Fresh Gluten-Free Pasta

Fresh Gluten-Free Pasta
Fresh Gluten-Free Pasta might be just the side dish you are searching for. One portion of this dish contains roughly 11g of protein, 8g of fat, and a total of 292 calories. This gluten free, dairy free, and vegetarian recipe serves 4. A mixture of corn flour, quinoa flour, guar gum, and a handful of other ingredients are all it takes to make this recipe so delicious. From preparation to the plate, this recipe takes around 45 minutes.

Instructions

1
Combining the Flours
2
Sift the corn flour, quinoa flour, and potato starch into a large bowl.
Ingredients you will need
Quinoa FlourQuinoa Flour
Corn FlourCorn Flour
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BowlBowl
3
Add the xanthan gum, guar gum, and salt and stir. Sift the entire mixture into the bowl of a stand mixer.
Ingredients you will need
Guar GumGuar Gum
SaltSalt
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Stand MixerStand Mixer
BowlBowl
4
Forming the Pasta Dough
Ingredients you will need
Pasta DoughPasta Dough
5
Put the eggs and egg yolks into the bowl of dry ingredients. Run the stand mixer on medium speed with a paddle attachment until the dough feels fully formed, about 3 minutes. The final dough should feel firm yet still pliable, a little like playdough.
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Egg YolkEgg Yolk
DoughDough
EggEgg
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Stand MixerStand Mixer
BowlBowl
6
Making the Pasta
Ingredients you will need
PastaPasta
7
If you are using a pasta machine, cut the ball of dough into quarters and roll out each piece of dough to about a 1/2-inch thickness. We like to roll out each piece between 2 pieces of parchment paper. Lightly flour both sides of the dough with a bit more potato starch. Run the dough through the machine, increasing the setting each time, until the dough is paper-thin and long. If the pasta sheet starts to break, it is thin enough.
Ingredients you will need
Potato StarchPotato Starch
DoughDough
All Purpose FlourAll Purpose Flour
PastaPasta
RollRoll
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Baking PaperBaking Paper
Pasta MachinePasta Machine
8
If you are making the dough by hand, we suggest you cut the ball of dough into 8 pieces, and then cut each of those pieces in half, so they are about the size of golf balls.
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DoughDough
9
Roll out each piece of dough as thin as you possibly can.
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DoughDough
RollRoll
10
For fettuccine, use the fettuccine setting on the pasta machine. If you are cutting the dough by hand, you want ribbons of pasta, about 1/4-inch wide. For spaghetti, use the spaghetti setting on the pasta machine. If you are cutting the dough by hand, you want thin strings of pasta.
Ingredients you will need
FettuccineFettuccine
SpaghettiSpaghetti
DoughDough
PastaPasta
Equipment you will use
Pasta MachinePasta Machine
11
For ravioli, cut the rolled-out pasta into 2-inch-square pieces. Dollop the filling in the middle of a square of pasta.
Ingredients you will need
RavioliRavioli
PastaPasta
12
Brush the edges of the pasta with an egg wash.
Ingredients you will need
PastaPasta
EggEgg
13
Place another pasta square on top and press down, crimping the edges. (Having a ravioli cutter on hand helps with this process.)
Ingredients you will need
RavioliRavioli
PastaPasta
14
For lasagna, leave the pasta in long sheets.
Ingredients you will need
PastaPasta
15
To cook the pasta, bring a large pot of salted water to a boil.
Ingredients you will need
PastaPasta
WaterWater
Equipment you will use
PotPot
16
Put the pasta shape of your choice into the boiling water. When the pasta rises to the surface, take a little piece and taste it. You should be able to bite into it without it falling apart. (With gluten-free pasta, it's a fine line. One moment it's al dente, and the next it's one big ball of mush, so watch the pot.) Cooking times will vary for the different shapes. Fettuccine generally takes 4 to 5 minutes, spaghetti 3 to 4 minutes. Ravioli takes a little longer, about 5 to 6 minutes. The cooking times will differ in each kitchen, depending on how thin you were able to roll out the dough.
Ingredients you will need
FettuccineFettuccine
SpaghettiSpaghetti
RavioliRavioli
DoughDough
PastaPasta
WaterWater
RollRoll
Equipment you will use
PotPot
17
Let your taste be the judge.
1
You have some wiggle room with different flours here. Tapioca flour works as a replacement for the potato starch, as does cornstarch. You might try sorghum or brown rice if you cannot eat corn. However, be sure to substitute by weight instead of volume.Suggestions:You can easily double or even triple this recipe for more pasta. Work with the pasta in batches if you do.
Ingredients you will need
Corn StarchCorn Starch
Brown RiceBrown Rice
SorghumSorghum
PastaPasta
CornCorn
2
From Gluten-Free Girl and the Chef: A Love Story with 100 Tempting Recipes by Shauna James Ahern & Daniel Ahern. Copyright © 2010 by Shauna James Ahern and Daniel Ahern; photography © 2010 Lara Ferroni. Published by John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
DifficultyHard
Ready In45 m.
Servings4
Health Score3
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