Homemade Pasta

If you want to have a total new pasta feeling, make it yourself. Homemade pasta is ready after about 2 minutes cooking and gives you the real "al dente" taste. It's tender but also firm.

Italians realy like their pasta. They have stores, that sells "pasta fresca", handmade tagliatelle, ravioli, tortelini, that are made some hours ago and not dried yet. Or "mama" makes it on sundays.

Ingredients (serves two)

You need 100g semolina an 45g Water (or a small egg plus water up to 45g)  per dish. No Salt.
I like best Half Semolina and half "Semolina Durum Wheat". 

Making the dough

Pasta 200g: Half  semola and half semola durum wheat
2 eggs, add water up to 90g, not more
Pasta Put the semola in the food processor,
switch to low speed and
give the eggs (plus water) in the bowl 
Knead Watch the dough getting smoother
pasta After about 2 minutes its done
Pasta Form a ball
Pasta Cover it and give it 5 minutes rest.

Roll out and cut the pasta

Pasta Fix the pastamaker
Pasta Divide the dough, form two balls and flatten them.
Pasta Switch pasta machine to the widest position "1".
Pasta Roll out
Pasta
Pasta Flip over on both sides and
roll out again.

Repeat 3 to four times,  until it gets nearly retangular
Pasta Here we are.
Pasta  Put the machine to the next position
Pasta and roll out again
Pasta
Repeat rolling out with the next position of the cylinders, up to number 6 (if you like your tagliatelle firm and a bit "chunky") or number 7 (if you prefer them tender and thinner). The scarf gets pretty long. Make shure, there if enough room for it and take the folded scarf out from time to time.


Pasta Ready to cut.
Pasta Cut the end (with the backside of an knife, so you won'nt harm your Kitchentable)
Pasta
Cut to tagliatelle
Pasta
The ready cut tagliatelle piles up under the machine
Pasta
Just before the whole scarf is cut, take it with your hand
Pasta
... cut the rest and hang it over a broomstick.
You can let it dry or use imediately.

Cooking the Pasta

Pasta
Take a big pot and bring 2 liter water to boil.
Pasta
Put in the pasta and let it boil for two minutes if you like them "al dente".  Don't cook for more than three minutes, fresh pasta is verry delicate.
Pasta
Pour them into a colander and serve immediately. 
Pasta
Here with roast and red cabbage. Add some gravy and it's ready to serve.

Preserving

Pasta can easily be preserved. Just let it dry. Cooking time for dried pasta will be about 5 minutes.

Best with ...

pesto or other pasta-sauces or as side dish to freid veal like the italian scaloppina.

This recipe is courtesy of my brother Stefan!

Please leave some feedback by rating this page (1=worst 10=best)! If you have a question, please use the Contact Form to ask me directly via email or post your question in the discussion forum as I will be able to reply to you if you use that.

Rating 9.4473684210526316/10 with 228 individual rating(s) given. Minimum rating 3, maximum rating 10

Comments:

9This was a great recipe, will have to buy a pasta machine though. Looking at the pictures are making me very hungry.
9This is really helpful. Some storage advice would be a bonus. Lovely photos.
9im 15 too.....brill
10wow! i am 15 years old, and now i know how to make fresh pasta for food tech! yay!
9PLEASED I COULD USE SEMOLINA AND NOT SEMOLINA FLOUR WHICH IS HARD TO FIND
10thanks very good
9makes it look really easy
10an excellent lesson in making and cooking of pasta,the person who said you should have done without a pasta machine and gave you a 7 should relise as all you need is a kin rolling pin
10Nice job, my friend.
10very well done the pictures go with great and it took the fear out ove pasta making for me. i am only 23 and like makeing italian
10Great to know I can make the dough in a food processor - quite time consuming without! Very clear pictures - thank you
9More info about the flour would be good.I liked the weight idea for eggs as I use small bantam eggs Otherwise great clear instructions and pics. I can't wait for my machine to come to try out your recipe!
10very good ,now i know, many thanks
9I was really pleased to find this page as I had no instructions with my machine. Now I know what to do and we won't be eating great lumps of greyish blubber again.
10brill thanks
10I was thinking of buying a pasta making machine so I could make fresh pasta with the kids, but wasn't sure how to make the pasta, thanks to your step by step easy to understand instructions I will get the machine and have a go.
10I have recently tried making Pasta with Rolling pin (hard work!!) and cutting it by a Pizza Wheel Cutter. Flavoured with herbs and/or tomato puree. This works but the dried Pasta is brittle so now I must try to find some fine-ground SemolinaNULL Stu (jnpenrosestupart@hotmail.com)
10Thank you. I just got the same machine and I have been wondering how to use it!!!
10Great photos, clear instructions much better than the few lines I just got with my pasta maker machine, looking forward to trying it out.
10Hello, Thank you for the wonderful site and great photo details. I'm inspired to use my "juicer-pulp" in some recipes ala quasi-natural al dente. Warm regards, Bob ocd_bob@yahoo.com
10much better tha the instructions that came with my machine thank you
10just got a pasta maker with no information, so found this page very useful...thanks
8Very detailed, will use
9I found this page very useful indeed and will probably come back again for a refresher course! Thank you
8Fine semolina is still quite rough; my deli sells "00" flour for pizza, is this what you need for semolina durum wheatNULLNULLNULL Help me, more information and thank you for your thoughtful pictures
10this is fab great detail nicely explained is perfect the photos add a nice touch am off to have a go now thank you
10Prego!!! This was excellent with the photos!!!
10great thank's for making so easy
9Great Photo's perfect for projects & inspiring for us to try pasta !
10Thanks!
10an excellent description - thank you - I am going to make some this afternoon. My daughter bought me a pasta machine for Christmas.
10Just got my own pasta machine, second hand, prompted by Jamie Olivers program. Can't wait to have a go. Brilliant site - Thanks
10Perfect! Exactly what I needed to know and very well presented. Thanks a lot
10Thank you! I've been making my own pasta for a while now, but your pics were a huge help. Great page!
10Wish I had seen it before I used my machine for first time thanks one question my pasta machine rollers are at widest apart on number 7 not number 1NULL
10That was super! Just what I needed to make up my mind about purchasing a pasta machine
10very helpfull thanks
10Thanks. very good
8Great pics, helpful all around. I'd like some tips on the smaller cut pasta, as I have had trouble with it.
10great info!
10had a pasta machine for Christmas. You are very informative and I can't wait to give it a go! Thankyou!!!
8just what I was looking for! But is it absaloutely necessary to do the multiple rolling outNULLNULL
7youll should also show how to make it without a pasta machine
10Awesome! Pictures speak a thousand words! Thanks!
10thanks for being so explicit!
9minging idea with the meat & cabbage! but great instructions!
10great help... except I have just followed the recipe with my machine and have 250g of egg and water!!!. Whatever will happen!!
10great photos - clear and concise. found the pictures very helpful. thanks!
10Don't know what 100g is only know pounds and ounces
10Different than my method but easier. You CAN teach old ladies new tricks!