Kitty said: Yes.How do I stop my fresh pasta sticking before I cook it?-I try seach this on internet but no results found.Maybe this is a stupid question.
Mike said: oh,no,you are wrong.I have found as below for this question(How do I stop my fresh pasta sticking before I cook it?),it will help you,my kids.
Answers:
Dust with flour like already mentioned (before you take it through the pasta machine). You can spread the fresh pasta on a kitchentowel and cover with another towel for the next layer
(The answers "with oil" is *during* cooking, but not quite necesarry if the water is boiling well before you put in the pasta)
Other Answers:
oil in water
Some salt in the water and a drop or two of olive oil. Add a bit of cooking oil.
Dust it with flour
always add some cooking oil to the waterput a bit of olive oil into the water when cooking it a bit of flour
Add a little olive oil to the water before cooking, then rinse the pasta in cold water once it's done cooking.
add a tablespoon of olive oil before boilingYou stop it sticking after you have cooked it by draining it when it is still slighly firm (the Italians call this al dente) returning it to the heat with the heat turned down and stirring in a little olive oil or butter or if you have to, sunflower oil. Only a little but it adds to the flavour and stops it sticking
Source(s):
my mum, she wasn't Italian but she really could cook pasta oil in the water
there's no need to put oil in the water if you make sure you add the pasta when the water is at a 'rolling' boil and stir it a couple of times during cooking.....
fresh pasta, mmmm.
put some butter on it Cooking Pasta the Right Way
Cooking pasta the right way... We could do a whole class just on this subject. After all, if your pasta isn't properly cooked, no sauce can mask its shortcomings. So here are ten things to keep in mind when cooking pasta...
1. First of all, start with a big pot. None of those squat pans, and no need for nonstick unless you happen to have only a nonstick stockpot.
2. Bring 4 cups of water to a boil for every 3 and 1/2 ounces of pasta you intend to cook. The water should be at a rolling boil when you add the pasta.
3. Add about 1 tablespoon of salt per quart of water when the water comes to a boil (if you add it earlier, it will simply make the water come to a boil more slowly).
4. Don't add oil! The pasta won't stick together unless you don't stir it often enough as it cooks. (Adding oil to the water will create a slippery surface on the pasta; the sauce will adhere poorly to the pasta when it's time to combine the two.)
5. Add the pasta all at once, and stir with a long-handled tool. If you are making long pasta, keep stirring until it becomes supple, loses rigidity, and is entirely submerged in the water.
6. Keep the water boiling the whole time as the pasta cooks: to do this, cover the pot with a lid. (If the pasta water is not boiling, the outside of the pasta will be overcooked by the time the inside is al dente.)
7. Stir the pasta every minute or so. This is crucial to prevent sticking and to ensure even cooking.
8. Check often to see how the pasta is coming along, and drain it when it's al dente (meaning to the tooth, because it should offer a little bite when it's drained): there should still be a thin white dot at the center. (Pasta drained when it is al dente has been shown to be more easily digested by the human organism... So it's not just a matter of taste!)
9. Reserve about 1 cup of the cooking water before you drain the pasta. Use as much of this reserved pasta cooking water as needed to thin out your sauce (this allows you to cut down on olive oil or butter). Also, because the pasta cooking water is so rich in starch, it helps the sauce bind to the pasta--making for pasta with a lovely, velvety quality. And, the residual heat in the reserved pasta cooking water will help your pasta stay hot for longer...
10. NEVER rinse pasta after you drain it, even if you plan to serve the pasta cold: it will wash out the starch and much of the flavor. (To cool drained pasta for use in cold dishes, toss it with a touch of olive oil and spread it out on a large tray until it reaches room temperature--about 15 minutes.)
Your pasta is now ready to toss with sauce in a heated bowl or large skillet... Buon appetito!
Source(s):
http://www.rusticocooking.com/pasta.htm#pasta
Put some oil into the water - that should do the trick I find washing it under cold water before cooking, to remove surplus starch, then place in boiling water, with oil and pinch of salt (sparingly though, )and just before cooked, strain again, add fresh water, and bring back to boil. when coooked to your approval, drain again and wash quickly under cold water an serve immediately.
Put a dash of olive oil in the water
just add an oil--so it wont stick upTry extra virgin olive oil... make sure u keep stiring it as u cook it then add olive oil at the end
you need to put a bit more flour on the pasta. then the most import thing that you might be missing then have two more beers
rub it with flourBoiling water with a tablespoon of olive oil.
Place pasta in gently and stir occassionaly.
Remove when al dente.
Allow to drain on its own !
Source(s):
Experience!
Add a drop of olive oil to boiling water before adding pasta. Stir the pasta once it hits the water to seperate. put a little oil in water before placing pasta and and stir every once in a while. when pasta is cooked place under cold running water until ready to use.
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