June 4, 2012

An Easy to Work With Fresh Pasta Dough At Home

So after making angel food cake at home (separate post to come later), I wound up with 12 egg yolks with no plans. Thus began my attempt to find a recipe that could use as many of the yolks at one time.

Good thing Jen from Canada's Food & Family already did the legwork and made it super easy with her Recipes to Use Up Extra Egg Yolks. Conveniently organized by 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, and 12 egg yolk recipes - I was hooked by Thomas Keller's French Laundry Pasta Dough, made available by Smitten Kitchen with fantastic step by step pictures. Probably because I had all the other ingredients handy already, plus fresh pasta is so easy to freeze and use later. Here's a quick refresher on how to freeze fresh pasta.

Technically, this is a 7 yolk pasta dough recipe, but it requires 6 yolks and 1 egg. Along with all purpose flour, olive oil (I use my favorite lucero ascolano olive oil), milk, and some good old fashioned work - you'll get some of the best tasting pasta, and easiest to work with fresh pasta dough I've ever tried. It makes rolling pasta with a the Imperia Pasta Machine so smooth and simple. I've easily gone down to even setting number 2 for paper thin pasta sheets that I plan to use for homemade lasagna and cut up to about 3/4 inch for some pappardelle. Each batch makes about 13-14oz of pasta.

Yes, it is probably a fatty pasta but it is worth it. I may also have made 4 batches at this point...thanks Smitten Kitchen!

Tip: Be sure to follow the 2 below steps I've repeated below. It'll make the process so much easier, speaking from experience :)

"When the dough begins thickening and starts lifting itself from the board, begin incorporating the remaining flour with the pastry scraper by lifting the flour up and over the dough that’s beginning to form and cutting it into the dough. When the remaining flour from the sides of the well has been cut into the dough, the dough will still look shaggy. Bring the dough together with the palms of your hands and form it into a ball. It will look flaky but will hold together."

"Even if you think you are finished kneading, knead it for an extra 10 minutes; you cannot overknead this dough. It is important to work the dough long enough to pass the pull test; otherwise, when it rests, it will collapse." - Smitten Kitchen

Fresh Fettuccine
Homemade Fettuccine
Homemade Fettuccine: unbleached all purpose flour, 6 egg yolks, 1 egg, olive oil, 2% milk. rolled at setting 3.
 Fresh Spaghetti
Hand Made Angel Hair / Spaghetti Noodles
Homemade Spaghetti: unbleached all purpose flour, 6 egg yolks, 1 egg, olive oil, 2% milk. rolled at setting 3 (this is more like a pasta between angel hair and spaghetti because it is so delicate!)



1 comment:

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