Bucatini is a thick spaghetti-like pasta commonly found in Italian recipes that hail from Rome. What makes it unique is the small hole running through its center. To the untrained eye, bucatini is ...
Butter, cheese, olive oil, garlic — these are our favorite things to mix with pasta. In one of Martha Stewart’s favorite pasta recipes, however, she adds a secret sweet ingredient, and it looks so ...
Anna Hezel, author of "Tin to Table: Fancy, Snacky Recipes for Tin-thusiasts and A-fish-ionados, offers "Sunday Morning" viewers her recipe using tinned seafood. She writes: "This is sort of a ...
Italian pasta comes in many shapes. We break down what they are, and the best sauce pairings, cooking tips, and history to ...
In a large pot of salted boiling water, cook the bucatini 8-10 minutes if dried pasta, 4-5 minutes if fresh. Drain and reserve a couple of cups of the pasta cooking water. In a medium saucepan, render ...
While often thought of as a Roman dish, Bucatini all'Amatriciana originated in the town of Amatrice, northeast of Rome. It's a dish made with a kind of thick spaghetti (bucatini's long strands are ...
Dinner doesn’t need a pep talk when I’ve got pasta on the plan. These are the kind of no-fail recipes I make over and over ...
Even when they are tasty, creamy pasta sauces can be unappealingly heavy. A few bites and you’re done. Luckily, a lighter solution lies in peak season for sweet corn, whose high starch content can ...
Amatriciana is a very classic Roman sauce. It comes from the town of Amatrice, which is right outside of Rome. There are so many iterations of this sauce; some have lots of onions like mine, some have ...