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Sacred Earth => Food [Public] => Topic started by: Nichi on October 26, 2009, 12:10:45 PM

Title: Penne
Post by: Nichi on October 26, 2009, 12:10:45 PM
http://www.youtube.com/v/vJeJELexpDg&hl=en&fs=1&

I like to watch her cook -- she's got a certain way of doing things which is different than what I was taught. For example, she never uses a collander, but instead uses one of those spider-thingies. There are other little things too: she espouses the virtue of the pasta-water which we typically send down the drain in that collander. .  I've learned a lot about Italian food watching her. (Don't let her looks fool ya, heh, she's a real chef.)
Title: Re: Penne
Post by: Nichi on October 26, 2009, 12:11:42 PM
(Love Penne .. I always have a few boxes of it on hand.)
Title: Re: Penne
Post by: Ke-ke wan on October 26, 2009, 12:25:35 PM
She's one of my Fave chefs to watch (Giada).  And you're right,  she's good!  I love her recipes because they are simple,  elegant yet easy!  At Thanksgiving I watched her on Iron Chef America,  in a cook-off with other top Chefs using all Thanksgiving ingredients.  Pretty amazing stuff.

I love penne' too.  Especially good with thick sauces as the sauce goes inside the noodles,  not just on top.  Penne' rigate is actually a favourite with children, too.  They love the shape of it. 

V icki,  if you love the dried penne' that you get at the grocery store,  you should try it fresh.   Its waaay delicious!

(http://lh3.ggpht.com/_47cXIAbDKE0/Sk4Fv_9dirI/AAAAAAAAChY/JrKz3Ve6kPM/zucchinipasta.JPG)

Penne' is also very nice in co0ld pasta salads!

Title: Re: Penne
Post by: Nichi on October 26, 2009, 12:27:54 PM
She's one of my Fave chefs to watch (Giada).  And you're right,  she's good!  I love her recipes because they are simple,  elegant yet easy!  At Thanksgiving I watched her on Iron Chef America,  in a cook-off with other top Chefs using all Thanksgiving ingredients.  Pretty amazing stuff.

I love penne' too.  Especially good with thick sauces as the sauce goes inside the noodles,  not just on top.  Penne' is actually a favourite with children, too. 

I saw that one too! Her against Rachel Ray -- that was something.
I like Mario Batali too.

V icki,  if you love the dried penne' that you get at the grocery store,  you should try it fresh.   Its waaay delicious!

(http://lh3.ggpht.com/_47cXIAbDKE0/Sk4Fv_9dirI/AAAAAAAAChY/JrKz3Ve6kPM/zucchinipasta.JPG)

Mmmmm yum!
Title: Re: Penne
Post by: Ke-ke wan on October 26, 2009, 12:29:48 PM
I saw that one too! Her against Rachel Ray -- that was something.
I like Mario Batali too.

My favourite is Bobby Flay,  though.    :P
Title: Re: Penne
Post by: Nichi on October 26, 2009, 12:35:06 PM
My favourite is Bobby Flay,  though.    :P

I like Bobby too ... and Tyler Lawrence, who I just want to snuggle up with. (Sorry for crass girl-talk.)
Title: Re: Penne
Post by: Ke-ke wan on October 26, 2009, 12:50:24 PM
Tyler Lawrence, who I just want to snuggle up with. (Sorry for crass girl-talk.)


I feel the same way about Bobby!   :P

Nah,  I can't see this video either.   :-[
Title: Re: Penne
Post by: Ke-ke wan on October 26, 2009, 12:59:49 PM
So.. pretty much, I guess that keeps out Australia, S. Africa, Czechoslovakia, & Sweden too. Poopedy-poop! Guess I won't be posting these anymore. It's a shame -- she's a good 'un to watch.

You can probably find the videos on the Food Network Website.  Easy to share from there as well.

Title: Re: Penne
Post by: Ke-ke wan on October 26, 2009, 01:05:00 PM
Here is the Food Network link to some of Giada's vidoes form the show "Everyday Italian"
http://www.foodnetwork.com/everyday-italian4/video/index.html

And some from Giada at Home:
http://www.foodnetwork.com/giada-at-home/index.html
Title: Re: Penne
Post by: Nichi on October 26, 2009, 01:05:54 PM
Thanks!
Title: Re: Penne
Post by: Ke-ke wan on October 26, 2009, 01:12:55 PM
Thanks!

And a link to the Food Network Video Library.

Enjoy!  I have to go get ready for work and school tomorrow.  Ugh!  Monday already.. >:(
Title: Re: Penne
Post by: Nichi on October 26, 2009, 09:00:30 PM
I made a very rich and yummy "Penne" dish the other day -- it will make anyone in here who is dieting cringe.  :)

While the penne was boiling, I mixed up a sauce:
marinara sauce
half and half
a stick of butter (never margarine)
cottage cheese, though more ideally, this would have been ricotta (just didn't have any)
oregano
basil
garlic
a big bag of shredded mozzarella

(To taste, I usually use red wine too, but this turned out pretty tasty right off.)

I got that heated and blended through, and when the penne was ready, mixed it in.  This was ad lib -- just hunting through the fridge and throwing things in. I think some small-diced zucchini might have gone well in it too.

I ate some, froze some, and refrigerated some.
Interestingly, that which was refrigerated and warmed up the next day was even better than the first helping fresh from the stove. That time for things to "set" is magic.
Title: Re: Penne
Post by: Michael on October 26, 2009, 10:42:28 PM
I'm a little behind here - I gather that penne is simply a type of pasta.
We buy organic pasta from the supermarket. I say this because it's a bit of a controversy.

First, the family down the road were horrified when I gave them some of our pasta - they had run out that evening. They would never eat anything that was 'organic' - what crap! Much prefer to go hungry than stoop to greenie shit.

Next, for me, what shape the pasta, is of very little relevance to me. I don't care if it's straight or twisted or whatever, so long as it doesn't look like spaghetti - spaghetti reminds me too much of the 'spaghetti bolognaise' my mother used to cook. This has caused fights between me and Julie - that stuff is too much a reminder of the crass 'foreign' food my parent's generation used to dabble in.

Last, from comments when we had a restaurant, aficionados in pasta (which apparently includes all Italians) have precise tastes and attitudes to pasta which is far removed from my consciousness - they only buy special pasta from special shops which specialise in special pastas. I tried it once, and yes, I begin to see their point, but you have to know, I eat extremely fast, and such delicate distinctions are mostly lost on me. I am a heavy flavour man, with loads of chilly and anything that tastes horrible - the more horrible the better. So delicate distinctions are lost on my palette. I feel I have a lot to learn from these more refined diners. I do try...
Title: Re: Penne
Post by: Nichi on October 26, 2009, 10:53:22 PM
(http://www.joanneweir.com/recipes/mains/images/penne-pasta.jpg)

Yes, in the 50's, all good housewives used to have to know how to make a good bolonnaise sauce -- with spaghetti.

There really are some differences between the pastas .. and then whether they're homemade, or flour-based, or whole wheat flour-based, and the distinctions go on. (My knowledge is limited.) I like the spinach pastas a lot ... fettucine or farfalle or whatever!

It ends up being about the sauce, though.

Title: Re: Penne
Post by: Nichi on October 26, 2009, 10:56:10 PM
Then you have your stuffed raviolis and tortellinis, and you get into real art.

My mother and John lived in Italy for a few years, and they came back telling stories about how certain things are just not done over there, in terms of ways of cooking it, that we do in the US. And then ... there's a difference in the dry pasta made here and the dried pasta made there, which has some impact on cooking al dente, but I never got it straight what they were saying.
Title: Re: Penne
Post by: Muffin on January 23, 2010, 10:49:00 PM
Trying to buy pasta is one of the hardest things in Italy. Enter any supermarket or shop and you will find shelves full of different kind of pasta. In larger supermarkets you can choose between at least 50 different types of pasta. IF you can choose.

Obviously the shape doesn't really matters so much for the taste, but it makes some difference on how you will have to eat for the final food. And that will change your experience of eating.

Take the fettuccine (http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/archive/7/7c/20071205180551!Fettuccine_al_rag%C3%B9_modified.JPG) for example. You could do the same thing with the penne, and it would still taste good, but you wouldn't be able to twist the pasta around your fork and take a big bite in it. :P Besides, the fettuccine is made with eggs, the penne no.

Sometimes the shape matters, sometimes it doesn't.
There are different kinds of fettuccine. Big, medium, small, longer, shorter - in this case there's no difference between them. Usually you can substitute one with another. Your "eating" experience will be slightly difference, but not the taste of the food.

There are different kinds of penne too. Some are shorter, some end in a straight cut, others in a diagonal cut. Again, they are the same.
Then there's the smooth version of the penne, without ridges. They have the same taste, but you can't replace one with another.

I'm sure everyone's familiar with the carbonara. You think it's made with spaghetti? You're wrong. While the  spaghetti alla carbonara is a famous dish between the italians too, I know that most of the people in Rome would prepare the carbonara with the penne. It makes sense too.
The spaghetti is good for thin sauces, the penne is better for thick sauces - the ridges are there to help the sauce stick to the pasta.
Well, in Rome you don't use cream for the carbonara. Eggs, bacon, parmiggiano and pepper. Here the ridges help the egg to stick to the pasta when coagulating, so you actually imbue the pasta with the "sauce", instead of only coating it. It makes a lot of difference. They will give you the sensation of a different taste.

I am not a big pasta eater myself, but I can't wait to to be back in Rome and eat some good food.
Next week I'm eating carbonara and pizza every day. :D
Title: Re: Penne
Post by: Nichi on January 24, 2010, 04:16:09 AM
Your post has made me very hungry, R!  :)
Title: Re: Penne
Post by: Firestarter on January 24, 2010, 04:43:03 AM
I bet the pizza rocks in Italy!
Title: Re: Penne
Post by: Jahn on January 24, 2010, 05:39:35 AM
 :( The video would not show "in my country"  :P

Spagetthi, macaroni, tagliatelli, penne, lasagna it is all very popular in Sweden and some do their own pasta in machines and you can even buy fresh pasta.

When I boil (always use dried pasta) I throw in oil, peppar and onions in the water and then usually end up and fry the pasta in oil.

The pasta I use to either meatballs or mincemeat sauce.
Title: Re: Penne
Post by: Nichi on January 24, 2010, 08:10:40 AM
:( The video would not show "in my country"  :P


Sorry about that, Jamir .. It was a lesson, to stop posting bits from the FoodNetwork. Still can't understand why the prohibition. Mea culpa.