Whole Wheat Short Pasta
- 150 grams Whole wheat strong bread flour
- 150 grams Whole wheat cake flour
- 2 grams Salt
- 150 grams Whey (140-170 g)
- 1 tbsp Olive oil
- 1 Flour for dusting
- 1 potful Water for boiling the pasta
- 1 pinch Salt for boiling the pasta (about 0.8% of the pot of water)
- Put the pasta ingredients into a bread machine and set it to knead the dough.
- If kneading by hand, knead until the dough becomes shiny.
- Wrap tightly in plastic wrap forcing out any air, then place in a plastic bag and chill in the refrigerator overnight.
- Dust your working surface with flour, then roll out the dough to a thickness of 1 mm.
- The photo shows it folded into thirds.
- The dough is quite stiff, so put strength into it.
- One example of how the pasta can be shaped: Cut into 1 x 3 cm strips, and twist them.
- Another example of how the pasta can be shaped: Roll the pasta into a 1-cm diameter baton, cut into 1 cm pieces, then press down on each piece with the back of a fork.
- They should turn out flatter than gnocchi.
- Add the salt to a pot of water, bring it to a boil, then add the pasta.
- The water should be at boiling temperature.
- Once the pasta rises to the top, it's done.
- The pasta can be kept frozen for up to 2 weeks.
- Sprinkle with flour, put them in a Ziploc and freeze.
- Every 30 minutes, shake the bag about three times so that they won't stick together.
- The sauce in user Brandy's recipe for "Cheese and Nuts Cream Sauce Pasta" is delicious!
- Here's Cookpad user Brandy's recipe for "Seafood Tomato Pasta with Olives".
- It has a sublime richness of brandy.
- You can also make lasagne noodles with this recipe.
whole wheat strong bread flour, whole wheat cake flour, salt, olive oil, flour, water, salt
Taken from cookpad.com/us/recipes/144772-whole-wheat-short-pasta (may not work)