Time dinner so that the pasta is the last thing to be ready,
where you’re eating it within 5min of it coming out of the pot.
Serve it in one bowl, with the sauce in another.
The primary goal is to keep the tastes and textures distinguishable,
merging only as you chew. The pasta resists your teeth; the sauce
flows. The sauce is rich and flavorful; the pasta is a hearty foil.
Secondarily, by combining only on each person’s plate you can handle a
range of preferences in sauce-to-pasta ratio, and different dietary
restrictions (ex: a separate vegan sauce).
Some people love pasta that finishes its cooking in the sauce, pulling
in the flavor, and I do think it’s neat that pasta can do this. But
it’s the opposite of what I want, since it makes the dish more
homogenous.
On salting, I’m targeting a level of salinity in the mouth while also
maximizing contrast between the pasta and the sauce. That means
cooking the pasta in unsalted water, while making the sauce saltier
than would be tasty if eaten on its own. I think unsalted pasta has
ended up with a bad reputation because people are unwilling to make
the sauce salty enough to bring the combination into balance.
I don’t know how people ended
up thinking there was only one way to cook pasta, but to my taste
the standard approach is a big missed opportunity.
Heretical Pasta
Link post
If you ask the internet how to prepare pasta you’ll hear two things:
You must salt the water.
You must serve it mixed with the sauce.
I disagree on both.
I’ve been cooking pasta since I was a kid, and I prepare it the way my mother (who grew up in Rome) did:
Cook it way less than it says on the box, until it’s no longer crunchy but not further.
Time dinner so that the pasta is the last thing to be ready, where you’re eating it within 5min of it coming out of the pot.
Serve it in one bowl, with the sauce in another.
The primary goal is to keep the tastes and textures distinguishable, merging only as you chew. The pasta resists your teeth; the sauce flows. The sauce is rich and flavorful; the pasta is a hearty foil. Secondarily, by combining only on each person’s plate you can handle a range of preferences in sauce-to-pasta ratio, and different dietary restrictions (ex: a separate vegan sauce).
Some people love pasta that finishes its cooking in the sauce, pulling in the flavor, and I do think it’s neat that pasta can do this. But it’s the opposite of what I want, since it makes the dish more homogenous.
On salting, I’m targeting a level of salinity in the mouth while also maximizing contrast between the pasta and the sauce. That means cooking the pasta in unsalted water, while making the sauce saltier than would be tasty if eaten on its own. I think unsalted pasta has ended up with a bad reputation because people are unwilling to make the sauce salty enough to bring the combination into balance.
I don’t know how people ended up thinking there was only one way to cook pasta, but to my taste the standard approach is a big missed opportunity.
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