Last week, Sean and I attended a Grana Padano media event with Lidia Bastianich that was held at Eataly. (I fell in love with Eataly earlier this year. You can see more images of it on the Eataly in NYC photos post.) At the event, I learned Lidia Bastianich pasta recipes.
We had such a great time enjoying the cooking demo and dinner! This week, I will be sharing a few of the delicious recipes that Lidia demonstrated and fed us…starting with Lidia Bastianich’s basic egg pasta dough recipe. Enjoy!
Lidia Bastianich Pasta Recipes
Basic Egg Pasta Dough
From Lidia’s Italian Table: More Than 200 Recipes From The First Lady Of Italian Cooking, © 1998
Ingredients:
- 4 cups unbleached all-purpose flour
- 6 large eggs
- ½ teaspoon salt
- ½ teaspoon extra virgin olive oil
- Warm water as needed
Directions:
1. On a marble or wooden work surface, pile the flour into a mound. Make a well in the center of the mound that goes all the way down to the work surface. In a small bowl, beat the eggs, salt and olive oil together with a fork until blended, then add them to the well. Continue beating the egg mixture with the fork, gradually working the flour from the sides of the well into the egg mixture.
As you work, the egg mixture will become thicker and the size of the well will expand. Continue beating until there is just a thin ring of flour around the egg mixture and the dough becomes too thick to mix with a fork before almost all of the flour is incorporated. Drizzle a tiny amount of the warm water over the egg mixture and continue mixing. It is possible you will not need any water at all.
Work the remaining flour into the dough with your hands just until a rough, firm dough is formed. Rub your hands together to remove as much dough as possible and add that to the rest of the dough. Shape the dough into a rough ball and set it aside.
2. Sprinkle your hands liberally with flour, rubbing them together to remove any remaining scraps of dough from your skin. With a knife, loosen any dough and flour from the work surface. Pass these scrapings through a sieve so you can reuse the flour and discard the scraps in the sieve. Make sure your hands are clean and flour them lightly.
3. Once you have formed a rough ball, it is ready to knead. Flour a marble or wooden work surface. (For effective kneading by hand, the surface should be hip-high; this will allow you to put your body weight into the kneading motion.) Press the heel of one hand deep into the dough, keeping your fingers high.
Then press down on the dough while pushing it firmly away from you – the dough will stretch and roll under your hand like a large shell. Turn the dough over, then press into the dough, first the knuckles of one hand, than with the other; do this about ten times with the knuckles of each hand. Use the knuckles of your forefingers especially during this process.
Then repeat the stretching and knuckling process, using more flour if needed to prevent sticking, until the dough is smooth and silky, 10 to 20 minutes. Roll the dough into a smooth ball.
4. Place the dough in a small bowl and cover with plastic wrap. Let the dough rest for at least 1 hour at room temperature or up to 1 day in the refrigerator, before rolling and shaping the pasta. If the dough has been refrigerated let it stand at room temperature for at least 1 hour before rolling and shaping.
As always, this recipe is meant to be a guideline. Cooking is not always an exact science so enjoy making it your own.
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You Might Also Like:
- Lidia Bastianich’s Carrot & Apple Salad Recipe
- Panna Cotta with Berries Recipe by Lidia Bastianich
- Lidia Bastianich’s Squash Ravioli with Sage Butter Recipe
{Top Photo Credit – Getty Images for Grana Padano, used with permission}