Quizzes & Puzzles4 mins ago
Correct Way To Eat Macaroni
24 Answers
I love pasta and every type is a different experience, but how should one eat macaroni? it is the most unmanageable of all pastas. I cooked some today 'al dente' and had difficulty even getting it onto the plates, getting two stands on the floor in the process! It's too thick to wrap around your fork like spaghetti, and if you manage to get it into your mouth you cant suck it in easily because of the hole through the centre. If you cut it into small lengths it will not remain on your fork. What would Montalbano do?
Answers
Googled a bit... found this http:// www. fortwayne. com/ apps/ pbcs. dll/ article? AID=/ FW/ 20130315/ LIVING/ 320132732/ 1013 It's about spaghetti but applicable to all long pasta (or so it says) Some interesting viewpoints expressed there that I'd not heard before, like how Italians regard the fork+spoon method and 'not cutting the pasta in polite...
00:07 Wed 18th Sep 2013
Googled a bit... found this
http:// www.for twayne. com/app s/pbcs. dll/art icle?AI D=/FW/2 0130315 /LIVING /320132 732/101 3
It's about spaghetti but applicable to all long pasta (or so it says)
Some interesting viewpoints expressed there that I'd not heard before, like how Italians regard the fork+spoon method and 'not cutting the pasta in polite company'.
All of a sudden I am struck with the idea that this is yet another one of those social devices used to separate the 'in group' from the 'out group'. It takes years of practice to manipulate the pasta without covering your clothes in sauce and Italians get to do this in the privacy of the family home. Not so long ago, the tourists would have had their earliest, clumsiest efforts in the restaurant setting - much to the amusement of the serving staff, no doubt.
Long macaroni does appear to be on sale in UK but I guess it's still a 'niche' product and not many have tried it.
We're used to macaroni cheese made from the 1" pieces and a bechamel sauce thick enough to make the pasta pieces stick to each other. You can thus impale the tubes through the side and rasie them to your mouth without any of the sauce inside the tubes draining out.
It was only a year or two back that I learned it is an American recipe, not a 'British classic'.
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It's about spaghetti but applicable to all long pasta (or so it says)
Some interesting viewpoints expressed there that I'd not heard before, like how Italians regard the fork+spoon method and 'not cutting the pasta in polite company'.
All of a sudden I am struck with the idea that this is yet another one of those social devices used to separate the 'in group' from the 'out group'. It takes years of practice to manipulate the pasta without covering your clothes in sauce and Italians get to do this in the privacy of the family home. Not so long ago, the tourists would have had their earliest, clumsiest efforts in the restaurant setting - much to the amusement of the serving staff, no doubt.
Long macaroni does appear to be on sale in UK but I guess it's still a 'niche' product and not many have tried it.
We're used to macaroni cheese made from the 1" pieces and a bechamel sauce thick enough to make the pasta pieces stick to each other. You can thus impale the tubes through the side and rasie them to your mouth without any of the sauce inside the tubes draining out.
It was only a year or two back that I learned it is an American recipe, not a 'British classic'.
Hypognosis; Thank you, it shows the subject worthy of research; eating long macaroni in company is not for the faint-hearted. I didn't realise it was a 'niche' product, the pre-chopped version is I see the most popular and is used to make macaroni cheese, in this form the glutinous matrix allows it to be transferred to the mouth without loss of dignity.
My main problem was attempting to eat it with a Bolognaise type sauce, the olive oil in which made for a very slippery plate-full.
I agree with the lady, eating any pasta utilising a spoon would be beyond the pale.
My main problem was attempting to eat it with a Bolognaise type sauce, the olive oil in which made for a very slippery plate-full.
I agree with the lady, eating any pasta utilising a spoon would be beyond the pale.
grasscarp; As part of my new research :-) ; please ask your husband if he would eat pasta with a spoon in company, and even more, would he do so in Italy?
brionon; Most certainly; every society and every culture has its 'table manners' - except perhaps now a large part of the UK, where many don't even sit at a table anymore.
brionon; Most certainly; every society and every culture has its 'table manners' - except perhaps now a large part of the UK, where many don't even sit at a table anymore.
Wow, I never knew there was long macaroni either! Mine is usually smothered in cheese sauce (mmm.....) so sticks to your cutlery too :)
That from the girl who cuts spaghetti up before it goes on my plate...
I would have thought it was perfectly acceptable to use a spoon for long pasta is eating out somewhere respectable as long as you are delicately winding less than a mouthful and not wrapping loads round so it ends up stringing down etc...
That from the girl who cuts spaghetti up before it goes on my plate...
I would have thought it was perfectly acceptable to use a spoon for long pasta is eating out somewhere respectable as long as you are delicately winding less than a mouthful and not wrapping loads round so it ends up stringing down etc...
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