Post by PhredPost by DavidWNo, it goes into a largeish saucepan of already-boiling water and
sits there for 18 minutes (with a couple of stirrings to keep it
loose) starting from when it's all under water, which takes 1
minute (so 19 minutes all up). By 'firm' I mean
When you say "and sits there", I presume you mean with the water
still boiling?
After the pasta is added to water at a boil and the water resumes
boiling the water should reach a hard rolling boil so that the pasta
is continuously agitated until it's done... there should be no need to
stir once a rolling boil is reached. If the pasta just sits there
then the water is not boiling hard enough
The water is boiling hard.
and the pasta will not cook
properly (stewed pasta is awful, slimey exterior, interior raw);
I cook 200-250g (a meal for one) in 2L of water. Once I get it all under water
(about 1 minute) the strands are still all in a solid bunch. I stir it after
three or four minutes because it takes that long for the strands to become loose
enough to swim around on their own. That's probably enough stirring, but I stir
it again when I put the sauce on (about 5 min. from the end) just to make sure
no strand is sticking to the bottom.
Maybe those the few early minutes extend the overall time compared with softer
brands, since it's not cooking well at that stage.
probably not enough BTUs, not enough water, incorrectly shaped pot. I
find an 8 qt pot filled with 6 qts water to 1 pound of pasta works
best...
The packet recommends 1L/100g, which corresponds to 4.3 quarts per pound.
also to achieve a rolling boil the pot should be taller than
it is wide... the more surface area the more difficult to achieve a
rolling boil with typical wimpy residential burners. There needs to
be enough water so the pasta has room to agitate and not sit all
jammed against itself in a lump.
It has enough room to agitate and it does agitate. It just takes a while, and a
stir, before it gets there.
Btw, it's not possible to cook pasta
properly with those so called pasta pots with the perforated basket...
most low quality restaurants use perforated baskets for reheating
already cooked pasta, a high quality restaurant does not serve
reheated pasta, each order is cooked fresh from scratch. I never
order pasta at restuarants, it's almost always reheated crap, already
coated with sauce so it's looks and tastes like canned, or worse, left
overs scraped from other diner's plates. Pisghetti w/meata balles is
cheap, I'm not going to pay $14.95 for a peasant's dish that I can
cook much better at home for under $3... a pound of pasta, a dozen
meat balls (I use fresh ground meat), tomato sauce, and a sprinkle of
grated cheese feeds a family of four and costs under $12, even
includes a glass of dago red each. And if I'm feeling lazy meat sauce
is much simpler... top round and boneless pork loin costs $2/lb, takes
me five minutes to grind. Naturally when I make meat sauce (or any
pasta sauce) I'll make like 6-8 quarts so I have plenty to freeze,
then whenever I decide on pasta last minute all I gotta do is boil
water...
Yes, sauce keeps very well and once it's made spaghetti is a great meal that's
very quick and easy to prepare. That's why I virtually live on it on work days.
and that's why I don't order pasta at restuarants, it's a
very inexpensive dish and restaurants make it all up in advance, in
fact the vast majority use canned pasta sauce, and maybe doctor it a
bit, maybe. Today just about every item on a restaurant menu comes in
#10 cans, frozen, or dehydrated... pasta comes all three ways. You
really don't want meat sauce at a restaurant.