Best 5 Basic Pasta Dough Recipes

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Pasta, a beloved culinary creation, has captivated taste buds across cultures and generations. Originating in Italy, this versatile dish has evolved into an international staple, inspiring countless variations and interpretations. From classic spaghetti to intricate ravioli, the world of pasta is a symphony of flavors and textures.

In this comprehensive guide, we embark on a culinary journey to explore the art of pasta making. We begin with a foundation recipe for basic pasta dough, providing step-by-step instructions and expert tips to achieve the perfect consistency and texture. Once mastered, this fundamental dough can be transformed into a variety of pasta shapes, each with its own unique characteristics and culinary applications.

For those seeking a taste of tradition, we present classic pasta recipes that have stood the test of time. Spaghetti Carbonara, a Roman delicacy, combines the richness of eggs, cheese, and guanciale (or pancetta) to create a harmonious and satisfying dish. Pesto Pasta, originating from the Liguria region, bursts with the vibrant flavors of fresh basil, pine nuts, and Parmesan cheese, offering a refreshing and aromatic experience.

For those with a penchant for seafood, we offer a delectable Shrimp Scampi Pasta, where succulent shrimp are sautéed in a luscious sauce of butter, garlic, and white wine. Alternatively, our Creamy Pesto Salmon Pasta combines the elegance of salmon with the vibrant flavors of pesto, creating a dish that is both sophisticated and indulgent.

Vegetarians and vegans are not forgotten, as we present a collection of plant-based pasta recipes that showcase the versatility of this culinary canvas. Roasted Vegetable Pasta is a colorful and nutritious dish featuring an array of roasted vegetables tossed in a flavorful sauce. Lentil Bolognese, a hearty and protein-packed alternative to traditional Bolognese, offers a rich and satisfying experience without compromising on taste.

To complete our pasta repertoire, we explore the art of stuffed pasta, where delicate sheets of pasta dough are filled with an array of delectable fillings. Ravioli, a classic Italian dumpling, is filled with a combination of ricotta cheese, spinach, and nutmeg, offering a taste of authentic Italian cuisine. Tortellini, another beloved stuffed pasta, originates from the Emilia-Romagna region and is typically filled with a mixture of pork, beef, and mortadella, resulting in a savory and flavorful treat.

Whether you are a seasoned pasta aficionado or a novice cook looking to expand your culinary horizons, this comprehensive guide provides all the knowledge and inspiration you need to create delicious and authentic pasta dishes at home. So, let's embark on this culinary adventure together and discover the endless possibilities that pasta has to offer.

Here are our top 5 tried and tested recipes!

BASIC FRESH PASTA DOUGH



Basic Fresh Pasta Dough image

Fresh pasta isn't something to master in one go. It takes time and practice, but it yields dividends. This particular recipe is vastly versatile. It can be made into whole grain pasta, by swapping in 1 cup sifted whole wheat, spelt or farro flour in place of 1 cup all-purpose or 00 flour. Add more egg yolks or water as needed and rest the dough for 1 hour. Or try a green pasta, as in this ravioli verdi: Steam or sauté 6 ounces baby spinach (about 6 cups) until just wilted. Spread it out on a parchment-lined baking sheet, and, when cool, squeeze water out thoroughly, a handful at a time, then chop roughly. Purée with 2 eggs and 1 egg yolk, then use this mixture in place of eggs in the recipe. Or, for something a little different, make an herbed pasta, like this pappardelle, by stirring in 1/2 cup finely chopped parsley, chives, chervil, tarragon, or basil in any combination to the eggs before adding to the flour in the main recipe.

Provided by Samin Nosrat

Categories     dinner, lunch, pastas, main course

Time 45m

Yield 4 to 6 servings for cut pasta, 6 to 8 servings for stuffed pasta

Number Of Ingredients 4

2 cups 00 or all-purpose flour
2 large eggs
3 egg yolks, plus more as needed
Semolina flour, for dusting

Steps:

  • Mound the flour in the center of a large, wide mixing bowl. Dig a well in the center of the mound and add eggs and yolks. Using a fork, beat together the eggs and begin to incorporate the flour, starting with the inner rim of the well. The dough will start to come together in a shaggy mass when about half of the flour is incorporated.
  • Use your fingers to continue to mix the dough. Press any loose bits of flour into the mass of dough. If needed, add another egg yolk or a tablespoon of water to absorb all of the flour. Once the dough comes together into a cohesive mass, remove it from the bowl.
  • Transfer to a lightly floured surface and knead by hand for 4 to 5 more minutes until the dough is smooth, elastic and uniform in color. Wrap the dough in plastic and set aside for at least 30 minutes (and up to 4 hours) at room temperature.
  • Line three baking sheets with parchment paper and lightly dust with semolina flour. Set aside.
  • Cut off a quarter of the dough. Rewrap rest, and set aside. Use the heel of your hand to flatten the dough into an oval approximately the same width as your pasta machine, about six inches. Set the rollers to their widest setting and pass the dough through.
  • Lay the dough out onto a lightly floured cutting board or countertop and neatly press together into halves, so it's again about the same width of the pasta machine. Feed the pasta through again at the widest setting. Think of these first rollings as an extended kneading. Continue to fold the dough in thirds and roll it until it is smooth, silky and even-textured. Do your best to make the sheet the full width of the machine.
  • Once the dough is silky and smooth, you can begin to roll it out more thinly. Roll it once through each of the next two or three settings, adding flour as needed, until the dough is about 1/4-inch thick.
  • Once the pasta is about 1/4-inch thick, begin rolling it twice through each setting. As you roll, lightly sprinkle all-purpose or 00 flour on both sides of the pasta to prevent it from sticking to itself.
  • Roll out pasta until you can just see the outline of your hand when you hold it under a sheet, about 1/16-inch thick for noodles, or 1/32-inch thick for a filled pasta. (On most machines, you won't make it to the thinnest setting.)
  • Cut pasta into sheets, about 12 to 14 inches long. Dust the sheets lightly with semolina flour and stack on one of the prepared baking sheets and cover with a clean, lightly dampened kitchen towel. Repeat with remaining dough.

Nutrition Facts : @context http, Calories 197, UnsaturatedFat 2 grams, Carbohydrate 32 grams, Fat 4 grams, Fiber 1 gram, Protein 7 grams, SaturatedFat 1 gram, Sodium 28 milligrams, Sugar 0 grams, TransFat 0 grams

BASIC DOUGH FOR FRESH EGG PASTA



Basic Dough for Fresh Egg Pasta image

Fresh pasta isn't something you can master in one go. There's a learning curve. Only experience can teach you how the dough should feel and how thin to roll it. (Not that it needs to be rolled by hand with a rolling pin. A hand-crank pasta machine is a fine tool, perfect for a small batch.) But pasta making isn't rocket science either. Most competent home cooks will succeed, even if they never match the prowess of mythic Italian nonnas. Fresh homemade egg pasta is definitely worth the effort, though, and it is always better than commercially produced versions.

Provided by David Tanis

Categories     pastas, project

Time 1h20m

Yield 4 servings

Number Of Ingredients 4

2 cups all-purpose flour
1/4 teaspoon salt
2 large eggs plus 2 egg yolks, beaten
Semolina or rice flour, for dusting

Steps:

  • Put flour and salt in a mixing bowl. Add eggs and yolks, and mix with hands or wooden spoon for a minute or so, until dough comes together. (Alternatively, use a stand mixer with a paddle attachment.) If dough seems dry or crumbly, add 1 or 2 tablespoons cold water, but only enough to keep the dough together.
  • Turn dough out onto a board and knead to form a ball. Flatten dough ball to a 1-inch-thick disk, wrap in plastic, and let rest at room temperature for at least 1 hour (several hours is fine).
  • Divide dough into 4 pieces. Knead each piece until smooth. Roll with a rolling pin or pasta machine as thinly as possible (but not quite paper-thin). Cut each sheet in half, making 8 smaller sheets. Dust dough sheets lightly with semolina to keep them from sticking. Stack 2 or 3 sheets, roll loosely, then cut into 1/2-inch-wide noodles or other desired shape. Continue until all dough is used. Gently fluff noodles and spread on a semolina-dusted baking sheet. Refrigerate, uncovered, until ready to cook.

Nutrition Facts : @context http, Calories 285, UnsaturatedFat 3 grams, Carbohydrate 48 grams, Fat 5 grams, Fiber 2 grams, Protein 11 grams, SaturatedFat 2 grams, Sodium 185 milligrams, Sugar 0 grams, TransFat 0 grams

BASIC PASTA DOUGH



Basic Pasta Dough image

Provided by Food Network

Yield about 1 pound or 4 portions

Number Of Ingredients 2

1 1/2 cups unbleached flour
3 eggs

Steps:

  • On a clean dry work surface, make a mound of the flour and, using your fingers, make a well in the center of the mound. Using a fork, break the shell of the eggs one by one and drop the eggs into the center of the well you made of the flour. With the fork, beat the eggs together. Again using the fork, slowly begin to fold the flour in towards the center of the well to incorporate the flour into the beaten eggs. As you mix the flour with the beaten eggs, it will begin to form a doughy mass. Work this mass using your fingers until it begins to lose its moist and sticky character.
  • When the mass begins to feel uniformly dry, begin to work the dough using both hands: kneading with the palms of both hands, pushing from the center of the ball of dough outwards and folding the near edge inwards to begin the kneading cycle again. The kneading stage should take about 10 minutes by hand.
  • After the dough has been fully kneaded, it is time to thin the dough into sheets suitable for cutting. A manual pasta machine works wonders at this stage. Cut the ball of dough into three equal pieces. Form these pieces, by hand, into equal rectangular shape to be passed through the rollers of the pasta machine. Set the cylindrical rollers at their widest opening, put a piece of dough in the space between rollers and crank the handle to pass the dough through. As the sheet of pasta comes out the bottom of the rollers it should be set on a dry cotton towel to rest while you begin on the next piece. Repeat the thinning process with the remaining pieces of pasta, thinning and then setting aside, consecutively so that each piece of pasta is equally rolled out. When all the pasta has passed through the first rolling stage, set the machine to the next setting to begin rolling the pasta thinner. Start the rolling process again, beginning with the first piece of dough and continue with the remaining pieces. As each is rolled thinner set it aside and continue onto the next.
  • As you return to the first piece of dough, set the cylinders one setting closer. Continue in this fashion until the pasta dough has been rolled out as thinly as possible.
  • As the sheets of dough rest, keep them on a cotton towel, to prevent sticking to the work surface. When they are all rolled out you are ready to cut the pasta into the desired shape. They can be cut using the cutting wheels of the rolling machine or by hand using a knife.

BASIC PASTA DOUGH (NO EGG)



Basic Pasta Dough (No Egg) image

This recipe yields the equivalent of about 1-1/2 lbs of dry pasta, and can be used to make 4 dozen raviolis.

Provided by JoeyV

Categories     Low Cholesterol

Time 2h

Yield 4 serving(s)

Number Of Ingredients 3

3 cups flour
1 cup warm water
2 tablespoons olive oil

Steps:

  • Put flour in large mixing bowl, making a well in the center.
  • Add wet ingredients to well and very slowly mix together with a fork, incorporating only a little flour at a time so it mixes smoothly and evenly. Trust me, the more patient you are with this the better it will turn out.
  • Continue kneading by hand for about 10 minutes, let rest for a half hour covered with a towel. Repeat a couple times until dough is smooth and silky, and just slightly sticky.
  • Shape by hand or with a machine.
  • Note: Boiling fresh pasta takes significantly less time than dry pasta. Depending on the shape, cook for 30 seconds to 2 minutes.

BASIC PASTA DOUGH



Basic Pasta Dough image

Categories     Pasta     Side

Yield makes 1 1/4 pounds

Number Of Ingredients 3

2 1/4 cups all-purpose flour, plus more for dusting
3 extra-large eggs
6 extra-large egg yolks

Steps:

  • Put the flour, eggs, and egg yolks in the bowl of a standing mixer fitted with the paddle attachment and mix on low speed until the dough comes together. Turn off the mixer, remove the paddle attachment, and replace it with the dough hook. Scrape down the sides of the bowl and beat the dough with the dough hook on medium speed until it forms a ball, about 5 minutes. Dust a flat work surface with flour. Turn the dough out onto the dusted surface and gently knead it for 20 to 25 minutes, until the ball begins to feel elastic and the surface of the dough feels smooth and silky. Wrap the dough in plastic wrap and refrigerate to rest for at least 45 minutes and up to overnight before sheeting it (any longer and the dough will discolor).

Tips:

  • Use a kitchen scale to measure your ingredients for the most accurate results.
  • If you don't have a pasta roller, you can use a rolling pin to flatten the dough. Just be sure to roll it out evenly so that it is the same thickness throughout.
  • If the dough is too sticky, add a little more flour. If it is too dry, add a little more water.
  • Knead the dough for at least 8 minutes, or until it is smooth and elastic. This will help to develop the gluten in the flour and make the pasta more chewy.
  • Let the dough rest for at least 30 minutes before rolling it out. This will help to relax the gluten and make it easier to work with.
  • When cooking the pasta, be sure to add it to a large pot of boiling water. This will help to prevent the pasta from sticking together.
  • Cook the pasta for the amount of time specified in the recipe. Overcooking will make the pasta mushy.
  • Drain the pasta well before serving. This will help to prevent the pasta from becoming waterlogged.
  • Serve the pasta with your favorite sauce and toppings.

Conclusion:

Making pasta from scratch is a fun and rewarding experience. With a little practice, you'll be able to make delicious pasta dishes that your family and friends will love. So what are you waiting for? Get started today!

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