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Home-made Pasta

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  • Home-made Pasta

    So a friend and I attempted to make some macaroni. I found several recipes that said:
    4 eggs plus a pound of flour (bread if you can b/c of the higher gluten), and a dash of salt.


    Uhhhhhh....yeah, not so great....so we started with the flour in a mound, made the hole in the middle....added the eggs and salt and started mixing with our hands. Got it sorta dough-ish....had to add some water....then tried to put it in my KitchenAid Artisan with a dough hook.....the mixer could barely move it....so we worked up a sweat kneading it by hand....I can barely feel my fingers to type this. OK...we finally get it smooth, without it breaking when we knead it. Let it rest for 15 minutes.

    Then I cut it into 'walnut-sized pieces'. We attached the food mill/grinder/pasta extruder thing to the front of my mixer, turned it to speed 10 and started feeding the pieces into the hopper. Waiting for each piece to move along before adding the next. After maybe a 1/3 pound my motor was SMOKING!!! So we stopped, let it rest a while and tried again....same thing.

    HELP! I don't think my mixer is permanently messed up, but I'm going to let it rest for a few days. I did get the bowl stuck after trying to knead the dough in it....it took both of us to un-twist it from the base.

    I'm guessing our dough was too thick/hard but this recipe was on multiple websites and in my cookbook from the Culinary Institute of America. The one in the attachment's instruction book called for 2.5 cups of flour for 4 eggs.....which is about the same (a cup is about 8 ounces right?)

    So do you think my mixer just can't handle pasta making? What recipe do you use? Should I just get a pasta machine? Or should I just kick it old skool and knead by hand, roll it out and cut the pasta by hand? (Outlook not so good for the last one! )

    Anyone make pasta?? Anyone?
    Mom of 3, Veterinarian

  • #2
    So a few thoughts....

    -- bread flour...maybe the gluten was too much and all purpose flour would be better? gluten makes it thick right? gluten is like glue?

    -- maybe use a cup of flour for 4 eggs and mix and slowly add flour until it seems right??







    And yes....I KNOW you can buy pasta for <$1/pound.
    Mom of 3, Veterinarian

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    • #3
      I made pasta once - eons ago. I've got no memory of the recipe. I had a hand-cranked pasta machine. If it made your KitchenAid mixer smoke ... wowza.

      Perhaps Nellie has some words of wisdom.

      Comment


      • #4
        I'll look for my recipe and post it. I know I use all-purpose flour and I make the dough in the cuisinart.

        Like you said, yes you can buy it for a $1/lb but the fresh tastes really good and a hand crank machine keeps a 6 yo very busy.

        Comment


        • #5
          One additional thought: a cup does = 8 oz of liquid, but flour shouldn't be measured by weight. I have no idea what a "properly scooped" cup of flour weighs, but if it weighed 8 oz, we'd only have 10 cups of flour in a 5 lb bag.

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          • #6
            Oh, but it can be weighed! I love recipes that give measurements by weight as well as cups. It is far more accurate (and an excellent excuse for a kitchen scale). That's the Rose Levy Beranbaum addiction talking.

            Comment


            • #7
              Ooooooh....when Daegan is old enough!!


              When you say Cuisinart....do you mean a food processor??


              If so I'm thinking that I might need to invest in something like this....what's it good for?
              Mom of 3, Veterinarian

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              • #8
                I thought we weighed a cup at about 1/2 a pound....I have a scale and we were using that for the 'pound' measurement.....hmmm....
                Mom of 3, Veterinarian

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                • #9
                  Originally posted by cupcake
                  Oh, but it can be weighed! I love recipes that give measurements by weight as well as cups. It is far more accurate (and an excellent excuse for a kitchen scale). That's the Rose Levy Beranbaum addiction talking.
                  Right - of course it can (duh). What I meant to say is that a cup of flour does not weigh 8 oz - right?

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Okay - I googled it.

                    Flour, King Arthur Unbleached All-Purpose - cup - 4.25 oz; 120 g (note: flour measurements can be all over the place, depending on what your source is. I use this type of flour, so this is what I’m going by)

                    Flour - Bread, spooned - cup - 4.5 oz; 128 g

                    Flour - Cake, dipped - cup- 4.6 oz; 130 g

                    Flour - Cake, Self-Rising - cup = 1 c Cake Flour, 1.5 tsp Baking Powder, and pinch Salt
                    Flour - Cake, sifted - cup - 3.5 oz; 99 g

                    Flour - Cake, spooned - cup - 4 oz; 112 g

                    Flour - Oat - cup - 3.1 oz; 90 g

                    Flour - Rye - cup - 2.75 oz; 78 g

                    Flour - Soy - cup - 3.75 oz; 106 g

                    Flour - White Rice - cup - 5.6 oz; 160 g

                    Flour - Whole Wheat - cup - 5.25 oz; 149 g

                    Flour - Whole Wheat Pastry - cup - 3.1 oz; 90 g

                    http://www.sweetnapa.com/volume-to-weig ... onversion/

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      I just weighed a cup of all purpose flour and it weighed 5 ounces. The package says 1/4 cup is 30g. So 1 cup would be 120 g....which is 0.12 kg...multiply by 2.2 lb/kg...get 0.264lb....multiply by 16oz/lb....get 4.224oz. So about the same?


                      Hmm I thought flour would be denser than water, but I guess it isn't.


                      I scooped the flour....overflowed the cup....then tapped the top with a knife so it settled....then scraped off the excess with the flat edge of the knife....then dumped it in the scale.
                      Mom of 3, Veterinarian

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Cool....we used the King Arthur bread flour to make the dough. I used Gold Medal Unbleached All Purpose for the weight I just did.


                        So it's about 3.5 cups/pound of the bread flour.....maybe it should've been just 2.5 cups then....

                        waiting impatiently for Nellie's recipe....even though I'm not going to make any more tonight!
                        Mom of 3, Veterinarian

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          And you probably got the extra .8 from the tapping of the cup so it settles. According to Cook's Illustrated, you want to lightly scoop (as opposed to digging), then gently scrape the overflow off the top. They say not to tap or bang it to settle the flour. Nellie's goddless RLB might say differently.

                          So when you made it today did you weigh it or did you go w/the assumption that 1 c = 8 oz?

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            We weighed.

                            And thanks for the help with my flour scooping! No wonder I always thought my cookies and breads were too flour-y!!! I always just used 1/2-1 cup less than the recipe called for....it's because I over-cupped!
                            Mom of 3, Veterinarian

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Originally posted by Genivieve
                              Nellie's goddless RLB might say differently.


                              She also advises the dip and sweep -- no tapping. Or, she advises the dip and sweep in the absence of weighing.

                              I have also noticed that the weights are all over though probably more accurate than just the measuring cup.

                              According to RLB:
                              All-purpose, dip and sweep, 5 oz to a cup
                              All-purpose, lightly spooned, 4.25 oz to a cup
                              All-purpose, sifted, 4 oz to a cup

                              Bread flour, dip and sweep, 5.5oz to a cup

                              Some of her recipes, such as pie crust, provide a lightly spooned, dip and sweep, and weight measurement.


                              Pasta recipe:

                              1.5 cups all-purpose flour (I assume dip and sweep)
                              1 tsp salt
                              2 large eggs
                              2 large egg yolks
                              2 tsp olive oil

                              I put all that in the food processor and process until there is a nice little ball of dough spinning around. I might pulse it at first but I'm not sure. It is sort of automatic at this point.

                              If you don't use a food processor, I'm sure it would work to use the dough hook attachment on the Kitchenaid or do the make a well in the flour/knead my hand method.

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