarely eaten by Italians but are popular outside Italy include alfredo (a white cream sauce), and spaghetti
with meatballs and tomato sauce.
Pasta varieties
Pasta comes in many different shapes and sizes. There are simple string-shaped pasta like spaghetti and vermicelli,
ribbon-shaped ones like fettucine and linguine, short tubes like elbow macaroni and penne, large sheets like lasagna,
tiny grains like couscous and orzo, and hollow pasta stuffed with filling, like ravioli, manicotti, and tortellini.
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