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Boiling pasta in salted water is a straightforward kitchen task, but you can improve your results with these simple tricks.
Everything you need to know to cook pasta perfectly:
We review the best colander for the job:
1. Use Plenty of Water—or Stir Often
As pasta boils, it leaches starches into the cooking water, which can cause the noodles to stick together. The easiest way to cut down on sticking is to boil pasta in a generous amount of water—4 quarts per pound of dried pasta—to dilute the starches. However, if you don’t have a pot large enough for all the water, you can reduce the water by half and stir the pasta frequently during cooking.
2. Salt the Water
Salting the cooking water ensures that seasoning gets into the pasta, not just on it. Add 1 tablespoon of salt to 4 quarts of water (or 1½ teaspoons to 2 quarts), making sure to stir well so that the salt will dissolve.
3. Skip the Oil
Since it merely sits on top of the cooking water, adding a splash of olive oil to the pot before adding the pasta doesn’t prevent the pasta from sticking together as it cooks—though it may help keep the water from boiling over. To prevent the pasta from sticking together, simply stir it for a minute or two after adding it to the boiling water.
4. Check for Doneness Often
We recommend ignoring the cooking times listed on packaging, which are almost always too long and result in mushy, overcooked pasta. Tasting the pasta is the best way to check for doneness. We prefer pasta cooked al dente, meaning that it has a bit of resistance in the center when bitten.
5. Reserve Some Water
Before draining the pasta, reserve about ½ cup of the cooking water, which is flavorful, somewhat salty, and starchy. It can be used to loosen a thick sauce without diluting the sauce’s body or flavor as much as plain water would.
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What size of pot do you recommend for 1lb of pasta? And do you have a brand recommendation?
I can't cook I really need a video on how to brown the ground beef to add to the jarred spaghetti sauce.
I have never had over cooked pasta by following the suggested cooking time printed on the packaging. In fact, the opposite is true and I always end up adding an extra 2-3 minutes.
Then again, I never use the cheap stuff made outside of Italy.
As for the oil, you add it or not, it won't make any difference, except ending up with a greasy pan that will require a little extra effort to wash up.
I use no more than 2 qts of water, and that is an outlier. sale the water and like rice shoot for little remaining, so what if you have to stir the pasta. you get the starch saturated water as a bonus. The huge amount of water wastes the energy to boil it. Old wives tale vs more up to date food chemistry
So oil on top is a myth. But it still affects the sauce absorbing? How is that if he said all it does is stay on top and do nothing.
5 practical tips within 1 minute. Love it when they get straight to the point!
title and video thumbnail should be dry pasta. I'd expect other ATK followers to dabble more in homemade pasta than most, as I was hoping to get more out of this video.
Oil is not for sticking. It's for not over boiling. Everyone knows that.
Did he get cuter?
Adding salt to the water seems very pointless.
Imagine the volume of water, the low quantity of salt used in relation to that, and how little ‰ are going to get seeped in to the pasta.
No, this tradition is a placebo, not expert cooking.
You missed the most important tip. Start with cold water. Put your pasta in a pan, cover it with cold water, then bring it to boil. Never sticks.
ATK, you are good educators.
I love Dan … and the rest of the staff, of course. But I love Dan just a little bit more 🙂
That was awesome
that guy is cute as a button
is there a ratio between the salt and water, or just put as much as i like?
Thanks, Dan!
If I put the recommended 1/2 cup of pasta water to the sauce, won’t this thin the sauce itself?
I use very little water when cooking pasta and it's perfect every time. Highly concentrated salty starchy liquid is great for finishing sauces also
Plus take the pasta when it's 90% ready to your desired taste and cook it with the sauce in a warm low heat skillet for 1-2 minutes. it just bond the two together like glue! and if necessary use the 1/2 glass of starchy water to balance it.
Some people argue that the less water you use the better, provided it does not stick, as it gives you a starchier water to use later.
Some people also claim you should use oil for filled pasta only, but I can't quite understand the logic here. It's still pasta on the outside.
Gordon Ramsay says to put oil in the water, so I add oil to the water. I have never had the issue of sauce not sticking
Wrong. A few drops of oil will break the surface tension of the starchy water minimizing boil-over. A small amount of oil won't effect sauce.
Those advices are definitely "Italian approved"!!=D Good job!!
Molto Bene =)
He’s right. I’m Italian and make pasta the way I was taught.
So why does the water erupt when you add a big spoon of salt?