Hmm. Well, you can vary the taste by throwing salt into the pot, but I’ve never found a level of salt that I thought would raise the quality more than a point on a ten point scale. Adding spices while boiling, like powdered garlic, will alter the taste somewhat but I think they’re more effective in sauces / applied afterwards, and are often visible.
If someone wants to experiment, my starting point would be this:
Take some good olive oil (extra-virgin, first cold press, etc.) and grate fresh garlic into it. Stir and let it stand covered for an hour or so. Once your pasta is ready, drain it, and then toss with the garlic-infused olive oil.
Apparently my mother tried to make some spaghetti according to my grandmother’s instructions, but it never tasted the same to me. So either it was something really subtle, or there was a placebo effect involved (or both).
ETA: Though now that I think of it, I’m not entirely sure of the “bland” thing anymore—there might have been a sauce involved as well. Damn unreliable memories.
I hear that fresh pasta is comparable to fresh bread.
Interesting. Links or stories? I am very much aware of the difference between fresh-baked bread and “plastic bread” from the supermarket. It’s huge. Are people claiming freshly-made pasta is different to the same degree?
Are people claiming freshly-made pasta is different to the same degree?
It appears not. [1][2][3] Fresh pasta has a more pronounced flavor, and is generally made with a superior variety of flour (that doesn’t keep as well), which means less of the flavor work is done by the sauce.
(I don’t think I’ve ever had fresh pasta, and so don’t have any first-hand reports. I do think fresh bread is worlds better than supermarket bread, though.)
Also, in America at least, making fresh pasta is a very grandmothery thing to do, and so my prior was high enough to be remarkable.
Do you know if it was fresh? I hear that fresh pasta is comparable to fresh bread.
No, unless I misremember terribly it was ordinary market spaghetti.
Hmm. Well, you can vary the taste by throwing salt into the pot, but I’ve never found a level of salt that I thought would raise the quality more than a point on a ten point scale. Adding spices while boiling, like powdered garlic, will alter the taste somewhat but I think they’re more effective in sauces / applied afterwards, and are often visible.
If someone wants to experiment, my starting point would be this:
Take some good olive oil (extra-virgin, first cold press, etc.) and grate fresh garlic into it. Stir and let it stand covered for an hour or so. Once your pasta is ready, drain it, and then toss with the garlic-infused olive oil.
Apparently my mother tried to make some spaghetti according to my grandmother’s instructions, but it never tasted the same to me. So either it was something really subtle, or there was a placebo effect involved (or both).
ETA: Though now that I think of it, I’m not entirely sure of the “bland” thing anymore—there might have been a sauce involved as well. Damn unreliable memories.
Interesting. Links or stories? I am very much aware of the difference between fresh-baked bread and “plastic bread” from the supermarket. It’s huge. Are people claiming freshly-made pasta is different to the same degree?
It appears not. [1] [2] [3] Fresh pasta has a more pronounced flavor, and is generally made with a superior variety of flour (that doesn’t keep as well), which means less of the flavor work is done by the sauce.
(I don’t think I’ve ever had fresh pasta, and so don’t have any first-hand reports. I do think fresh bread is worlds better than supermarket bread, though.)
Also, in America at least, making fresh pasta is a very grandmothery thing to do, and so my prior was high enough to be remarkable.
Hmm… I am getting curious. Not yet to the degree of making fresh pasta myself, but I recall that there is WholeFoods nearby that sells it...
On the other hand pasta is basically boiled wheat dough and I generally find dough as bread to be yummier than dough as pasta.