Organic Pasta Recipe

I made my own Tagliatelle yesterday… a first for me.   I have to say I really enjoyed making it, so much so, i’m now converted … no more shop bought pasta for us

Recipe :

  • 250g Italian “00” Flour
  • 1 Medium Egg
  • 4 Medium Egg Yolks
  • 1 Tbsp Olive Oil
  • 1 Tbsp Cold Water
  • Pinch of Salt

Method :

  • Put the flour in a mound on a clean surface (preferably marble) and make a well in the middle.   Put the whole egg, egg yolks, 1 tbsp cold water, the polive oil and salt into the well.
  • Using your fingertips, mix all the ingredients in the well together, then gradually draw the flour into the centre little by little.
  • When the dough is almost completely amalgamated, knead it 4 or 5 times with the heel of your hand, then roll it into a ball, wrap in cling film, and refridgerate for 1 hour.
  • Divide the pasta dough inhalf; re-wrap one portion.   Roll the other portion through a pasta machine, starting on the widest setting.   Continue to roll it through the machine repeatedly, narrowing the setting by one notch each time until the sheet of dough is 1.5mm thick.   Roll it through once more to prevent shrinkage when you cut it.
  • Fit the appropriate cutter on the machine and cut the dough into linguine, spaghetti or tagliatelle.
  • lay the strands on a sheet of grease proof paper or lightly floured parchment to aerate them and prevent tangling.
  • To cook the pasta bring a large pan of lightly salted water to the boil with a few drops of olive oil added.   Add the freshly cut pasta and cook for abour 1 1/2 – 2 mins, until it is al dente (tender, but firm to the bite).   The precise cooking time is determined by width and thickness of the pasta strands.

 

Recipe Source : “Eggs by Michel Roux” ISBN 1-84400-196-2

They’re Crowing and Fighting !

Oh dear…. I went out to the cheeps this morning, only to find big partridge pekin’s comb and wattles bleeding, and hanging onto white silkie cross’s neck,  the two of them running around the coop fighting one another, with Big PP having a distinct advantage….

BPP’s wattles and comb covered in blood….

So I dug out the old rabbit hutch and seperated him, putting small PP in alongside him for company, these two seem to get on and have not fought (yet)! … then Big PP started to crow! abeit a squeeky baby version of a crow… it really sounded a bit like the character Anne from Little Britain! 🙂

My son seems to think that small PP might just be a girl (he is hoping) but apart from their size, they both have similar colouring… my friend over on Neepsthat I bought them from advised that a good way of telling the sex with partridge pekins is… males have a copper/chestnut plain breast feathers and females have lighter lacey coloured breasts.   I’m sure they’re both boys…

Unless I can find new homes for them… time is running out for the PP’s.