Homemade Strangozzi
5 ingredients
37 steps
Ingredients
- 1/2 pound all-purpose flour, plus more for working the dough (1 3/4 cups)
- 1 3/4 cup fine semolina flour, plus more for working the dough
- 1/2 teaspoon kosher salt
- 1 1/4 cups ice water, plus more as needed
- A food processor fitted with a steel blade; a pasta-rolling machine; a pizza cutter or pizza wheel; a long serrated knife; 3 baking sheets
Directions
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1Put the flours and the salt in the bowl of the food processor, and process for a few seconds, to aerate.
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2With the food processor running, pour in the water through the feed tube.
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3Process for about 30 seconds, until a dough forms and gathers on the blade.
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4If the dough does not gather on the blade or process easily, it is too wet or dry.
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5Feel the dough, and add either more flour or more ice water, in small amounts.
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6Turn the dough out on a lightly floured surface, and knead by hand briefly, until its smooth, soft, and stretchy.
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7Press it into a disk, wrap well in plastic wrap, and let it rest at room temperature for at least 1/2 hour.
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8(Refrigerate the dough for up to a day, or freeze for a month or more.
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9Defrost in the refrigerator, and return to room temperature before rolling.)
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10Cut the dough in six equal pieces.
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11Keeping it lightly floured, roll each piece through the machine at progressively thinner settings (but not to the thinnest setting), extending it into a strip about 1/8 inch thick, 20 inches long, and 5 inches wide (or as wide as your machine allows).
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12Trim the edges so the rolled strips are even rectangles, and lay them flat on lightly floured trays or baking sheets.
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13Dust the tops with flour, and cover loosely with a kitchen towel.
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14Let the sheets dry for 15 to 30 minutes to make the next steps easier.
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15To form strangozzi: Lay out one pasta strip on the floured surface in front of you, and roll it up from both short ends, making two fairly tight coils that meet in the middle, like an old-fashioned scroll.
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16With a very sharp knife, slice the scroll crosswise, down through both coils of dough, at 1/4-inch intervals.
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17From a 5-inch scroll, you should be able to cut about twenty cross sections; each one is a rolled-up strand of strangozzi.
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18To unfurl the strangozzi, try this clever method that I learned in Umbria: After slicing the scroll, slide the long blade of a serrated knife (or similar thin blade) under the cut pieces, without separating them.
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19Make sure that the knife edge runs exactly under the center line of the scroll, where the two coils meet.
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20Now lift the knife, and all the cut pieces, off the table.
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21Twist the knife so only the sharp edge, not the flat of the blade, is in contact with the dough.
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22Jiggle the knife gently.
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23If youve centered the blade correctly, the coils of all the cut pieces will begin to unroll, on either side of the knife blade, and soon youll be holding a score of strangozzi strands.
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24If the dough is sticky in spots, unroll reluctant coils with your fingers.
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25Finally, lower the strands to the work surface, slide them off the knife, gather all into a loose nest, and set it on a floured towel or tray.
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26(If you have problems with this procedure, or dont have a suitable long implement, unfurl the strangozzi by separating the cut pieces by hand and shaking the coils loose one at a time.)
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27Make strangozzi from the rest of the long dough rectangles.
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28Leave the nests of pasta uncovered, to air-dry at room temperature, until youre ready to cook them (or freeze the nests on a tray until solid, and pack in airtight ziplock bags).
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29Passionate as I am about pasta, especially fresh homemade pasta, in all its forms, it is always a thrill for me to discover a new recipe for dough, a new shape, or a new technique (not to mention dressings, which are truly infinite in their variety).
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30And though Ive been making fresh pasta since I was a child and studying the subject throughout my culinary career, my recent travels through Italys regions have added a few treasures to my list of favorite fresh pastas.
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31One of these is the distinctive strangozzi (some say stringozzi) of Umbria.
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32These long pasta strands are as different as can be from the rich and refined tagliatelle of Emilia-Romagna or the tajarin of Piemonte.
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33Strangozzi are made from a plain dough of wheat flour, water, and salt (no egg, no olive oil) and rolled a bit thicker than usual.
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34But they have a satisfying wheaty taste, and such substance and texture that eating strangozzi is a joy for any true pasta-lover.
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35In this group of recipes, I share with you an easy formula for dough and a clever method for forming and unrolling long strands of strangozzi that I learned in Umbria.
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36It is slightly complicated but very efficientand lots of fun.
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37Then youll find recipes for three typically tasty Umbrian sauces, delicious with strangozzi and with other pastas, too.
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