Cooking & Baking
Related: About this forumThe Cold Water Pasta Hack - has anyone here tried this method for cooking pasta?
Cooking pasta in a skillet starting out with cold water.
Supposed to take less time, use less water, and make better, tastier pasta.
https://www.tasteofhome.com/article/cold-water-pasta/
MOMFUDSKI
(7,080 posts)Thanks for the tip.
Diamond_Dog
(34,546 posts)Let us know if it works as described!
My hubby who used to be married to an Italian says this is a travesty!
I will post when the deed is done. Thanks sgain
viva la
(3,766 posts)I would think the pasta might absorb too much water.
Then again, I always start boiled potatoes in cold water.
niyad
(119,678 posts)done (hint, when it comes to the surface). I only use about a third of the water called for, zbsolutely NO salt (allergic), and frequently either save the water for sauces, or put it in the garden.
Diamond_Dog
(34,546 posts)And cook it in boiling water for exactly 11 minutes and it comes out fine every time . It does seem like a lot of water going to waste though. I dont use salt either and dont really miss it.
MOMFUDSKI
(7,080 posts)doneness. Never couldnt figure out when it was done.
maspaha
(378 posts)I usually avoid cooking pasta in the summer since the last thing my air conditioning needs is more heat and humidity. But, this cooking method sounds like maybe I could add pasta back to the summer menu.
Cant wait to hear the results!
Diamond_Dog
(34,546 posts)Im exactly the same - dont want to add all that extra heat and humidity to my already too hot kitchen! (even with the a/c running). So I dont cook pasta in the summer if I can help it!
mitch96
(14,623 posts)progree
(11,463 posts)I just use tap water which is room temperature usually.
Set cook time for 4 minutes, high pressure
(Preheat takes about 14 minutes so total time from start button to end is about 18 minutes).
Quick Release when done.
This with whole grain "elbows". I haven't tried spaghetti or other pasta yet.
Warpy
(113,130 posts)One of those "I got a frypan for my burgers, but my girlfriend wants spaghetti" sort of thing.
Diamond_Dog
(34,546 posts)Backseat Driver
(4,635 posts)Don't really have THAT problem - my "problem" more often when making a traditional presentation, is getting the sauce to adhere perfectly to the cooked, drained, re-wet with hot water, and double-drained pasta plated w/sauce on the top of the noodles (sauce is either too thick, too thin, or separates, so I'm often the heretic blaspheming chef and serve it "kid style," all chopped and mixed into the too-short-for-fork or spoon twirling strands of spaghetti. Instead, the sauce is all mixed up with shorter pieces as with shell, spiral, and penne shapes that grab the sauce in the hollows of the pasta and then sprinkled with "stinky feet" parmesan cheese. How does one tell when the sauce is just perfect on top of those long strands of spaghetii ???
Phentex
(16,480 posts)Do you mean you rinse it after draining? Why? The sauce won't stick to it if it's wet. Some people want to add a drizzle of olive oil but that causes the same issue.
Backseat Driver
(4,635 posts)I guess I did it to actually remove the starchy water, and it gets cold and too sticky just sitting in the strainer waiting for its sauce....heheh, Thanks.
Nittersing
(6,843 posts)I'm only cooking for one or two, so can't speak to larger portions, but I love that I can just pop it in the microwave and forget about it.
https://www.amazon.com/Microwave-Pasta-Cooker-Original-Sticking/dp/B000YT2XOI?th=1
mitch96
(14,623 posts)Diamond_Dog
(34,546 posts)I appreciate your sharing your experience! Now I want to try it too.