| Home | Articles | Contact Us | Blog | Archive |
 
                                     
               
Subscribe
to our newsletter.
It's Free!


Related Links:


 7 Need to Know Campsite Cooking Strategies
 A New Website For The Home Cook
 Chicken Korma
 Chicken recipes that everyone enjoys
 Cleaning and Storing your Dutch Oven
 Cooking Lobster at Home
 Cooking Tips
 Cooking with Annie Dote
 Cooking With Your Kids Helps Develop Motor Skills for Preschoolers
 Délices de France A Delicious Way Of Cooking A Culinary Art
 Delices de France A Delicious Way Of Cooking A Culinary Art
 Do you ever Search for Quick recipes
 Dutch Oven Cooking Basics
 Easy Tasty Chicken Wing Recipes
 Finding Delicious Cookie Recipes
 Frugal Outdoor Cooking
 How to Make Your Own Baby Food and Save a Fortune
 Is Your Recipe Safe
 Light Calorie Cooking How To Cook Low Calorie Foods Which Still Taste Fantastic
 Pleasures of Soup
 Really Useful Time Management Tips from a Cooking Show
 Regional Cuisine – Down Home Southern Cooking
 Russian Beverages for Russian Brides in the US
 Save Time in the Kitchen Cook Pasta the way Restaurant Chefs Do
 Season Your Pans for Non Stick Cooking
 Sot Suppe (Norwegian Sweet Soup)
 The Secret to Cooking for a Crowd
 The Secrets To Successful Cooking
 Thinking of Remodeling Your Kitchen
 Use H O L L Y to Beat Christmas Cooking Stress




Your Cooking Guide
Save Time in the Kitchen. Cook Pasta the way Restaurant Chefs Do
by: Skip Lombardi

Have you ever wondered how a restaurant can get a dish of pasta to your table in about four minutes when you know it takes ten minutes just to cook the pasta? Does the water on their stoves boil at a higher temperature than the water on yours? Do they know a trick that you don't? As a matter of fact, they do.

They parboil, or partially pre-cook their pasta; so when an order comes in to the kitchen, a cook can turn out a dish of perfectly 'al dente' pasta in a minute or two. Pre-cooking is a worthwhile technique for home cooks, because it enables them to pull together a great sit-down meal in practically no time, no matter how busy their day may have been.

 

It's also a great method to use when you plan to serve pasta for a crowd. I once catered a party for fifty, where I had a "pasta bar." With the assistance of one helper, and two propane burners, I served fifty portions of freshly cooked pasta (al dente) without holding anyone up in the buffet line.

 

To parboil pasta at home, bring a large pot of salted water (at least six quarts) to the boil. Add one pound of pasta and stir until the pasta wilts (in the case of spaghetti or linguine) and becomes submerged. When the water returns to a full, rolling boil, cook the pasta for exactly two minutes, then drain, shock in ice water, and drain again. Note: Strand pasta like spaghetti or linguine will be brittle, so handle them with care.

 

Place the pasta in a container large enough to hold it, then add enough olive oil to just coat each strand. Cover and refrigerate until needed. Parboiled pasta will keep, refrigerated, for four to six hours.

 

Note: Coating pasta with olive oil flies in the face of conventional wisdom that says, "Never coat pasta with olive oil. The sauce won't adhere to the pasta." Well, conventional wisdom aside, sauce sticks to parboiled pasta like glue. What else can I say?

 

When it's time to cook dinner, bring a large pot of salted water to the boil, add the pasta (You'll note that the pasta has softened over the time you've had it refrigerated. This is perfectly fine.), cook for one or two minutes, then drain in a colander. Be sure to taste after a minute or so. The pasta cooks quickly. Serve as you would any pasta that you had cooked for eight to ten minutes.
 

Again, this is a great, worthwhile technique to use at home, because you can parboil the pasta at a time of day when you're not juggling three or four other tasks, like preparing a sauce, or a salad. And when it's time to prepare the rest of dinner, you'll feel more confident in the outcome, because you can focus more of your attention on the other parts of the meal.

 

Try this technique once, and you could be hooked. You may not be serving fifty or sixty people per night, but you'll be cooking just like a chef in a neighborhood Italian restaurant.

   
 
 


                        
                             
Google
Copyright 2005 cookingforpleasure.com All Rights Reserved.