Corzetti by Pyrex

corzetti by Pyrex
corzetti by Pyrex
Corzetti (is corzetto the singular?) by Pyrex! How cool is that?

We’ve been wanting to make corzetti, but we couldn’t see purchasing a corzetti stamp. It’s not as if we’d be making corzetti all that often, and the handmade stamps seem to cost at least $30. That’s a lot for something so specialized. Perhaps if we can pick up a used corzetti stamp someplace, we might consider it, but, for right now, we’ll just have to make do with what we have. In this case, custard cups. Really. Custard cups.

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Shaping Caramelle Pasta

caramelle pasta
caramelle pasta
Candy for dinner? No, caramelle!

I think we first saw this cool pasta shape in the book Flour + Water: Pasta, by Thomas McNaughton; we’re not positive, but pretty sure, as it shows a huge number of pasta shapes and how to make them. Of course, once you see these, you’ve pretty much figured out how to shape caramelle. Oh, and, of course, caramelle means candies in Italian.

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Spaghetti alla Chitarra

spaghetti all chitarra
spaghetti all chitarra
Spaghetti alla chitarra. A new pasta shape for us!

Isn’t there always one? You know the one, the one person who, for whatever reason, just loves spaghetti (the pasta shape) and not a single other shape of pasta. No matter how much you explain that it’s all made from the same dough, they still want only spaghetti. Perhaps they like the fact that you can wind the pasta around the fork, or perhaps the fun part is slurping down the strands.

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Shaping Cappelletti

cappelletti en brodo
cappelletti en brodo
Did a bunch of tiny witches drown in our soup?

Right before Christmas, we were perusing books in one of those chain bookstores (when we buy books, we get them from our local independent bookseller) and happened to look through the book flour + water : pasta, by Thomas McNaughton, and spied some pastas that looked like little witches’ hats: cappelletti. They looked pretty easy, so we thought that we’d try to make some.

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Shaping Tortelloni

tortelloni
tortelloni
A tortelloni! Made by us!

This is probably the most ambitious shaped pasta we’ve ever made, and, initially, we were really thinking of making ravioli. But we figured, what’s the worst that could happen? We make horrible looking tortelloni (a larger version of tortellini). So what! What’s the best that could happen? We’d learn a new skill. Great! So, with almost no downside, and a huge upside to shaping tortelloni, who wouldn’t at least want to try it?

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Battini or Pipistrellini

drying pasta bats

The witching hour is closing in! We rushed this pasta shape into production here at Scratchin’ Central so you can make up a batch of these Pipistrellini (our guess at small bat in Italian) for Halloween dinner.

cutting bat pasta
Simply roll out your pasta dough and go to town with a small bat-shaped cookie cutter.

Simply roll out a batch of fresh pasta dough (we worked with about 1/8 of the dough at a time) and use a bat-shaped cookie cutter to cut out a bunch of bats.

shaping pasta bats
Lightly press each bat over a chopstick to give it a bit of a shape.

We placed each bat over a small wooden stake in case vampires are about (really a chopstick) to make for something approaching a 3D shape. Once finished, you’ll be ready to serve your bats in a blood-red sauce!

What a fun shape for Halloween. Fives!

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Roman-style Polenta Gnocchi

Roman-style polenta gnocchi
Roman-style polenta gnocchi
This is cornmeal? Yes!

Do you ever have recipes that sit around for a long time while you search out and find just the right ingredients? That’s the case with this recipe. It’s not as if it’s a difficult recipe; in fact, it’s really easy, but we just couldn’t find one of the key ingredients: semolina. We looked in all the likely places, but no semolina flour. We finally gave up. But, that didn’t stop us; oh, no, we scratched our way forward and came up with the following.

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