Pasta Alluovo Egg Dough Recipes

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PASTA ALL'UOVO (FRESH EGG PASTA)



Pasta all'Uovo (Fresh Egg Pasta) image

There is nothing like fresh homemade pasta. This egg pasta is easier than you think, and when cut into long, wide tagliatelle strips, it is the perfect mate to Ragu di Carne.

Categories     homemade pasta     fresh egg pasta     Italian culinary academy     fresh pasta     egg pasta     pasta all'uovo     tagliatelle

Yield 1

Number Of Ingredients 6

5 oz. 00 flour
5 oz. semolina
4 eggs
1 pinch salt
2 tsp. Extra virgin olive oil
semolina

Steps:

  • Put the flour, semolina, eggs, salt, and oil in the bowl of a food processor. Process until the dough forms a ball and is no longer sticky when touched with clean fingers. If it is, process in more flour a little at a time.
  • Dust a work surface with flour. Scrape the prepared dough out onto the surface and knead for approximately 5 minutes, until the texture is smooth, silky, and elastic.
  • Divide the dough into 2 balls, sprinkle with flour, and wrap in plastic. Refrigerate for 30 minutes.
  • To roll the dough: Dust a work surface with semolina. Cut one of the dough balls in half and dust the dough with semolina. With the pasta machine on the widest setting, roll the dough through the machine. Fold the dough strip in half and roll it through the machine again. Do this two or three more times, dusting the pasta with semolina if it gets sticky. Set the strip aside and repeat with the remaining dough.
  • Adjust the machine to the next widest setting and roll the dough strips through the machine in the same way twice more.
  • Continue rolling the dough strips through the machine, dusting with semolina but no longer folding the dough in between rolling. Make the opening smaller each time, until the pasta is rolled to the desired thickness.
  • Cut the strips into tagliatelle and place on parchment paper sprinkled with semolina.

AUTHENTIC HOMEMADE ITALIAN EGG PASTA DOUGH



Authentic Homemade Italian Egg Pasta Dough image

Flour, eggs, salt: that's all you need to make fresh pasta at home. This is the simplest and most authentic Italian recipe you'll find to make homemade pasta like lasagna, ravioli, tagliatelle, tortellini... you name it! The best part is you don't even need a pasta machine if you don't have one!

Provided by Alemarsi

Categories     World Cuisine Recipes     European     Italian

Time 1h

Yield 4

Number Of Ingredients 3

2 ¼ cups Italian-style tipo 00 flour
3 large eggs
1 pinch salt

Steps:

  • Place flour on a marble or wooden work surface. Make a well in the center and crack in eggs; add salt. Gently beat eggs using a fork, incorporating the surrounding flour, until mixture is runny. Pull remaining flour into the center using a bench scraper, incorporating it until dough forms a ball.
  • Knead dough with your hands by flattening the ball, stretching it, and folding the top towards the center. Turn 45 degrees and repeat until dough is soft and smooth, about 10 minutes.
  • Shape dough into a ball. Place in a bowl and cover with plastic wrap. Refrigerate until firm, 30 minutes to 1 hour.
  • Roll out the dough with a pasta machine or with a rolling pin and cut into your favorite pasta.

Nutrition Facts : Calories 297.3 calories, Carbohydrate 49.2 g, Cholesterol 139.5 mg, Fat 4.8 g, Fiber 1.6 g, Protein 12.8 g, SaturatedFat 1.3 g, Sodium 92.6 mg, Sugar 0.5 g

PASTA ALL'UOVO (EGG DOUGH)



Pasta All'uovo (Egg Dough) image

As important as it is to develop feel and instinct when making dough, there is a metric formula for making pasta all'uovo. For every 100 grams of flour, use 1 (50- to 55-gram) egg, which corresponds to 1 USDA medium egg.

Provided by Oretta Zanini De Vita

Number Of Ingredients 3

1 pound (450 grams) sifted all-purpose flour (farina 00)
5 medium or large eggs, or 4 extra-large or jumbo
Extra flour for dusting and adjusting

Steps:

  • Hand method:
  • Sift the flour onto a large wooden board. Form the flour into a mound with the approximate profile of Mount Fuji. Form your hand into a loose fist, and, with the back of the fingers, gently ream out the center of the mound until you have something that resembles a low, broad volcano with a very deep crater. Italian cooks call this a fountain, fontana, for the pool of liquid in the center, but it's definitely a cone.
  • Break all the eggs into the crater one by one. Pierce the yolks with a fork and begin gingerly to use the fork to incorporate them into the flour with a movement something like scrambling eggs. Incorporate the liquid from the center outward. The walls of the crater will keep the liquid from running out.
  • When the liquid has absorbed enough flour that you now have a messy, wet dough surrounded by flour, knock what's left of the volcano in toward the center and begin to knead with your hands to incorporate the rest of the flour into the dough. Scrape up all the remaining flour and the dough bits and squeeze them into the dough.
  • Food processor method:
  • Put all the ingredients in the container of a food processor fitted with the steel blade (not pastry hooks or the like). Let rip at high speed until you see crumbs forming. Keep going until the dough forms a ball. You may become convinced that your dough will never form a single ball, only many little ones. In that case, give up because you risk overheating the dough. Pour what you have out on the wooden board; use your hands to form the pieces into a single loaf of dough.
  • Kneading:
  • The biggest mistake people make, says Oretta, is not using enough force. Skip the gym the day you make pasta and make kneading your workout. The women of Scandriglia, where Oretta has her country house, recommend making fettuccine as a remedy for backache in preference to those boring exercises. On the other hand, my friend Antonietta, who learned to make pasta as a child in Basilicata, tells me southern men enjoy watching the undulating hips of southern women as they knead the pasta dough. If it helps to put on some music and do the maccheroni mambo as you knead, go right ahead.
  • Plant your feet firmly on the floor and the heels of your hands firmly on the dough in front of you. A dining table will usually be a more comfortable height than a kitchen counter, which may be too high. With all your strength, and leaning in with your whole body, push the dough forward hard with the heel of one hand, then with the heel of the other hand. Then fold it over and continue the movement, alternating hands-or whatever works for you. You're pushing the whole piece of dough forward, so it moves on the board.
  • After each completed movement, give the dough a quarter turn and repeat. Keep this up for 30 minutes, or as long as you can stand. If you've used the food processor, 15 or 20 minutes will do. You can quit early, too, if you plan to use a rolling machine: send the dough through one extra pass for each minute of kneading saved.
  • As you work, the dough may seem dry, but you don't want it to be wet and sticky. It needs just enough moisture to hold it together, not a drop more. If your dough is so dry that you are quite sure it will never hold together, you can add a teensy bit of water. (It used to be quite normal to use water to save eggs, which could be sold for cash.) Your goal is a single smooth loaf of dough that is not sticky to the touch. If the flour is either very freshly ground (hence moister) or very old (drier), you'll have to adjust by feel. When it feels just right-moist but not tacky, considerably drier than the average dog's nose-set it aside for a moment.
  • You'll probably need to clean the board about halfway through the process. Use a plastic scraper or the blunt side of a large knife to scrape up any bits that have stuck to the board. (Sharp knives may damage your nice wooden board, and their edges are dulled by scraping.) Likewise wash your hands, which are doubtless also encrusted with bits of dried dough by this time.
  • Resting:
  • Once you have a beautifully silky loaf of dough, let it rest for 30 minutes to let the gluten develop. Wrap it in foil, or just place it on the board and invert a bowl over it until you're ready. By this time, you probably need to put your feet up too.
  • When the dough and you have rested, you can proceed to the next stage. Depending on what kind of pasta you want to make, this may involve rolling and cutting to make a pasta sheet (sfoglia) or pulling pieces directly from the loaf of dough and shaping them by hand.

PASTA ALL'UOVO



Pasta all'Uovo image

Number Of Ingredients 4

Makes 450g (1 lb) pasta dough
300g (10 1/2 oz) plain flour
3 large, very fresh eggs
A generous pinch of salt

Steps:

  • Pile the flour in a mound on a work surface. Break the eggs into the centre and add the salt. Stir the eggs into the flour, with a fork at first and then with your hands, until it forms a coarse paste. Add a little more flour if too moist.
  • Now the pasta dough has to be kneaded. It should be smooth and workable, not too soft but not too hard. Do this in the machine or by hand.
  • If the latter, clean your hands and the work surface first. Lightly flour the surface and your hands, and knead the dough with the heel or palm of one hand, pushing it away from you and folding it back towards you. Collect all the bits from the work surface and incorporate them into the dough. Flour the surface and your hands from time to time. After about 10 - 15 minutes the dough should be ready. Allow it to rest for 15 - 30 minutes before rolling, but cover with a cloth.
  • Once again, dust the clean work surface and the rolling pin with flour. Take a part of the dough (leaving the rest still covered), and begin to roll it out gently. Always roll away from you, each time rotating the dough by a quarter turn.
  • The thickness required is dependent on the type of pasta: 1.5 - 2mm (1/16 inch) for stuffed pasta, and 3 - 4mm (1/8 inch) for lasagne and cannelloni. If you are making stuffed pasta such as ravioli, then use the pasta straightaway. If you are making lasagne, cut the sheets and place them on a floured cloth to dry a little. If you are cutting ribbons, fold the sheet of pasta into a loose roll and cut it into ribbons of the desired width. Open out the rolls gently and allow them to dry for a further 10 minutes or so before cooking.
  • If using a machine to roll the dough, you have to force a section of the pasta dough through at a time until the dough becomes smooth. Then you decrease the gap each time through the rollers, so that the dough becomes thinner and longer. Repeat this until you obtain the desired thickness. Then either put it through the cutting rollers to make various sizes of ribbon, or cut into sheets.
  • Cook fresh pasta in a large saucepan, preferably with a rounded base. Use one litre (1 3/4 pints) water per 115g (4 oz) pasta, plus two teaspoons of salt. When you put the pasta into the pot, give it a quick stir to prevent it from sticking together (it is only with lasagne, which must be immersed one sheet at a time, that it is necessary to add a few drops of oil to the water). Cooking time varies according to the kind of pasta, its thickness and whether it is stuffed, but home-made noodles and ribbons will take between three and five minutes. Stir the pasta while it is cooking, preferably with a long wooden fork. Always test the pasta when you think it should be almost done: it is ready when it is al dente, and slightly resistant. A little before it reaches that stage, take the saucepan off the heat, add a glass of cold water, and leave for a couple of seconds. Then drain the pasta and return immediately to the saucepan or a preheated dish, mixing it with a little sauce and perhaps some grated cheese. Serve it immediately.

Nutrition Facts : Servingsize 1 serving, Calories 1089 kcal, Fat 4 g, SaturatedFat 1 g, Cholesterol 0 mg, Sodium 0 mg, Carbohydrate 239 g, Sugar 0 g, Protein 18 mg

RAVIOLO AL' UOVO



Raviolo al' Uovo image

Provided by Anne Burrell

Time 2h50m

Yield 8 servings

Number Of Ingredients 15

2 cups ricotta cheese
1 cup freshly grated Parmigiano, plus more for garnish
1/4 cup chopped fresh Italian parsley
2 large eggs plus 8 large egg yolks
Kosher salt
All-purpose flour, as needed
1/2 recipe Chef Anne's All-Purpose Pasta Dough, rolled for ravioli, recipe follows, or 1/2 pound store-bought fresh pasta sheets
Semolina flour, as needed
8 tablespoons (1 stick) unsalted butter
2 cups chicken stock
1/4 cup chopped fresh sage leaves
1 pound all-purpose flour (about 3 3/4 cups), plus more for dusting
4 eggs plus 1 yolk
1/4 cup extra-virgin olive oil
Kosher salt

Steps:

  • In a medium bowl, combine the ricotta, Parm, parsley and 2 whole eggs; mix well and season with salt.
  • Dust a clean work surface lightly with all-purpose flour and lay out two sheets of pasta about 12 inches long; brush them lightly with water. Equally space 4 dollops of the ricotta mixture on each pasta sheet; then use a spoon to make a "nest" or small hole in the center of each dollop. Carefully separate the remaining eggs (reserve the whites for another purpose) and put a yolk in each ricotta "nest"--the ricotta should lovingly nestle each yolk (if a yolk breaks, scoop it out with a spoon and don't use it).
  • Cover the ricotta nests and egg yolk with another sheet of pasta. Use your index fingers to press around each ricotta nest to seal the edges, then use a fluted ring cutter or dough roller to cut around each ravioli (they should be 3 to 4 inches in diameter). Reserve the ravioli on a tray generously dusted with semolina.
  • Bring a large pot of well-salted water to a boil. In a large saute pan, melt half the butter and add half of the chicken stock (you're going to use the remainder for your next batch); season with salt and toss in half the sage. Bring this to a boil (BTB) and reduce to simmer (RTS).
  • Add 4 of the ravioli to the boiling water and cook for 3 minutes. Using a spider or slotted spoon, carefully transfer the ravioli from the water to the pan with butter and chicken stock and cook for 2 to 3 minutes. If the sauce reduces too much, add a few drops of the pasta cooking water. The sauce should cling to the ravioli in a buttery hug.
  • Transfer the ravioli to serving plates, spoon a little extra sauce over each one, and finish with a sprinkey-dink of grated Parm. Repeat with the remaining ravioli.
  • Mound the flour on a clean, dry work surface. Make a big hole (called a well) in the center of the flour pile--bigger is definitely better here. Crack the eggs into the hole along with the extra yolk, olive oil, and 2 tablespoons water; season with salt. Using a fork, beat the eggs together with the olive oil, water, and salt and begin to incorporate the flour into the egg mixture. Be careful not to break the well or the egg mixture will run everywhere and you'll have a big fat mess on your hands (and your board). When enough flour is incorporated that you can handle the dough, use your hands to combine everything really well. If the mixture is tight and dry, wet your hands a bit. When the mixture is homogeneous, start kneading...
  • To knead the dough, it's VERY important to put your body weight into it, to get on top of the dough, and really stretch it. Be careful not to tear it--the idea is that you stretch the dough, not rip it. Use the heels of your palms and roll the mixture over itself. When it's done it should be smooth, supple, and velvety and look like the head of a preemie Cabbage Patch Doll. Kneading will take anywhere from 8 to 15 minutes, depending on how experienced you are. (Don't hold back: This is where the perfect, toothsome texture of your pasta is formed. Get in there and work it!)
  • When the pasta is ready, wrap it in plastic and let rest for at least an hour at room temperature before rolling. If you're making the dough ahead of time, wrap, refrigerate, and bring to room temperature before using.
  • To roll out the pasta, you need to run the dough through the pasta roller a bunch of times to get it long and thin. To start, cut off about a quarter of the dough (remember, the bigger the piece you start with, the longer your dough is going to get), keeping the rest wrapped up so it doesn't dry out. Squish the dough to flatten it--this will help it run through the pasta roller more easily. Where do we start? We start at the beginning! Run the dough through the pasta roller starting on the widest setting, number 1. Then dust the dough with flour, fold it into thirds, and put the dough through this setting two more times. If the dough ever feels sticky or tacky, give it a little dusting of flour. Now adjust the setting to number 2 and repeat the process again--changing the setting each time until your dough is the desired thickness. Once the dough is rolled out, be sure to keep the pasta sheets covered so they don't dry out. Depending on what I want to use the pasta for, I usually stop around number 5 or 6. For long noodles, I keep it thicker, and for ravioli or stuffed pasta, I keep it thinner. All pasta machines are different, so you need to judge how your pasta machine works and adjust your rolling accordingly. Once you get the thickness you want, repeat this process with the remaining pieces of dough.

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