Homemade Cavatelli Pasta

  5.0 – 1 reviews  • Italian

A typical Southern Italian pasta dish is cavatelli noodles, which are produced from only durum wheat semolina flour, water, and salt. This pasta’s characteristic and firm texture is a result of the starch in the durum, which goes well with either a light tomato sauce or a hearty Bolognese. Use only extremely fine semolina (also known as durum or semola rimacinata) to avoid the dough becoming too stiff.

Prep Time: 40 mins
Additional Time: 1 hr
Total Time: 1 hr 40 mins
Servings: 4

Ingredients

  1. 2 ¼ cups durum wheat semolina flour (such as Bob’s Red Mill®)
  2. 1 pinch salt
  3. 1 cup water, or as needed, at room temperature

Instructions

  1. Mix semolina flour and salt in a large bowl or on a marble work surface. Make a well in the center.
  2. Pour water into the well a little at a time, mixing it with flour. Add as much water as needed to make a sticky but compact dough.
  3. Knead dough with your hands by flattening the ball, stretching it, and folding top toward center. Turn 45 degrees and repeat until dough is elastic and smooth, but not too soft, about 10 minutes.
  4. Shape dough into a ball. Place in a bowl and cover with plastic wrap. Let rest at room temperature for about 30 minutes before using. If you are using cavatelli within a few hours or the following day, wrap in plastic wrap and chill in the refrigerator.
  5. Work with one portion of dough at a time, keeping remaining dough covered to keep it from drying out. Dust a work surface with semolina flour; roll out dough to make a rope, about 1/3 inch thick.
  6. Cut off little 1/3-inch-thick pieces. Press and gently drag a small piece of dough toward you with your index and middle finger. The two sides will curl inwards, leaving hollow spaces.
  7. Proceed the same way with rest of dough. Transfer cavatelli to a floured surface and sprinkle with more semolina flour. Do not overlap cavatelli or they will stick together. Let dry for about 30 minutes before cooking.
  8. If not using cavatelli right away, let stand at room temperature for 24 hours and then transfer to a paper bag. Check from time to time to make sure no mold develops, and use within a week.
  9. Cooking time will depend on dryness. If cavatelli is freshly made, it will take about 5 minutes. If pasta is a few days old, cooking takes about 8 to 10 minutes. In any case, as always when cooking pasta, the best way to check is to taste.
  10. If you cannot find durum or semolina “rimacinata”, mix regular semolina with plain white flour in a 50-50 ratio.

Reviews

Craig Miller
these came out great and it was a fun “project” with my teenagers

 

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