User:Tocharianne/pasta

This is the text from the articles linked to List of pasta to avoid people having to click on every link.

Campanelle
Campanelle is a type of pasta which is shaped like a small bell or flower. (Campanelle is Italian for little bell.) It is also sometimes referred to as gigli or riccioli. It is intended to be served with a thick sauce, or in a casserole.

Cavatelli is a small, shell-shaped pasta with a rolled edge. It is similar in shape to casarecci, but shorter in length. The pasta is typically sold refrigerated.

Some Italian-Americans in the New York area refer to the pasta as "gab-a-deel" or "cav-a-dell" (among other pronunciations) instead of cavatelli. Such corrupted pronunciations have their origin in various Southern Italian dialects. Italian-Americans who are educated in the Italian language, however, refer to the pasta by its correct Italian name.

Some people confuse cavatelli with another pasta product, gnocchi. Cavatelli are made of flour and water. Gnocchi (pronounced nyo-kee) are made with mashed potatoes, water, salt and flour.

Cencioni


Cencioni is a type of pasta.

The name derives from the Italian for little rag.

Cencioni are oval and petal-shaped, with a slight curve, larger and flatter than orecchiette, with a more irregular shape and a rough texture to one side to help sauces cling better.

Conchiglie


Conchiglie is a type of pasta.

Commonly known as "seashells", the name derives from the Italian word for seashell.

Farfalle


Farfalle is a type of pasta.

Commonly known as "bow-ties" the name derives from the Italian for butterfly.

Farfalle comes in several sizes, but has a distinctive bowtie shape, like a little Action Man bowtie (a satirical quote from Alan Partridge). Usually the farfalle is formed from a square of pasta with two sides trimmed in a ruffled edge, and the center pinched together to make the unusual shape. They are sometimes ridged, known as farfalle rigate. Different colors are available; plain, tomato, and spinach. These are often sold together in a mix. Suitable for most sauces, farfalle are very well suited to cream and tomato dishes, and children have a particular affinity for them.

In Modena farfalle are known as strichetti.

A larger variation of farfalle is known as farfallone.

For some unexplained reason, farfalle is considered "Dead To Me" by Stephen Colbert.

Fiori


Fiori is a flower-shaped pasta.

Fusilli, a helical shaped pasta, is usually about 4 centimetres long. Fusilli is almost identical to another shaped pasta called Rotini. They both have the spiral shape, although rotini is slightly bigger and thicker than fusilli.

Fusilli is often made in green and red varieties - these are produced by adding spinach and carrots respectively.

In popular culture
The pasta is prominently featured in the Seinfeld episode, "The Fusilli Jerry".

Gemelli


Gemelli is a type of pasta.

The name derives from the Italian for twins.

Gemelli are not twin tubes twisted one another, but rather a single s-shaped strand twisted into a spiral.

Gigli
Gigli redirects to campanelle

Lanterne


Lanterne is a type of pasta.

The name derives from the Italian for oil lantern.

Lanterne have deep ridges and are curved in a lantern shape.

Orecchiette
Orecchiette is a type of pasta native to Apulia, whose shape is approximately that of a small ear (in Italian, ear is "orecchio"). In the Taranto area it is still called by the synonym "chiancarelle". An orecchietta is about 3/4 of an inch in size and looks like a white small dome with a thinner center than edge and a rough surface.

A different, non-dome shaped version is called "strascinate". Like most pasta, all versions of orecchiette are made with only hard wheat flour, water and salt.

The typical regional recipe couples orecchiette with turnip heads.

Origins
Orecchiette probably come from the Provence region in France where a similar type of pasta has been made since Medieval times. This kind of pasta is disc-shaped with a hollowed center, usually obtained by pressing the thumb on the disc; this particular shape facilitates the drying process so that the pasta could saved for a famine. Boats leaving for long trips used to carry large quantities of this pasta. It is then claimed that the Anjous, the French dynasty that dominated Apulia in 1200, brought this pasta into Italy with its current name.

Rotelle


Rotelle is a type of pasta.

The name derives from the Italian word for little wheels. They are also known as wagon wheels.

Rotini


Rotini is a type of pasta, related to Fusilli, but with a tighter spiral.

The name derives from the Italian for twists.

Rotini originate from Northern Italy and the tight twists help them retain a wide variety of sauces better. They are often used in pasta salads with pesto or tomato based sauces.

Strozzapreti
Strozzapreti is the name of a variety of regional Italian specialties.

One is a kind of pasta which is laid out flat in sheets then twisted to look like a rolled towel; due to this method of production, each piece of the pasta is markedly non-uniform, unlike spaghetti or macaroni. The pasta originates from the Italian region Romagna.

Another version from Florence consists of small balls of a mixture of spinach or chard, ricotta cheese, Parmesan cheese, flour and seasonings, baked in an oven.

Strozzapreti from Emilia are made from flour, water, Parmesan cheese, and egg whites beaten together.

The name is Italian for "priest choker"; there are several legends to explain the origin of the name. One is that gluttonous priests were so enthralled by the savory pasta that they ate too quickly and choked themselves, sometimes to death. Another explanation involves the azdora [the housewife in Romagna], who ‘chokes’ the dough strips to make the strozzapreti: "... in that particular moment you would presume that the azdora would express such a rage (perhaps triggered by the misery and difficulties of her life) to be able to strangle a priest!" Another legend goes that wives would customarily make the pasta for priests, and their husbands would be angered enough by the venal priests eating their wives' food to wish the priests would choke as they stuffed their faces with it.

Bigoli
Bigoli is a long, spaghetti-like dry pasta with a hole in the center. Traditionally they were made with buckwheat flour, but are more commonly made with whole wheat flour now. It closely ressembles the bucatini. Bigoli is a term used in Venice, whereas the term pici is used in Tuscany for a similar pasta without the hole in the center; oftentimes, the terms will be used interchangeably.

Definition
In "La vecchia cucina eugubina" they say that this noodle is as thick as a stockings-making wooden knitting needle.

Bucatini


Bucatini is a thick spaghetti-like pasta with a hole running through the middle. The name comes from buco, meaning "hole" in Italian. It tastes similar to spaghetti, but is thicker, with almost a vermicelli texture. Originating in Sicily, Bucatini is good with semi-thick sauces, or just buttered with spices.

Cannelloni
Cannelloni, or manicotti, are large tubes of pasta, generally 3 to 4 inches in length and one inch in diameter. After boiling, they are typically filled with a savory stuffing of ricotta cheese or meat, then covered with tomato sauce. However, there are many variations on the basic recipe.

In Italian, cannelloni literally means "big pipes" or "big reeds", while manicotti means "muffs", from the diminutive of manica ("sleeve"). Although both terms are plural nouns in Italian, the English term is often construed as singular, particularly when used as the name of the dish.

The term manicotti is more common in the United States, but they can be used interchangeably. However, an article in Better Homes and Gardens magazine distinguishes them, using manicotti for noodles rolled diagonally and cannelloni for noodles rolled rectilinearly. 

The American composer Peter Schickele has called for an uncooked manicotti tube, which he calls "pastaphone," to be used as a musical instrument (played in the manner of a horn) in works by the fictional composer P. D. Q. Bach.

Cavatappi
Cavatappi is a "S" shaped macaroni noodle. Cavatappi means "corkscrew" in Italian.

Cellentani


Cellentani is a form of tubular pasta.

Fideuá
Fideuá (pronounced "fee-theh-WAH", IPA /fiðe'wa/; from "fideu", Catalan/Valencian for noodle) is a typical dish of Valencia, Spain. It is a variation of the popular paella dish, originated in the 1960s in the city of Gandia when noodles were put instead of rice, because someone forgot to bring the rice. There are many variations of it with different ingredients, but it is usually made with seafood and fish, and optionally served with allioli sauce.

Elbow Macaroni
Elbow macaroni is a term for pasta in the shape of a small tube curved into a semicircular shape. (See also macaroni.) Its name comes from the similarity of its shape to that of a bent elbow. Elbow macaroni is commonly used in macaroni and cheese and other dishes.

Elbow Macaroni is produced by extruding dough through a circular die with a pin or disk in the center that forms the tunnel. The geometry of the die forces more dough through one side of the circle than the other, forming the characteristic curve. The images show front and rear views of an elbow macaroni die which extrudes five pieces at once. In this die, more dough is directed to the outside of the circles than the inside, and the extruded macaroni curls inward.

Macaroni


Macaroni is typically machine-made dry commercial pasta, used in contrast to fresh pasta made at home or in small local businesses. Macaroni technically must not contain eggs. Although usually commercially made, some more advanced home machines do allow for the fresh creation of macaroni pasta noodles.

Macaroni is a corruption of the Italian word maccherone and its plural maccheroni. Its etymology is debatable. Some scholars think it's related to Greek makaria, a kind of barley broth. Others think it comes from Italian maccare, "to bruise or crush" (referring to the crushing of the wheat to make the pasta), which comes, in turn, from Latin macerare.

Thomas Jefferson is credited with introducing the first macaroni machine in the United States, in 1789, when he returned home after serving as ambassador to France. He said that Daniel Paese taught him all he learned about this machine. The word macaroni was already familiar in the U.S. at that time, having appeared in the previous decade in the lyrics of the popular song "Yankee Doodle", in which the titular character "stuck a feather in his cap and called it macaroni"; this usage had to do with the Macaroni fashion.

In English-speaking countries, the name macaroni is customarily given to a specific shape of pasta: small pasta tubes cut into short pieces. In the United States macaroni is also sometimes labelled as elbow macaroni, or more simply elbows, due to the slight bend in the shape of the pasta noodle. In the U.S. and the United Kingdom, this pasta is often prepared by baking it with a sauce made from cheddar cheese; the resulting dish is called macaroni and cheese (often shortened to macaroni cheese in Britain, and "Mac'n'cheese" in the U.S.). In some parts of the U.S., a more narrow type of macaroni is sold as elbow spaghetti.

Among some Italian-Americans (particularly in New York City, Philadelphia, and New Jersey), macaroni is used as a generic term for any type of pasta. Such usage, however, is not technically accurate.

Penne

 * For other meanings, see Penne (disambiguation).

Penne are a type of pasta originating in Italy. They have a cylindrical shape. The ends are almost always cut diagonally. The name is derived from penna, which is Latin for "feather" or Quill.

Rigatoni


Rigatoni is a form of tube-shaped pasta. It is larger than penne and ziti. Rigatoni is usually ridged and the tube's end does not terminate at an angle, like penne's does.

Rigatoni can be coupled with many different sauces, from creamy to chunky. Consequently, rigatoni is a popular choice for restaurants which choose to stock only one tube-shaped pasta noodle. The tube may be stuffed with cheese or other soft foods.

The word rigatoni comes from the Italian past participle of rigare, which means "to draw a line" (American Heritage Dictionary).

Strand noodles


Spaghetti is a long, thin form of pasta. It is versatile, popular, and available throughout the Western world. Spaghetti is the plural form of the Italian word spaghetto, which is a diminutive of "spago," meaning "thin string" or "twine". The word "spaghetti" can be literally translated as "little strings."

Preparation
Most spaghetti sold and consumed is commercially prepared, then dried. Spaghetti is cooked by boiling the pasta in salted water until soft. The consistency or texture of spaghetti changes as it is cooked. The most popular consistency is al dente which is translated from the Italian as "to the tooth"; that is soft but with texture, sometimes even with bite in the centre. Others prefer their spaghetti fully cooked, which gives it a much softer consistency. The best dried spaghetti is made from durum wheat semolina. Fresh spaghetti should be prepared with grade '00' flour. Inferior spaghetti is often found produced with other kinds of flour, especially outside Italy.

An emblem of Italian cuisine, spaghetti is frequently served in tomato sauce, which may contain various herbs (especially oregano and basil), olive oil, meat, or vegetables. Other toppings include any of several hard cheeses, such as Pecorino Romano, Parmesan or Asiago. Outside Italy it is often served with meatballs, although that is not a typical Italian recipe.

Eating
According to Neapolitan habit, eating spaghetti with a fork and a spoon is perfectly polite, though the view on this varies in other cultures. Many other Italians eat it with just a fork like most other Continental dishes. In Asia, many people use chopsticks as a form of eating rather than forks, as chopsticks are custom in most Asian countries. In parts of the US, a narrow size of macaroni is sold as elbow spaghetti. This is a misnomer, as this product is short and tubular, thus it's not a spaghetti at all.

Spaghettini (thin spaghetti) takes less time (usually two minutes less) to cook to al dente form than regular spaghetti. There is also Spaghettoni (thick spaghetti) that would take longer to cook. All three types of spaghetti are larger than the other round-rod pastas (like vermicelli).

Trivia

 * Is the type of pasta/rice cooked to make "Rice-A-Roni"

Ribbon pasta noodles
Fettuccine (literally "little ribbons" in Italian) is a type of pasta. It is a very flat, thick, noodle made of egg and flour, similar to tagliatelle.

In Italian cuisine, it is traditionally made fresh (either at home or commercially), but dried versions also exist on the market.

A popular fettuccine dish in North America is fettuccine alfredo.



Lasagne in the arts
Lasagne is Italian for Big Lamp Post
 * Lasagna is the favorite dish of the fictional cat Garfield.
 * Singer "Weird Al" Yankovic’s parody of the song "La Bamba" entitled "Lasagna" can be heard on his album Even Worse.

Popular culture
In Chapelle's show, the beatdown that Rick James took was stated to have "his legs look like linguini."

Pappardelle (sg.: pappardella) are large fettuccine. The name derives from the verb “pappare,” to gobble up. The fresh types are two to three centimetres (¾-1 inch) wide and have fluted edges. Dried egg pappardelle have straight sides.

Pizzoccheri are a type of tagliatelle pasta from Valtellina made with buckwheat flour. Classically they are cooked along with greens (often Swiss Chard), and cubed potatoes. This mixture is layered with pieces of bitto cheese and dressed with garlic and sage lightly fried in butter together.

Pizzoccheri can be easily made, similarly to tagliatelle, by hand. They can also be found pre-made.

In Teglio, where pizzoccheri are said to originate, two fairs take place: La Sagra dei Pizzoccheri, celebrated in July and the festival of The Golden Pizzocchero, celebrated in September.

Tagliatelle /taa'tl-le/ is the classic pasta of the Emilia-Romagna region of Italy. Individually, they are long, flat ribbons, similar in shape to fettuccine, but typically about .75 inches long and about two centimetres wide. They can be served with a variety of sauces, though the classic is a meat sauce or Bolognese sauce.

History
Tagliatelle are an expression of the art of hand-made pasta, because the secret in achieving cooking perfection lies in the ability to roll the pasta evenly, without holes or cuts or difference in thickness.

Legend has it that during the Italian Renaissance, in the year 1487, a talented court chef, inspired by Lucrezia D'Este's hairdo, on the occasion of her marriage to Annibale Bentivoglio, son of Giovanni II, Lord of Bologna created tagliatelle. The recipe was of tagliolini di pasta e sugo, alla maniera di Zafiran (tagliolini of pasta and sauce in the manner of Zafiran) and it was served on silver plates. Over the years, tagliatelle has acquired a much less sophisticated tradition, as tradition wills it to be eaten by simple folk.

Texture and Serving Suggestions
Since tagliatelle are generally made as fresh pasta, the texture is porous and rough, making it ideal for thick sauces, generally made with beef, veal, or pork, and occasionally with rabbit, as well as several other less rich (and more vegetarian) options; such as briciole e noci (with breadcrumbs and nuts), uovo e formaggio (with eggs and cheese - a less rich carbonara), or simply pomodoro e basilico (with tomatoes and basil).

Trivia
In Lemony Snicket's A Series of Unfortunate Events, The Carnivorous Carnival Count Olaf's accomplice once threatened the Baudelaire orphans with a Tagliatelle Grande, or really big pasta noodle, that he meant to use as a whip.

Trenette are a type of narrow, flat, dried pasta especially associated with Genoa and Liguria. They are essentially the same as the pasta known as linguine elsewhere in Italy.

Trenette are the most traditional form of pasta served with pesto alla genovese, a dish known as trenette al pesto, which often also includes potatoes and green beans boiled in the same water.

Micro pasta
Acini di pepe are a form of pasta. Italian for "peppercorns", they look like tiny beads.

Acini di pepe works well in soups or cold salads. A common American cold salad recipe that teams the pasta with whipped topping, marshmallows, pineapple and mandarin oranges (incomplete recipe) is often called Frog's Eye Salad.

Also sometimes referred to as pastina (Italian for "tiny dough"), however some pasta makers distinguish pastina as smaller than acini di pepe.

Alphabets Pasta, also referred to as Alfabeto, is pasta that has been mechanicaly cut or pressed into the letters of the Latin alphabet.

Generally the only difference between alphabet pasta and other pasta is its shape. It is often fed to babies and young children.

Orzo roasted barley drink
"Orzo" is also the name of a hot drink made from roasted barley in some parts of the world. In Italy, for instance, a "caffé d'orzo" is an espresso style drink made from ground roasted barley. When prepared from the roasted barley directly, it can be made in many standard espresso or coffee makers. Although traditionally considered a coffee substitute for children, it is an increasingly common choice in Italy and other places for those who choose to eschew coffee for health reasons. In the United States, instant roasted barley drinks are sold under the name of "Postum," "Pero," and others, including varieties of "café de cebada" in Latin American markets.

stelle is a page about a town in Germany

Stuffed pasta


Ravioli is a popular type of pasta, comprised of a filling, commonly (though not always) meat based, sealed between two layers of pasta dough. Ravioli are commonly rectangular or circular in shape.

A common vegetarian option includes ricotta cheese and vegetables such as spinach or nettles in place of meat. The filling could be also potatoes, squash or even tofu. Though often topped with a red, tomato based sauce, the sauces are as varied as the fillings. Pesto, broth based and cream based sauces are also common.

Additionally, other ravioli varieties, like Chocolate Ravioli, have appeared to fill a dessert role.

The word ravioli derives from ravvolgere, the verb meaning "to wrap." Stuffed pasta was probably introduced in the Medieval period in Europe. Pasta was stuffed with meat, fish and vegetables, and could include a creamy cheese like ricotta. Tomato sauce would not have been used, since tomatoes were not introduced in Europe until the 15th century.

In Italy, most regions have their own versions of ravioli, and some of the earliest mentions of the dish come from the personal letters of Francisco di Marco, a merchant of Prato in the 14th century. Though the dish is of Italian origin the oldest known recipe is an Anglo-Norman vellum manuscript from the 1290s.

Today one can find packed refrigerated or frozen ravioli across the world, especially where Italian communities have a certain relief. Ravioli are made in special industrial lines supplied, all over the world, by Italian companies such as Arienti & Cattaneo, Ima, Ostoni, Zamboni, etc.; "fresh" packed ravioli have usually seven weeks of shelf-life.

In Lebanon and Palestine, this dish is called Shish Barak(Shishbarak), the same pasta filled with minced beef meat and cooked in hot yogurt.

Other cultures have parallels to ravioli. The Chinese jiaozi or wonton (indeed in Chinese ravioli and tortellini collectively are called "Italian jiaozi" (義大利餃) or "Italian wonton" (意大利雲吞)), the Russian pelmeni, the Ukrainian varenyky, the Tibetan momo and Jewish kreplachs are a few examples.

Mythology
The origin of tortellini is surrounded by several legends.

One says that this dish is born in Castelfranco Emilia (province of Modena). One night during a trip, Lucrezia Borgia checked into an Inn in the small town. The host was captivated by her beauty and couldn't resist the urge to peek into her room through the keyhole. The light inside the bedroom was only made by a few candles and so he could only see her navel. This pure and innocent vision was enough to send him into an ecstasy that inspired him to create the tortellino that night.

For some the shape of tortellini represents the bellybutton of Venus, the Goddess of Love in Roman mythology (Aphrodite in Greek mythology).

Agnolotti ('priest hats' in Italian) is a kind of ravioli made with a small round piece of flattened pasta dough, folded over with a meat and vegetable stuffing inside. They are prepared by either poaching them or by browning them in a frying pan with butter. This dish is associated with Piedmont in Italy.

Recipes
Thomas Keller's recipe for pasta dough and agnolotti.

Irregular Shapes
Spätzle ([ʃpætslə], German, sometimes explained as being a diminutive of Spatz "small sparrows") are similar to noodles and much used in southern Germany (Baden-Württemberg, Bavaria), western Austria, Switzerland, Alsace and sometimes also in Italy (in South Tyrol and other northern regions in which there they are named in italian "Troffi"). Until the 1950s, Spätzle were also consumed in Malta, where they were called pezzelati, but their consumption declined and came to an end with the introduction of ready-made pasta. The decline was so fast that most Maltese haven't even ever heard of this food. They are fabricated by grating or scraping dough into boiling water and continuously sieving out the batches that are cooked. The dough is a simple affair, consisting of eggs, flour, and salt. Some Spätzle recipes also contain milk or water.

The classic variety are "button" Spätzle (Knöpfle), which are lentil-shaped. If the dough is of firmer consistency, elongated (more noodle-like) Spätzle may be formed. This is the variety that can be purchased dried and packaged.

Spätzle may accompany any meat dish that is generally prepared with a sauce. Examples of variations of Spätzle are: However, the most traditional minimalist approach to spätzle serves it with only butter, bread crumbs and a little grated cheese tossed together.
 * eaten with sweet-sour lentils and fine-skinned frankfurter-style sausages in Schwaben, also known as the famous Linsen, Spätzle & Saitenwürstle.
 * mixed with fried onions and grated cheese (lots), then fried in a pan or baked in the oven as a substantial main course, mostly in Swabia and Bavaria, as Käsespätzle.
 * mixed into a stew as in the Gaisburger Marsch.

In popular culture
In the Australian sketch comedy show, The Ronnie Johns Half Hour, the character Paulie complains to a supermarket that Gnocchi is made from potatoes, and not pasta, and therefore should be stocked in the fruit and vegetable aisle of the supermarket. Throughout the series, Paulie's gnocchi campaign escalates; he stages protests and eventually the mafia attempts to silence him.