15 Mistakes Most Beginners Make Cooking Pasta at Home

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  • Опубліковано 21 жов 2019
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    --
    Pasta is was one of the most well known dishes in the world, but why do so many beginners fail to make it tasty at home? In this one dish breakdown, i'll be dissecting every single element of your classic pasta with marinara sauce to give you 15 great tip to up your past game at home!
    For full recipe and video breakdown - bit.ly/35Yt56g
    Follow me at on instagram @lifebymikeg
    All music provided royalty free by Epidemic Sound
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  • @angierogers264
    @angierogers264 4 роки тому +1646

    My Italian family will tell you to always add salt to the pasta water....no question about it. Otherwise you will have bland pasta.

    • @rosiedispensa6697
      @rosiedispensa6697 4 роки тому +44

      Im Italian American and my family always told me to only be generous with salting the water if you were making sauce but if you bought sauce in jars to go light because the sauce would have a pretty high salt level to preserve it. I’m curious if you think that could be true or if it should be lots of salt always

    • @darden1987
      @darden1987 4 роки тому +124

      Hello, I'm Italian and I can guarantee you that if you're cooking pasta you will put salt in it. There's not a single Italian who won't salt pasta water. Then all the tomato sliced or sauce have just tomato in it, no salt, I don't know if it's different in the US

    • @moussafedior2001
      @moussafedior2001 4 роки тому +5

      @@darden1987 già

    • @cloro1619
      @cloro1619 4 роки тому +5

      @@darden1987 Ma tanto gli americani mettono sale, ovunque e troppo, parola ci carlo cracco ahahha

    • @greveeen
      @greveeen 4 роки тому +5

      Well no shit sherlock

  • @VOsaki
    @VOsaki 4 роки тому +165

    This is the first video from this guy where I see everyone debating everything he did. Pasta is a sensitive subject

    • @lynnd5342
      @lynnd5342 2 роки тому +7

      I feel like the saying that it’s not polite to speak about politics or religion should include pasta 😳 Risking being impolite I’ll share that I’m married to an Italian with a set way of doing things but he doesn’t complain when I follow a new technique thank goodness. With new tools and new science I believe food evolves not to mention the traditions were made based on local farming whereas that isn’t really a limit anymore.

    • @1090yoyo
      @1090yoyo 2 роки тому +5

      If t you're talking about pasta and pizza, anyone slightly related to Italy, be it a pure Italian mamma or your pal who went in Italy for a school exchange 12 years ago, will c come and tell you you're doing it wrong.
      the secret of Italian cuisine is, the only right way is mama's way so it ceases to be the right one once you leave the house walls.
      This rule works all around the Mediterranean sea, try to talk about the '' true'' falafel or hummus recipe with anyone from Greece to Egypt 😂

  • @1hellan1daman55
    @1hellan1daman55 4 роки тому +737

    Hi! In the spirit of your commendable effort, allow me clarify a couple things from an Italian's prospective! 1- Italians NEVER use that amount of onion (unless they are going for a so called"cipollata"). 2- Less water is required, as to allow your starching agent to be effective. 3- The pasta water should taste "come il mare" (like the sea), hence way more salt in the pasta and WAY LESS in the sauce. 4- Italians hardly ever mix onion and garlic in one dish. 5- Oregano is hardly ever used for tomato sauces, unless you are going for a puttanesca sauce or for a marinara pizza topping. 6- Last but not least: Spadellare! The mantecatura (stirring) of the pasta at the very end needs to be quick and energetic or your pasta will end up breaking (as does in the last bits of your video). Thanks for going the extra mile to spread passion for the Italian cuisine!

    • @cheftekard7165
      @cheftekard7165 4 роки тому +38

      1hellaN1 Daman Ciao! I LOVE your answer! TROPPO ITALIANO. This is 100% correct. I am not italian but am a chef for over 20 years. He does need more salt in water and less in sauce. Dry oregano? NEVER. That is American-Italian. Onions? Seldom used in a basic marinara. I use red onion when I make penne all’ arabbiata but only then! You know what kills me? In US it’s almost impossible to find guanciale! Unless you live in a big city. Chicago, New York. Yes we can use bacon but it’s not the same! Ciao!

    • @TheBearJube
      @TheBearJube 4 роки тому +9

      Sea water is too salty (approx. 3.5%). About 1% is good, which is a lot more than he added www.seriouseats.com/2014/05/how-salty-should-pasta-water-be.html

    • @johnsrome8459
      @johnsrome8459 4 роки тому +24

      Ah, so good to read a proper Italian explanation at last! My Nonna would be proud of you! Yes, one of my fist thoughts was 'what a ridiculous amount of onion used here'! My Old Mamma uses the rule of same physical amount of chopped onion to chopped garlic (at most), to take a little acid out when making a slow cook sugo or ragu. If making a quick salsa with fresh chopped tomatoes, no onion required. Oregano - dried oregano is disgusting when applied in excess but many cooks not well versed in the nuances of Italian cooking seem to equate this very heavy flavour with all things Italian. Wrong! Nevertheless, I enjoyed this video - better than most - but if he described pasta as noodles one more time I was ready to lose it. Semolina flour based pasta is derived from Chinese wheat flour or rice based noodles. Good on the Chinese! They are not the same thing, though. Like Spam is not the same thing as lovely, lovely, lovely mortadella. Grazie Mille, 1hellaN1 Daman. Spero tu stai bene.

    • @Seti69
      @Seti69 4 роки тому +48

      Just because italians cook in a way doesnt mean it's the only way, keep your traditions to yourself and let the food evolve.

    • @Cristy576
      @Cristy576 4 роки тому +10

      Yep, as a fellow Italian I do agree with everything you said, and also the amount of oil seems excessive as well (although that might just be personal preference). I usually just put enough to coat the pan so the things cooking dont burn and the pasta seems a bit overcooked, but I prefer my pasta slight more cooked than al dente. Per il resto va tutto bene, le osservazioni fatte pure quelle azzeccate.

  • @sbodrillo
    @sbodrillo 4 роки тому +2896

    every time you say "noodle" instead of pasta, an Italian dies.

    • @fetusofetuso2122
      @fetusofetuso2122 4 роки тому +20

      help

    • @hp8087
      @hp8087 4 роки тому +51

      Then in Asia, everything is noodles

    • @luciennedespota909
      @luciennedespota909 4 роки тому +52

      Dio mio, Andrea, was thinking the same exact thing!!!!!! The Americanization of Italian food, (ala Mark Bitman,) makes me want to cry....like pronouncing "bruschetta" as "brusshhhetta".

    • @fetusofetuso2122
      @fetusofetuso2122 4 роки тому +5

      @@luciennedespota909 still. I don't wanna die...

    • @ToveriJuri
      @ToveriJuri 4 роки тому +51

      Get over it. Italians didn't even come up with pasta.

  • @kennakenna5002
    @kennakenna5002 4 роки тому +1696

    How to properly make pasta is basically a political topic.

    • @Neratil
      @Neratil 4 роки тому +53

      i would go as far as to say religious :)

    • @slappy8941
      @slappy8941 4 роки тому +49

      Next from Buzzfeed: "Is pasta racist?"

    • @stevenkent1405
      @stevenkent1405 4 роки тому +2

      Isn't pasta egg yolk flour base ingredient I have a steak kidney vegetables steak black bean sauce receipe video

    • @seileen1234
      @seileen1234 4 роки тому +15

      In reality is really easy but for any reason nobody cares to do a simple research using google translate on italian recipes.
      Add water.
      Boil.
      Put salt.
      Put pasta.
      Wait 10 minutes.
      Done.

    • @stevenkent1405
      @stevenkent1405 4 роки тому +1

      @@seileen1234 I appreciate your duty of care & your sincerity

  • @RugbyDiehard
    @RugbyDiehard 4 роки тому +1902

    why didnt you add the last 3 noodles in that bag, driving me crazy

  • @alessandrinchen
    @alessandrinchen 4 роки тому +423

    Came here to see if, as an italian, there was still something I had to learn.
    I learnt that US americans don't salt their water.

    • @kylanoble8669
      @kylanoble8669 4 роки тому +15

      Yes we do. C’mon broski considered using CANNED tomatoes. He doesn’t know things

    • @alessandrinchen
      @alessandrinchen 4 роки тому +2

      @@kylanoble8669 that comforts me 😄♥

    • @ericd.4460
      @ericd.4460 4 роки тому +6

      Yes, we do salt our water plenty.

    • @sozeverbal
      @sozeverbal 4 роки тому +17

      My pasta water is as salty as the sea. That’s how I was taught.

    • @xosmith5133
      @xosmith5133 4 роки тому +15

      canned tomatoes are the best wdym?

  • @gfatreak2
    @gfatreak2 4 роки тому +538

    If your pasta falls apart when tossing it through your sauce, then it was definitely overcooked...

    • @akshay_9146
      @akshay_9146 4 роки тому +36

      @@smizmar8 if it's yellow(or whatever color the original pasta you got it in) and soft, it's cooked. If it's white then it's definitely overcooked. No need to stick to the wall, it's pasta not a gecko :P

    • @ItalianFoodBoss
      @ItalianFoodBoss 4 роки тому +17

      2 tricks to evaluate if the pasta is ready, depending on the shape of pasta (long or short):
      Long: does it bend? Then it's "al dente" and can be "mantecata" (ie tossed with the sauce while it keeps cooking);
      Short: cut it in half and can you see the harder "soul"? Can be "mantecata" then.
      Ciaoooooo from the ITALIAN FOOD BOSS! I'm Italian, not just another guy trying to show you how to cook Italian food without ever stepping foot in my beautiful country!
      💪💪🇮🇹🇮🇹

    • @Mandapanda.
      @Mandapanda. 4 роки тому

      smizmar8 me too!!

    • @darkomarkovic8871
      @darkomarkovic8871 3 роки тому +4

      Also if all the water evaporates and the pan start burning and burn the house down, it's also overcooked

    • @MichaelKorzon
      @MichaelKorzon 3 роки тому +6

      The pasta wasn't overcooked. The pan was too small and he ended up mashing the pasta because he had to stir it too much.

  • @EthanChlebowski
    @EthanChlebowski 4 роки тому +43

    7:20 - No debate in my mind! If you aren't adding salt to your pasta water, you aren't making pasta. Solid tips in this one Mike.

    • @ximarre5121
      @ximarre5121 4 роки тому +2

      This video isn't totally useless. It just gave me opportunity to discover your awesome channel

  • @gabrielepumo9784
    @gabrielepumo9784 4 роки тому +548

    Mistake number 16: combining pasta and sauce in a pan so small that it doesnt allow you to toss the pasta and oat it with the sauce.

    • @ctownsoul
      @ctownsoul 4 роки тому +85

      And he put so much emphasis on selecting the right sized pan, and he still used one too small/cooked too much pasta

    • @VVeremoose
      @VVeremoose 4 роки тому +20

      I've actually found a mistake or two in each of his videos.

    • @captainguns
      @captainguns 4 роки тому +21

      Also cooking herbs vaporises the taste. Add them afterwards when the pan is off the heat.

    • @evokaiyo
      @evokaiyo 4 роки тому +13

      A lot of his cooking techniques are rather questionable. But then, he doesn't claim to be a professional chef either, so it's whatever goes. If people want to learn proper technique, it's better to learn at a recognized culinary school or similar

    • @jean-pierreaudet2098
      @jean-pierreaudet2098 4 роки тому +1

      @@captainguns
      So, we put the herbs whenever we want in a stew or a soup, cause there is water to protect, but we should wait near the end in a pan to keep the flavor.
      Is that good?

  • @ezrapost8561
    @ezrapost8561 4 роки тому +293

    “A few pinches of salt”
    My grandmother just turned in her Italian grave. You gotta use a lot of salt, it’s the only chance you get to actually season the pasta.

    • @ezrapost8561
      @ezrapost8561 4 роки тому +43

      The water should taste like the ocean

    • @Maxwaehrens
      @Maxwaehrens 4 роки тому +9

      Yeah when you have 2-3L of water you're not going to have any effect of the salt if you only put a few pinches. Pour a lot od fine salt from a container.

    • @Notius
      @Notius 4 роки тому

      Depends on what kind of salt he was using, if it's a compressed salt like Morton's, that amount might even be too much.

    • @davidkonevky7372
      @davidkonevky7372 4 роки тому +5

      Idk which one is the best way to do it I just wanna eat all the pasta in the world

    • @zepoubelle
      @zepoubelle 4 роки тому +10

      As salted as the mediterrannean sea they say.

  • @cyrillehumbert5732
    @cyrillehumbert5732 4 роки тому +5

    the title of this video is actually perfect, it is in deed 15 mistakes people do when cooking pasta. the editing is beautiful. also, i must say cooking is such a vast ocean and especially when it comes to pasta , it would be impossible to have everyone agreeing . even in italy we don t agree from one village to the next. even in same families you ll find some fights about how much this or how long that... good luck everyone, and enjoy your pasta, however you like them.

  • @flightTime123
    @flightTime123 4 роки тому +160

    Literally no Italian ever will debate salting the water. You make it salty as the sea, no if ands or buts!

    • @Boomawoom
      @Boomawoom 4 роки тому +4

      Depends on the pasta. Fresh pasta, yes. It cooks a lot faster and absorbs less water so you need a lot more salt. Dry pasta, not so much. It's going to absorb a lot of water so sea salt level for dry pasta will over salt it. But I agree with always salting the water. Source: Italian.

    • @leehiro4840
      @leehiro4840 3 роки тому +3

      Could I just cook with literal seawater actually?

    • @evertonm.junior31
      @evertonm.junior31 3 роки тому

      Just measure your salt. Generally, a range from 1 to 2% of the weight of the water is good. For example, if you use 1000ml (1 liter) of water, you should add from 10g to 20g of salt. Personally, I like to use 1.3%. Give it a try!

    • @edwardcullen3251
      @edwardcullen3251 3 роки тому

      This is wrong. There's a video on this and exactly how much to put depending on the amount of water

  • @Whiskypapa
    @Whiskypapa 4 роки тому +574

    There’s no option to put salt in water or not... You 100% should add the salt, and it should be as salty as sea water. In other words, way more than “a few pinches”.

    • @diogonpbrito
      @diogonpbrito 4 роки тому +8

      You can't explain why, can you? You just hear sea water and it just sounds perfect but it can be totally optional.

    • @mamacintable
      @mamacintable 4 роки тому +59

      @@diogonpbrito Of course he can explain why. Well seasoned pasta is better than bland pasta.

    • @mikehawk2148
      @mikehawk2148 4 роки тому +22

      Diogo Brito what do you mean can't explain why? Firstly it's always good to add salt when boiling water because it lowers the boiling point temperature of the water and secondly, the pasta in this case needs a lot of salt for seasoning as well since you use quite a lot water when you boil. That's kind of a no-brainer, unless all the other components of the dish are extremely salty, then you might wanna cut down a little bit of the amount that you add in the water

    • @joi1794
      @joi1794 4 роки тому +37

      @@mikehawk2148 salt doesnt lower the boiling point temperature of water but increases it.

    • @stanislasvillard2795
      @stanislasvillard2795 4 роки тому +14

      @@joi1794 Yes and by very little. You need more than 100g of salt per liter of water to increase the boiling point by 1°C. Salt is just there for seasoning, which is good enough for me.

  • @pope88fb
    @pope88fb 4 роки тому +150

    Everything right, except for the "al dente" pasta. As a italian, I can say that the first one you showed, the "not yet done" one, was perfect 😂
    Also, if when almost done, the tomato is still a little to watery, you can take out the pasta a copuple of minutes earlier, and finish cook it in the sauce :)

    • @witkofhf
      @witkofhf 4 роки тому +12

      pope88fb about the cooking, as an Italian myself, that is exactly what I thought! The first sample was perfect, considering that he meant to finish cooking in the pan...

    • @RasCricketSmallAxe
      @RasCricketSmallAxe 3 роки тому +1

      You cant say this is "right" when he's not even making his own sauce OR his own pasta! It's sacrilegious! Joking/not joking

    • @thejhonnie
      @thejhonnie 2 роки тому +5

      He called em noodles as well. Do not trust this man.

    • @amandalarissavieira7428
      @amandalarissavieira7428 2 роки тому

      My thoughts exactly.

  • @EvaaLvsM
    @EvaaLvsM 4 роки тому +326

    I'm just here reading the comments for helpful tips

    • @instalocktaka9628
      @instalocktaka9628 4 роки тому +2

      Cristian Baeza you’re giving UA-cam the wrong idea

    • @evertonm.junior31
      @evertonm.junior31 3 роки тому +3

      Measure the salt you put into pasta water. Generally, a range from 1 to 2% of the weight of the water is good. For example, if you use 1000ml (1 liter) of water, you should add from 10g to 20g of salt. Personally, I like to use 1.3%. Give it a try!

    • @CologneCarter
      @CologneCarter 3 роки тому +2

      @@evertonm.junior31 Stop preaching. Tossing a good amount in is the way to go. You can get pasta to taste too salty.

    • @songofshadow5043
      @songofshadow5043 2 роки тому +3

      Really? All I've gotten from the comments is that the dish he made isn't authentically Italian, even though he never claimed it was. I like onion and garlic. I LOVE dried oregano. No, I'm not "doing it wrong" just because I cooked MY dinner the way I like it instead of the way your grandmother made it.
      Sorry if this sounds mean; I'm just annoyed. Italy doesn't own "pasta covered in tomatoes."

  • @hindupair
    @hindupair 4 роки тому +245

    Pasta water has to be heavily salted, also some of us, especially Italians, like our pasta with a little starch ring in the middle but that’s just preference :)

    • @bluepajamagamers5704
      @bluepajamagamers5704 4 роки тому

      peter petersberg thank you

    • @RoninXDarknight
      @RoninXDarknight 4 роки тому +17

      @@s1iznc1d34 The salted water serves several purposes: speeds up the time it takes your water to boil if you're not cold starting & seasons the pasta itself. You want the noodles to add flavor to the dish, not just get lost in the sauce.

    • @Takitza
      @Takitza 4 роки тому +12

      @@RoninXDarknight Reducing the boiling point has nothing to do with cooking the pasta. In other words, salt doesn't make the water reach 100*C faster (which by the way you don't necessarily need boiling/100*C water to boil the pasta in, but this is another story).

    • @sumer122889
      @sumer122889 4 роки тому +9

      If your pasta has a white ring inside, it's undercooked. Al dente and undercooked are not same.

    • @hindupair
      @hindupair 4 роки тому +7

      Sümer Güven i didn’t claim that’s al dente I just say hella people prefer it that way

  • @xcofcd
    @xcofcd 4 роки тому +149

    My 3 biggest deathly sins with pasta is:
    1. Not putting enough salt in the water
    2. Overcooking pasta
    3. Putting oil on the pasta so it doesn't stick together. Now your sauce also won't stick on the pasta anymore either...

    • @anirudhviswanathan3986
      @anirudhviswanathan3986 3 роки тому +1

      Honestly, if I'm using that water in a sauce, I don't over salt my pasta water..... unless I only want to taste salt.

    • @johanneskingma
      @johanneskingma 3 роки тому +5

      Salt kills you. slowly. Don't add salt. Add MSG instead

    • @crimbleland
      @crimbleland 3 роки тому +5

      I NEVER KNEW THE LAST ONE

    • @CologneCarter
      @CologneCarter 3 роки тому +2

      @@crimbleland Depends. Oil in the sauce can be emulsified (meaning it combines with the watery content) and if it does it will stick to the pasta. Mayonnaise is an emulsion of oil and watery stuff and it will stick to whatever you spread it on.
      Starchy cooking water and the starch from tossing the pasta gets the sauce to emulsify if done in the right balance of course. You shouldn't overdo it with the oil in the sauce though or you may get to a point that the emulsion won't happen regardless what you do.

    • @bruhkobama9304
      @bruhkobama9304 3 роки тому

      @@crimbleland you can just rinse the starch off of them, they won't stick together but, there's no more starch on them so your sauce won't thicken up that much so reserve that water! But if your making a béchamel sauce for example, the sauce already has a thickening agent, flour, so your better rinse off the starch because it's gonna get sticky

  • @lom4x
    @lom4x 4 роки тому +14

    Been trying to cook my whole life and have always and gave up every time because I was disappointed with the results.
    Thanks to this one dish breakdown series, I've finally been able to cook things that I enjoy eating, this is an amazing gift both for me personally and for my family 👍👍👍

  • @Leandrasjones
    @Leandrasjones 3 роки тому

    I love how I know all about cooking pasta (and even making my own) but watching your videos. Is still good. This is a sign of great videos! Love your work!

  • @karena840
    @karena840 4 роки тому +7

    Your videos are not only well done, informative, and enjoyable.....but also very artistically put together....making them a true feast for both the eyes and tummy! Can't wait to try this pasta! Thank you for sharing.

  • @danielpedroso4311
    @danielpedroso4311 4 роки тому +141

    Good stuff!
    The only thing I do differently is to move my pasta to my sauce about 2 minutes *before* it’s al dente (in other words, while the white layer can still be seen inside the pasta), letting it finish its cooking inside the sauce.
    If you wait until the pasta is cooked to perfection to then move it to the sauce and cook it for another couple of minutes, you’ll end up with overcooked pasta (which, I do realise, is what most people are used to - everyone talks about al dente, but 90% of people cook their pasta way past that point).

    • @CoderShare
      @CoderShare 4 роки тому +1

      Nah 1 minute before the written time on the box then go to the sauce with it.

    • @aristotlek6286
      @aristotlek6286 4 роки тому +3

      True and Napolitans would throw the pasta basically half cooked into the sauce :P

    • @petervansan1054
      @petervansan1054 2 роки тому

      the firmer pasta the better!

  • @Gabifuertes
    @Gabifuertes 4 роки тому +79

    Adding a carrot or some sugar helps reduce the acidness of the sauce.

    • @Custerd1
      @Custerd1 4 роки тому

      Gabifuertes Baking soda.

    • @austinfrost369
      @austinfrost369 4 роки тому +2

      True but the sauce should tase a bit too strong because it will all be diluted by the pasta and toppings

    • @theresadoll5374
      @theresadoll5374 3 роки тому +1

      Two words. Bay. Leaf.

    • @Christina-cf9ot
      @Christina-cf9ot 2 роки тому

      My Italian momma has conniptions at even the hint of adding sugar. She says if you cook it long enough you don't need sugar - her sauce turns a dark red color.
      But then I've heard of other Italians who insist on it, must be a North versus South thing.

  • @colina1330
    @colina1330 4 роки тому +28

    7:20 - Wait a minute.... it's a debate as to whether or not to salt your pasta water? That's your only chance to season the pasta itself. Who isn't doing this (other than people who don't know how to cook)?

  • @mijles
    @mijles 4 роки тому +589

    Pasta water should taste like sea water. You have to add a bunch of salt to get there. Pinch of salt ain't even close :>

    • @profilepicture828
      @profilepicture828 4 роки тому +12

      mijles salt water is 3% salt, unless it’s the Dead Sea

    • @mohammadalikarimi8055
      @mohammadalikarimi8055 4 роки тому +22

      @@profilepicture828 I think thats what he meant.

    • @ahuramazda4
      @ahuramazda4 4 роки тому +22

      That guideline is BS. It's only American chefs that salt to their water like there's no tomorrow.

    • @profilepicture828
      @profilepicture828 4 роки тому

      Mohammad Ali Karimi ik

    • @hinglemccringleberry7265
      @hinglemccringleberry7265 4 роки тому +19

      @@profilepicture828 3% is a bit much. The 1-10-100 rule is pretty common! Per 1 Liter of water take 10 grams of salt and use 100 grams of pasta. So basically make a 1% saltwater solution to get perfectly salted pasta. The taste is pretty reminiscent of sea water though but actually not as strong as actual sea water. It is definitly more salt than what this video suggests.

  • @Baxtexx
    @Baxtexx 4 роки тому +81

    7:34 I've learned by an Italian that you should use a lot of salt. I mean really a lot. It should taste like salt water from the sea. Since I began doing that all my pasta has started getting a lot better.

    • @gouryoku
      @gouryoku 4 роки тому +11

      @@QuizPubUK and your talking-out-of-your-ass is at peak-level

    • @gokucrazy22
      @gokucrazy22 4 роки тому +5

      @@QuizPubUK that's why you dont completely salt your dish until about the end. The idea behind salting the water is to season the pasta itself, and to help the flavors blend with and enhance the sauce.

    • @ericksousa911
      @ericksousa911 4 роки тому +1

      In fact you don't need much salt to make it taste like seawater. Try boiling 4 litters of seawater and you'll see how much salt there is: it isn't much.

    • @Baxtexx
      @Baxtexx 4 роки тому +1

      @@QuizPubUK yeah maybe if you drink the water but I don't know why you would do that.

  • @jenerous76
    @jenerous76 4 роки тому +2

    Hey Mike. I'm a fan. I'm "the cook" among my circle of family and friends, but you've taught me a great deal and have exposed me to ingredients I've never seen (and honestly, probably wouldn't typically buy)…...but that is welcome, because I love learning something new every day. Thanks dude.

  • @04issy25
    @04issy25 4 роки тому +1

    This video was amazing. AMAZING. Before, I was tossing some passata and spices on pasta, but this was incredible. Best pasta I’ve ever tasted.

  • @vedi0boy
    @vedi0boy 4 роки тому +3

    Great video. This is basically all of the pasta lessons I learnt from BA over the years in one video, thanks!

  • @MasterClasster
    @MasterClasster 4 роки тому +10

    One tip I'd add is to add your pasta slowly to the sauce and mix it to see how the ratios are working. It's easy to make too much past and then just dump it all in the sauce and then end up with under-dressed pasta, so add it slowly until it's well coated and if you have extra pasta then save it for another dish. I'd say it's actually more likely than not you haven't made the exact right amount of either pasta or sauce to match together.

  • @sameoldsteph
    @sameoldsteph 3 роки тому +1

    You are an amazing inspiration to my home cooking game. I think one of the biggest reasons you are so successful is that you are not afraid to get your hands or kitchen dirty! (It's one of my drawbacks, I'm a neatnick.) I have been enjoying your videos so much over the past couple of weeks and am looking forward to making bread, which I haven't done since I was maybe 15 or so...

  • @KristyMills
    @KristyMills 4 роки тому +1

    You videos are perfect! Not too long, straight to the point. Very informational. Thank you always!

  • @Napkiner
    @Napkiner 4 роки тому +5

    I love these break down videos. Part 1 was actually my first video from the channel (RIP Brothers Green), and I’ve been upping my cooking game ever since. I’d love to see a one dish break down of Tacos or some other Mex/Texmex dish

  • @sarayve
    @sarayve 4 роки тому +64

    Tip 15: Clean the sauce pan out by throwing the pasta water in it. Boom. Quick cleaning.

  • @CraigRyan89
    @CraigRyan89 3 роки тому

    thank you so much. I'm considered a great cook among friends, but this video was such a blessing & this turned out amazing. i added a package of bella mushrooms with the onions and sprinkled 1lb of meat in before i added the pasta. this is going to be part of my permanent collections. I really really appreciate this video.

  • @DavidHongNU
    @DavidHongNU 4 роки тому +2

    I followed these tips and my pasta is so much better! Had no idea something as simple as pasta and marinara sauce could be improved. Great content.

  • @The4lex97
    @The4lex97 4 роки тому +86

    The pasta is really over cooked

  • @christianbaghino
    @christianbaghino 4 роки тому +15

    Yeah dude nearly there! tips from italy: don't mix garlic and onions..one or the other; tomato sauce is waay to watery; little less oil please :); cook the sauce at low fire and cover it with a spoon under the cover, then turn up the fire to reduce at the end; basil must be washed gently and dried with a cloth or kitchen paper; then...noodles? that is Rigatoni :) too little sauce for that pasta..which is overcooked btw lol..Ps--- never...EVER....EVER.... add water at the end...NEVER lol:
    I hope it helps!!! keep up the great work dude

  • @obsessedkitchen1013
    @obsessedkitchen1013 3 роки тому

    Keeping it simple is sometimes the best way! I’ve used this recipe so many times since watching!

  • @TargetProv31
    @TargetProv31 4 роки тому

    Wow! I bought the right pasta and cooked it this way. Game changer! Thank you.

  • @Prtondo
    @Prtondo 4 роки тому +20

    Several tips for cooking pasta (not noodles) that I have learned over the years:
    1) [SALTYING THE WATER] There is no debate; PUT SALT IN YOUR PASTA WATER ! You may salt the pasta from the outside, but you can taste the blandness inside. Bring the water to a boil, put the salt in it, let it dissolve for a second and then butta la pasta. The water has to be quite salty, else the salt won't get into the pasta.
    2) [GARLIC/ONION] I do not understand the garlic+onion thing. Put either one or the other, not both. Some things call for onion, other call for garlic (the combo onion+carrot+celery is fairly common). If you want the garlic but you do not want it to be too invasive, just put the garlic in the oil (as a whole or in half), and take it out before it burns... you will get aromatized oil. Ah, take out the "germ" inside the garlic (l'anima), if you intend to eat it.
    3) [SALTYING THE SAUCE] For the sauce, you put the salt in at the end. If you put the salt at the beginning, water evaporates and the sauce concentrates over time, so it will get saltier. The pasta water one puts at the end counts too. Put less salt if your cheese is very salty.
    4) [DO NOT OVERCOOK YOUR PASTA] While you thicken your sauce with the pasta inside, the pasta keeps on cooking ! You have to take it before (one or two minutes) it is al dente if you intend to continue for several minutes (you have to continually taste to see if it is cooked right).
    If you are interested in doing other pasta dishes, I recommend you look up Alex's (French Guy Cooking) video about the "cacio e pepe". It is important to know how to make a "white" sauce, meaning with no tomato, it opens up a whole dimension of possibilities.

    • @firstnamelastname9631
      @firstnamelastname9631 4 роки тому +3

      @@user-vq1op2zg6w Garlic and onion is more of a French thing, Garlic or onion is more an Italian thing, of course they are not mutually exclusive. Both countries share a border, the north western Italian cuisine has some similarities to the south eastern French.

    • @cavemantero
      @cavemantero 4 роки тому

      jackassondo...here in the Americas we eat a shit ton of garlic..why?...because it improves our health due to our incredibly toxic environments that apparently you don't have in rome

    • @antc.4457
      @antc.4457 4 роки тому

      Bravo Pablo! Finalmente qualcuno che capisce di cosa si sta parlando.
      Bravo Pablo! Finally someone who understands what you're talking about.

    • @Truther2001
      @Truther2001 3 роки тому

      @@cavemantero trust me Rome is one of the most polluted cities in Italy. But I'm more worried about the nuclear arms that were disposed of in the mountains of Sardinia by the US military 😤😤😤

  • @Michael-vf7oi
    @Michael-vf7oi 4 роки тому +112

    Great video, but "noodles"!? No, it is rigatoni, spaghetti, linguini, etc. Never "noodles:.

    • @AGH331
      @AGH331 4 роки тому +12

      Pasta are just Italian noodles, the same way German Klöße are a type of dumpling and French baguette is a type of bread. Just because Italians get their panties in a twist over names doesn't mean spaghetti, rigatoni and what not aren't noodles anymore.

    • @diamondmidnightgardener
      @diamondmidnightgardener 3 роки тому

      Marco
      Polo

    • @poppyrose1549
      @poppyrose1549 3 роки тому

      I hate it so much

  • @matthewcon
    @matthewcon 4 роки тому

    This video is super helpful. I appreciate the thought you put into the details. Thanks for helping me become a better cook!

  • @weslaycock466
    @weslaycock466 4 роки тому

    Loving this series. Thank you man. I be happy to learn whatever new vids you add. I think you're on track with hitting common dishes. Maybe with Christmas coming up you can give us something to work with there. Maybe something that we can bring to a family members house to contribute to the community food sharing. Food for thought atleast haha.

  • @nattkhan
    @nattkhan 4 роки тому +3

    The first video I saw was with you and your brother and you guys were making eggs in a bunch of different ways. It was funny/informative but you can really see how much you've matured and come into a sort of rhythm with your videos, which is cool. I'm watching this as I'm eating mediocre pasta so I'll keep this in mind for next time. Thanks!

  • @etherdog
    @etherdog 4 роки тому +29

    I would like to see jollof rice, the great west African staple. I got the flavors, but I am having trouble getting the right consistency on my rice. I like the work you are doing and your explanations are very clear and understadable. Thank you!

    • @NoNonsenseJohnson
      @NoNonsenseJohnson 4 роки тому +2

      John G AKA the best rice known to man, however, it is very difficult to cook and takes years of practice. I’d suggest watching an african woman who cooks it often.

    • @ashleykem8052
      @ashleykem8052 4 роки тому

      I would also suggest going to the source I reccomend precious kitchen on yt for the camerronian perspective.

    • @etherdog
      @etherdog 4 роки тому

      @@ashleykem8052 Hi, Ashley! I am so glad you mentioned Precious because she is the one I have learned the most from. Part of the reason for my request on the american cooking channels is to get more exposure for jollof rice, as it is a big part of West African food and culture. When I lived in Berlin in the late '80s and early 90s, I had a good Cameroonian friend who turned me on to jollof rice, and have been trying to scratch that itch ever since.

    • @ashleykem8052
      @ashleykem8052 4 роки тому

      @@etherdog Hi John! Thank you for clarifying the intent behind your request. I'm so glad you already discovered Precious's Kitchen, she is great! I absolutely agree that west african food/culture deserves more mainstream exposure! However, my reservation come from @prohomecooks possibly not being able to add any culture context to the dishes history. As we all know America is notorious for "discovering" and not Crediting. It would crush my soul for a naive viewer to believe that jollof rice is some new American fad dish. Now if we can get both @prohomecooks and @preciouskitchen (or any other west african chef) to collab as a guest star. I am in 100% in agreeance for that video! :)

    • @etherdog
      @etherdog 4 роки тому

      @@ashleykem8052 I am all for that collab, Ashley, or anything like it, Dan Pashman of the Sporkful podcast just did a 2 part series that was a fairly serious introduction (for white folks) of "plantation" appellations and how they make different people feel. I know he just scratched the surface of the issue, but if you look at the body of his work in the past year, he is bringing a lot of discussion about different cultures, and these last two episodes have brought more of an urgency in my thinking. Personally, I don't think there is much danger in cultural appropriation of jollof rice because 1) West Africans wouldn't let it; 2) the people who would attempt to make it are probably sensitive to the issue and would give all the credit to its origin; and 3) it is so darn good that it is a gateway food to other African dishes. Frankly, however, I don't think any american cooks on UA-cam are brave enough to even attempt it :-)

  •  4 роки тому

    Hey man, thanks! I am beginner, but made a perfect meal for me today with your help :)

  • @JokinAround
    @JokinAround 4 роки тому

    Just made it, it was amazing, thanks for the recipe and the tips.

  • @stephenhavilland
    @stephenhavilland 3 роки тому +3

    As a Senior Citizen trying to eat healthy but good tasting, I really appreciate your series. Some of the best pasta I ever had was in the 1970's in Milan, Italy. It was simply spaghetti with butter! Could you please tell us what wire spatula you are using? Thanks.

  • @haeschensk8er
    @haeschensk8er 4 роки тому +4

    loved the editing! And great recipe as always :)

  • @sflurp
    @sflurp 4 роки тому

    This was very helpful, thank you so much!

  • @aaronbower2980
    @aaronbower2980 4 роки тому

    Love your videos. Really well produced, easy to watch and helpful...keep it up

  • @ChefBuck90
    @ChefBuck90 4 роки тому +6

    As a chef, if you want high restaurant quality sauce you have to strain out those tomatoe seeds. Nothing worse then biting into one and it releasing its bitter, oily taste. Plus it helps create a smoothness and richness to the sauce.

  • @giovannaiorio5009
    @giovannaiorio5009 4 роки тому +61

    keep the head of the onion, that’s what holds the onion together while you’re slicing it

    • @anthonymuc
      @anthonymuc 4 роки тому +7

      It's kinda irritating he doesn't know that. Did he never watch Gordon Ramsey?

    • @criticalmak5329
      @criticalmak5329 4 роки тому +6

      @3:36 Famous Scottish footballer.

    • @marlonunlocked
      @marlonunlocked 4 роки тому +1

      Giovanna Iorio i mean he also doesn‘t use that technique literally every pro chef i‘ve ever seen does to not slice off their fingers

  • @ByteAIte
    @ByteAIte 4 роки тому

    Brilliant video. I learned so many new things by cooking this food.

  • @latinaalma1947
    @latinaalma1947 3 роки тому

    I have been making sauce since way before you were born my SON is 53. I was taught by my Italian mother in law in the 60s....some great tips here eg the pasta water as a thickener that was new to ME....we can always learn something new it worked in the video so I will try it...THANKS!.

  • @hollybxoxoxo
    @hollybxoxoxo 4 роки тому +78

    if your pasta is breaking up and not holding it's shape - it's overcooked dude.

  • @harveyspecter3361
    @harveyspecter3361 4 роки тому +8

    I just started cooking from a complete rookie level and your channel helps me so much! You explain it really intuitively and simple! Thanks :)

    • @ProHomeCooks
      @ProHomeCooks  4 роки тому +1

      thats great news, you getting to Pro Home Cook status?

    • @harveyspecter3361
      @harveyspecter3361 4 роки тому +2

      @@ProHomeCooks Give me some time and your videos and I will be there in no time ;)

  • @laraanne8484
    @laraanne8484 4 роки тому

    I live for this Chanel. I went from a total noob to being the best chef in the house without ever using a recipe ! All thanks to you bro’s, showing us tips and tricks to cook with what you have !

  • @yaskyjr4592
    @yaskyjr4592 3 роки тому

    First recipe I'm going to try making, thank you!

  • @uz16
    @uz16 4 роки тому +13

    I find that if I cook the pasta all the way through, if I mix it in and cook it further it overcooks it. So I always take it 75% then cook it the remainder for a few mins when coating.

  • @alyswilliams9571
    @alyswilliams9571 4 роки тому +40

    Best and simplest way to blanch spinach is to put it in a colander and pour over a kettle full of boiling water.

    • @doraemon.23
      @doraemon.23 4 роки тому

      Can you do that with hot water from a faucet?

    • @chudzy
      @chudzy 4 роки тому +5

      @@doraemon.23 Depends. Do you live on Venus and have boiling tap water?

    • @chudzy
      @chudzy 4 роки тому +1

      @@user-vq1op2zg6w Lmao turn your water heater down. That's an absurd waste of gas.

    • @Tomanna
      @Tomanna 4 роки тому +1

      @@chudzy Hot water faucets are rather common, actually

    • @chudzy
      @chudzy 4 роки тому

      @@Tomanna Hot water is common but water hot enough to cook pasta is not. Tap water shouldn't be much above 50C/120F. At that point it can burn you as well as start to degrade your plumbing

  • @michaelpitsenberger1038
    @michaelpitsenberger1038 3 роки тому

    I don’t know if you read all your comments Michael, but I love your videos. I’m a visual leaner and watching your videos are so educational and I want to cook a meal with you. Much love!

  • @sarahrast7534
    @sarahrast7534 2 роки тому

    Definitely trying this recipe!

  • @rhythmdivine2
    @rhythmdivine2 4 роки тому +20

    10:25 why would you leave like 3-4 in the package?! you are killing me!

  • @raindao7577
    @raindao7577 4 роки тому +104

    I don't skimp on the olive oil because I'm worried about my health, I do it because good olive oil is expensive!!

    • @patrickfelder1861
      @patrickfelder1861 4 роки тому +10

      If you heat it up, you don't need the best quality of olive oil. Especially for frying, it's a shame to abuse a high-quality, cold-pressed extra vergine oil. If you use it for cold dishes, just the best quality is good enough.

    • @raindao7577
      @raindao7577 4 роки тому +2

      @@patrickfelder1861 that still like 6 dollars a bottle! Who do I look like? Warren Buffet!

    • @chudzy
      @chudzy 4 роки тому +4

      @@patrickfelder1861 Please don't "fry" in olive oil. It burns at 350F or so, which is below the 375F that most use for actual deep frying. This was more of a sauteing than a frying.

    • @umt6429
      @umt6429 4 роки тому +1

      Olive oil is good for you. It's dumb to avoid ti for health reasons

    • @rjfontenotiii
      @rjfontenotiii 4 роки тому +4

      The cheap stuff is not as healthy. The process that is used to remove the oil from the olive destroys a lot of the nutrients in cheap olive oil.

  • @TJJulkowski
    @TJJulkowski 2 роки тому

    Done. 1-15. Moving on to next video. Keep em coming chef. Love it absolutely love it.

  • @eastcoastjen
    @eastcoastjen 4 роки тому

    Loved this video! It made me happy! Thanks for the pasta tips! My mouth was watering :D

  • @cgbleak
    @cgbleak 4 роки тому +4

    The Golden Equation in Italian cooking is: simple + fresh = delicious.
    No layers.
    And nine ingredients is at least 3 too many.

  • @stonedNcreepy
    @stonedNcreepy 4 роки тому +4

    My dad (an italian chef) always said "salty like the middle sea!" to describe how the pasta water should be ;) So go for more salt!
    Also, I don't know if you said that, but with cooked tomatoes you ALWAYS have to add some sugar to get rid of the bitterness.

  • @xomarahdickison7567
    @xomarahdickison7567 4 роки тому

    Hello Fresh is a great way to get into cooking if you don't have many skills. I did it for a while as a way to amp up some weekday easy recepies and I loved it. Even luving alone it was cost efficient cause I has next day's lunch and nothing went to waste. Great job with your video, awesome ideas!

  • @visakanthiruchelvam5028
    @visakanthiruchelvam5028 4 роки тому

    Gosh, this was a superb video. loved it. thank you.

  • @adritr
    @adritr 4 роки тому +12

    Guys, in Italy "al dente" is when pasta is a little bit hard but it not sticks to your teeths (resulting annoying). Same is for risotto. Crunchy but not sticky.

  • @jasonwells4112
    @jasonwells4112 3 роки тому +3

    I'm still wondering why you blanched the greens...? Throw it in at the very end and the residual heat softens them.

  • @jheidema91
    @jheidema91 4 роки тому

    I've struggled with cooking my entire adult life. I followed this guide, and made truly fantastic pasta.
    Thank you.

  • @brigav8975
    @brigav8975 2 роки тому +1

    Love your vids. Learned a ton from you. Thank you. For this one dish, I would humbly suggest...
    1. ) Transfer pasta sooner and cook in sauce longer. Startch will release into sauce.
    2.) IMO you used too much pasta, you did not need to transfer it all. Only transfer amount appropriate to sauce amount and pot size. Pot was also too small.
    3.) Add cheese and small pieces basil to each dish after pasta is plated.

  • @alicetwain
    @alicetwain 4 роки тому +20

    Take it from an Italian, and I do not mean Italian-American, I mean Italian from Italy. That's too much oil. The pasta is going to taste greasy.

    • @ToveriJuri
      @ToveriJuri 4 роки тому +11

      Italian "from Italy" means nothing when your regions are in a food civil war on how to cook things properly. ;)

  • @KryzMasta
    @KryzMasta 4 роки тому +60

    Couple of things: you say use the best ingredients. So use the best ingredients. Don't use diced tomatoes in a can, use whole ones - you'll get less inferior stuff that way. Apparently the preferred type of tomatoes are San Marzano tomatoes, because they have some extra sweetness, but that's probably just a personal preference, other types will be good too.
    Then, the reduction of the tomato sauce. It was still way too soggy when you put the pasta in, and with the added pasta water you required a whole new cycle of reduction. The end result was therefore sloppy. Also, as mentioned by others: you used so much pasta water that the ratio of starch to water was way too low, so not as effective in your reduction.
    Next: don't add the garlic at the same time as the onions. The onions need time to soften and caramelize, but the garlic will burn. And you could see the garlic go brown and hard. That will result in a bitter flavour. Now I'm not such a stickler for either onions or garlic, so it's fine to use both, but use it right. If you really want to get down to the true Italian approach, you should have gone soffritto: onions, carrot, sellery. No garlic. Cook and reduce, then add the tomato sauce. But that's a different choice.
    You made some good points, but made some basic errors yourself when making this. No matter, learn and try again!

    • @LemmyTheCarpenter
      @LemmyTheCarpenter 4 роки тому +1

      When you say cook celery and carrots do you mean cook as in water or fry on oil in the pan?

    • @KryzMasta
      @KryzMasta 4 роки тому +2

      Lemmy The Carpenter I should have said “sauté”. Easiest is first sauté the pancetta, and then add the onions, carrots and celery, and sauté more. Then add the minced meat and let it go golden, then add the concentrated tomato sauce and mix it in well. You can then add some extra tomatoes (whole but make sure they’re well crushed so they can turn so soft you won’t get their texture in the end). Then add red wine and reduce. Then add beef stock and let it simmer for an hour.
      Then it should be perfectly reduced.

    • @LemmyTheCarpenter
      @LemmyTheCarpenter 4 роки тому +1

      @@KryzMasta thanks sir will try it!

    • @pushthetempo2
      @pushthetempo2 4 роки тому +10

      In italy they use the fresh tomatoes because they have such great tomatoes that grow there. In many places like here in the UK it's hard to get that quality of fresh tomatoes so tinned italian tomatoes are the best substitute really.

    • @KryzMasta
      @KryzMasta 4 роки тому +5

      J T Even in Italy they use tinned whole tomatoes. Key is: San Marzano. Sweet and flavorful.

  • @johntmcgill6936
    @johntmcgill6936 4 роки тому

    I love pasta ! I'll try your method out !

  • @tblynch
    @tblynch 4 роки тому

    Well done sir, and yes my wife does happily clean up afterward. I sometimes rush the marriage of pasta and sauce, but after watching, I intend to meld as you demonstrated so well.

  • @firstnamelastname9631
    @firstnamelastname9631 4 роки тому +5

    I enjoyed watching your video, it was entertaining, you have great energy that comes across and you're kinda pleasant to the eye (blush). But, too many things are not right, many are brought up in the 1046 comments below. Keep it up! @ over 1.5 million subscribers you are doing something right.

  • @martinhenien4158
    @martinhenien4158 4 роки тому +90

    The easiest dishes scare me the most: pasta, rice, tea, water. It‘s all about the details....

    • @ximbomike
      @ximbomike 4 роки тому +28

      I feel you Martin, water is truly the scariest of dishes!

    • @mohammadalikarimi8055
      @mohammadalikarimi8055 4 роки тому +24

      No matter how much hydrogen, oxygen, and the number 2 - I mix, I just cant seem to find the right recipe.

    • @jmiquelmb
      @jmiquelmb 4 роки тому +1

      Totally true. The most difficult pasta dishes are the simplest ones, since you have to nail execution and they’re not as forgiving if you mess something during the process . The most difficult pasta that I know of is aglio e olio, which is basically garlic and oil. Same with rice. Most sushi chefs will tell you rice is the most important part in sushi, even to 80%. Making ok pasta and rice is easy. Making great simple pasta and rice is very difficult. Only advise I can give is watch videos (Italian if possible), and practice practice practice.

    • @jmiquelmb
      @jmiquelmb 4 роки тому +2

      @@s1iznc1d34 I'll could make an effort on telling why you're wrong in some stuff you said, but I don't think it's worthy of my time if you talk to me with this atitude.

    • @jmiquelmb
      @jmiquelmb 4 роки тому +1

      @@s1iznc1d34 I've tried to talk with too many people who use "lol" on the end of sentence to not know how futile is to talk with them. But feel free to think what you want

  • @johanneskingma
    @johanneskingma 2 роки тому

    That is a great video. After seeing this I never toss out the pasta water but use the starchy water to improve the sauce.

  • @James-sf7yp
    @James-sf7yp 4 роки тому

    Always learn something from your solo videos. Have learnt alot from this one too. Thanks for making these videos. How about bread making?

  • @DrumBeat231
    @DrumBeat231 4 роки тому +16

    That was not nearly enough salt in the pasta water. "Until it tastes of the sea and no less."

  • @jhonnybfmv
    @jhonnybfmv 4 роки тому +50

    Protip: Never watch this before going to bed.
    (was about to fall asleep but as the episode progressed i just got more and more hungry)

    • @iwantobeapanda
      @iwantobeapanda 4 роки тому

      jhonny criollo so I’m not the only one with an hangry belly in bed

    • @vinay5047
      @vinay5047 4 роки тому

      I saw your comment after watching the video and i am regretting.

    • @Tobias-
      @Tobias- 4 роки тому

      Agreed and also mad about the noodles crap

  • @urosugljesa
    @urosugljesa 2 роки тому

    The most delicious pasta I ever ate. ☺. Thanks so much for sharing. 😉

  • @FORREST123100
    @FORREST123100 4 роки тому

    killing it man! keep it up!

  • @mohammadalikarimi8055
    @mohammadalikarimi8055 4 роки тому +9

    I like using good water for pasta and rice. To me it makes such a big difference. Water is the foundational ingredient for coffee, tea, rice, water, dough, and other things

    • @evindrews
      @evindrews 4 роки тому

      @@corywalker3425 Depends. water throughout the US is very drinkable but vary in mineral and soluble content. Well water next to filtered -> distilled -> re-added minerals tastes shockingly different. It definitely effects the chemistry. Your right though about the rest, pretty much half of europe doesn't have potable water.

    • @VibeRantInc
      @VibeRantInc 4 роки тому +1

      Chlorine, fluoride, atrazine, mercury, there's a whole host of contaminants in our water supply worldwide. Berkey filtration is the way to go, not just for taste but for health.

    • @mohammadalikarimi8055
      @mohammadalikarimi8055 4 роки тому +1

      @@VibeRantInc agree. and yet people wonder why they dont feel good or their general health isnt where it needs to be.. usually comes down to two things, air quality and water.

    • @VibeRantInc
      @VibeRantInc 4 роки тому

      @@corywalker3425 Literally everything you wrote about water was incorrect. It's also convenient that I'm not interested in your ill formed opinions.

    • @VibeRantInc
      @VibeRantInc 4 роки тому

      @@mohammadalikarimi8055Yes though I would argue that food quality has an even greater impact, in the main, than air quality. Air quality can change rapidly and frequently throughout a day while food quality is more habituated and can remain largely the same (if not worse) throughout a lifetime. Clean water and organic food are major keys to wellbeing.

  • @centomodipermorire6079
    @centomodipermorire6079 4 роки тому +3

    Oh man, you're telling people how to not make mistakes, doing only mistakes. A kiss from Italy ahahahah

  • @courtneymessina1708
    @courtneymessina1708 4 роки тому

    LOVE your kitchen

  • @franskorte976
    @franskorte976 4 роки тому

    Will give this a try!😄

  • @hector665
    @hector665 4 роки тому +9

    Tip for the chef: use a deeper pot to cook the pasta sauce. Less risk dropping the noodles, less risk for mess.

    • @poppyrose1549
      @poppyrose1549 3 роки тому

      Noodles? You call yourself a chef?

  • @2porri675
    @2porri675 4 роки тому +25

    For the salt: 10gr for every liter of water .. but bruh! Wtf !!! The garlic!!! This is the real problem! What's wrong with you Americans!🤦‍♂️ we put the whole clove just to get the flavour in the oil and put it out when is light gold, absolutely not golden brown! And btw onion or garlic choose one! Check Italia Squisita on Yt

    • @nikIrock2734
      @nikIrock2734 4 роки тому

      Sporcacionne

    • @cavemantero
      @cavemantero 4 роки тому +3

      cuz we aint vampires asshole...and garlic and onion actually go well with each other

  • @twostepz4982
    @twostepz4982 4 роки тому

    Yep, I'm subscribing this channel and learn from this.

  • @MiPolakia
    @MiPolakia 4 роки тому +1

    I think this is the best most simple well edited pasta video ever.

  • @iPhonix07
    @iPhonix07 4 роки тому +6

    To make a simple, weekday, tomato sauce you don’t need so many onions and garlic, most of us in italy use one clove of garlic a little bit smashed and then we take it out at the end (somehow abroad you think we are just mad on garlic while we actually aren’t in most cases)
    Also you ALWAYS add rock salt to the water, otherwise it will always turn out bland.
    If you want to add greens broccoli or cime di rapa go extremely well with tomato sauce

    • @152mememe
      @152mememe 4 роки тому +2

      Beppe yes and I heard you don’t really use onions and garlic at the same time either?

    • @iPhonix07
      @iPhonix07 4 роки тому

      cor j yes that is, in most cases true. Garlic and onions are both strong flavoring agents so when making a simple sauce you just need one or they will just overwhelm the tomatoes.
      If your doing something like roasted piece of meat instead you can easily use both as you really want to season and give flavor to the piece of meat.
      In fact you will also probably use other things like carrots, celery, herbs and spices...

    • @marcelobarros5729
      @marcelobarros5729 4 роки тому

      Americans a crazy about garlic. Specially in Italian food. They load up on it. Many restaurants also load up garlic on their dishes.

    • @inquisitive1
      @inquisitive1 2 роки тому

      @@marcelobarros5729 because the quality of the tomatoes are trash compared to medi

  • @Sam-oi1bb
    @Sam-oi1bb 4 роки тому +8

    Hey, would really love to hear your thoughts on extras like adding wine or sugar in the sauce or even milk. Or is it more for a ragout kind of thing?

    • @kylecronin8737
      @kylecronin8737 4 роки тому +3

      Depends on the sauce! I put red wine in rich meat sauces because it has nice body to stand up to the richness and the acidity cuts through the fatty flavours of beef. I might add cream to a sauce like the one in this video, especially if I didn't add enough oil so the acidity of the tomato doesn't overpower everything.
      Lots of people add dry white wine to their meats sauces as well, and I think it can fit into creamy sauces (branching out of tomato sauces at this point).
      Sugar isn't traditional, but it works well to distract you from acidity through the flavour (though I don't think it actually changes the PH the way cream would).
      Milk works like cream, but because it's lower fat, it's not as effective.

    • @Baxtexx
      @Baxtexx 4 роки тому

      Brown sugar is great in any tomato based dish such as sauce, soup etc.

    • @potatocanvas3148
      @potatocanvas3148 4 роки тому

      Always useful to have a bottle of white wine around the house. Every time you cook onion you can basically deglaze with wine, adding some nice flavours.
      Be careful on the wine you pic, it should be a standard table wine, one you would actually drink. Also some wine are pretty acidic so choose wisely (it's usually written on the bottle).

    • @Sam-oi1bb
      @Sam-oi1bb 4 роки тому +1

      Nice info here, thanks. Little bit of wine for the sauce, little bit of wine for meee

    • @jmiquelmb
      @jmiquelmb 4 роки тому

      potato canvas Also be careful to not pick sweet white wine unless the recipe asks for it

  • @sunilparikh8598
    @sunilparikh8598 3 роки тому

    fantastic presentation.

  • @giancarlopenalba2616
    @giancarlopenalba2616 Рік тому +1

    I tried these tips and my friends loved my pasta.