Best manual pasta makers according to redditors

We found 99 Reddit comments discussing the best manual pasta makers. We ranked the 25 resulting products by number of redditors who mentioned them. Here are the top 20.

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Top Reddit comments about Manual Pasta Makers:

u/dr_obfuscation · 133 pointsr/LearnUselessTalents

I'll help you out. That's a pasta maker with a fettuccini cutter attachment.

Fun Fact: It also makes pasta!

u/blueshiftlabs · 90 pointsr/recipes

I'll save you a ton of scrolling through long-winded stories and baby pictures:

Ingredients


  • 4 eggs
  • 1/3 cup milk
  • 2 teaspoons salt
  • 2 cups all-purpose flour
  • 4 Tablespoons unsalted butter
  • 1 Teaspoon white pepper
  • 1/4 teaspoon nutmeg

    Instructions


  1. In a medium bowl, whisk together the eggs, milk, and salt. Add in the flour and stir until well combined.
  2. Bring a large pot of salted water to a boil over high heat. Place your spaetzle maker over the top, then pour half of the batter into the cup of the device. Quickly slide the cup back and forth to allow the batter to drop through. Repeat with second half of batter, working quickly, until all the batter is cooking in the pot.
  3. Set the spaetzle maker aside and give the dumplings a good stir in the pot. Let them cook for 1 to 2 minutes, until floating on the surface. Remove with a slotted spoon and place in a large bowl. Toss with butter and spices. Serve warm.

u/Zolhungaj · 76 pointsr/4chan

Two words: pasta maker

u/[deleted] · 20 pointsr/1200isjerky

I do in fact have the perfect recipe for halo top spaghetti.

First, get a noodle press (like this one www.amazon.com/dp/B019P8B1PU/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_i_wTPgDbQ0DXARA)

Next, press halo top through it. Any flavor works.

Finally, top with melted halo top. That's your sauce.

Enjoy!

u/DrAwesomeThrowAway · 19 pointsr/bingingwithbabish

Gourmia GPM9980 - Pasta Maker, Roller and Cutter - Manual Hand Crank - Slices Dough into Spaghetti and Fettuccine - Stainless Steel Surface and Chrome Plated Parts - 150mm https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0779KPT4B/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_i_35LjDbGHMFGJK
Compared to
KitchenAid KPEXTA Stand-Mixer Pasta-Extruder Attachment With 6 Plates and Housing https://www.amazon.com/dp/B003GWZ9ZK/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_i_B6LjDbMVMRZZT
In his master of none pasta carbonara vid I think

u/skahunter831 · 14 pointsr/Cooking

I don't have any other things to make with it, but I think this is the same machine for half the price. That's the one I have and it hasn't failed me yet.

u/lostinbass · 10 pointsr/simpleliving

Cheez-Its! you need a food processor to make it, but it's reasonably easy. They are my favorite processed snack, so I was stoked to find a way to make them myself.

Making your own ricotta is also not too tough and a really cool process. Watching the milk separate into curds and whey is really awesome. And you can make the best lasagna with it.

Yogurt is also pretty easy. Basically you just warm up milk, add some old yogurt too it and let it sit. I let mine culture in a beer cooler, because the temperature is more static.

Making pasta is also pretty easy, but requires equipment. My recipe is 1 cup of white flour to 1 egg, with about a half eggshell's worth of water (for two people). If you want to mix it up, do half whole wheat/buckwheat/semolina flour and half white. It's so much tastier than store bought dry pasta, cooks faster, and keeps well in the freezer. I have very fond memories of making pasta with my mom when I was younger.

Anyway that was longer than anticipated. I make almost all my food from scratch, so if there is something you want to know about I can probably point you in the right direction. Cheers!

u/lolzfeminism · 10 pointsr/Cooking

This is excellent and has worked for me really well for 3 years now, but it's hand-cranked, which is alright with me. I do not know about the quality of electric pasta machines.

u/vernazza · 7 pointsr/hungary

Hey, I have a saved comment for this! Here you go:

> Famous, traditional dishes
>
> beef stew: what Hungarians call 'pörkölt', this is what's incorrectly known as 'goulash' abroad.
>
>
beef and potato soup, aka. what Hungarians consider real 'goulash'.
>
> chicken paprikash: the chicken variation of the above stew, with added sour cream.
>
>
The iconic side dish for Hungarian stews is egg noodle dumplings, called 'nokedli' or spaetzle in German-speaking areas. Specialty stores and shops throughout Central Europe sell spaetzle makers. A potato ricer with adjustable discs might work as well. Pick the one with the large holes and use a knife to cut them if they don't separate into small pieces on their own.
>
> If you don't have either, all you need is a teaspoon dipped in hot water, a pot and a fair amount of patience to individually spoon each noodle into the boiling salted water. They are done when they float to the top (do it in small batches).
>
> Somló trifle: a scrumptious walnut-chocolate sponge cake dessert, but very time consuming to make. Most Hungarians eat it at confectioneries because of this, but if you're a hardcore cook, prove they are wrong to do that!
>
>
Dobos torte: another labor intensive, but delicious and traditional cake of caramel, cocoa and walnuts.
>
> Lesser-known dishes
>
> catfish paprikash: another variety of the two recipes up top. Best served with dill-cottage cheese 'nokedli' (adjust the above recipe).
>
>
pork fillet Bakonyi-style: pork in creamy mushroom sauce
>
> sirloin Temesvári-style: with yellow wax or green beans (yellow is preferable)
>
>
tripe stew: tastes great if you're an adventurous eater!
>
> fruit soup: if you're not weirded out by tripe already, this is a sweet soup with whipping cream, fruits and cloves and it's not a dessert. Yes, we do eat and like it!
>
>
bean goulash: substituting the potatoes for pinto beans in the goulash recipes transforms it into a very different, but equally fantastic soup.
>
> drunkard's soup: the perfect hangover cure or something that warms you up in the winter - sauerkraut soup with root vegetables, pork and sausage.
>
>
lecsó: pepper-heavy ratatouille, feel free to make it more filling with adding rice or beaten eggs. Use spicy Hungarian sausage (sub for chorizo or other air-dried, smoked, paprika-heavy sausage). Do not use bell peppers for this or any other Hungarian recipe ever, the sweetness will ruin it.
>
> főzelék, vegetable stew or pottage is also very traditional and simple, though in my experience the creamy consistency of some of the recipes can be off-putting for many foreigners (maybe don't start with the green pea one). However the spinach or lentil one will not be alien to the fans of Indian cuisine.
>
>
sweet dumplings of different varieties are favorites of all children.
>
> Cookbooks, recipes
>
> For a general Hungarian cookbook, use Zsuzsa's Cookbook. Written by a Hungarian grandma living in Canada, her recipes are already adjusted for what's available in North America. Her site is antiquated, click on the names of the categories, not the images. She also cooks a fair amount of non-Hungarian food, you can spot which is traditional by the Hungarian name written after the English ones.
>
> Zserbo.com's focus is lesser-known, but commonly eaten Hungarian dishes as well as regional specialties that even Hungarians can be unfamiliar with. Updates are infrequent, but there's a solid number of recipes up already.
>
> Among cookbooks this and this are solid, English-language cookbooks with both classics and everyday recipes.
>
> This one is a super and very traditional Jewish-Hungarian cookbook by a famous family of restaurateurs who also run the best traditional restaurant of the country. Also available as an e-book if you'd like to save on shipping fees.
>
> Cooking tips, ingredients
>
> Hungarian paprika is not the same as what's sold as that in North America (ground bell pepper). Ours is a much more flavorful pepper variety grown for exclusively spice use. You can order from here, they ship from Hungary and carry the real deal! Or if you'd prefer domestic shipping, this business with shops in Wisconsin and Illinois comes recommended.
>
> Most of the recipes suggest using oil to fry the onions. If you do that, make sure you're not doing it with some harsh olive oil, but sunflower, canola or something equally neutral tasting. However it's lard that really brings out the best flavours from the paprika, you should go for that. Make sure to only mix in the paprika powder when the pot is off the flame, otherwise it'll burn within 10-15 seconds and becomes bitter.
>
> Some of these recipes suggest bell pepper, which is odd as we never use it in Hungary. Use something mildly hot instead (Hungarian wax pepper or closest equivalent), it has moderate heat, so account for that and the guests' tastes as well.
>
> Celery root (celeriac) and kohlrabi are somewhat important and widely used ingredients in Hungarian soups, not sure if you have them available. Their roles are similar to bay leaf, rounding the other flavors out. They are put in whole (well, a quarter or a half to be precise depending on the size, you need maybe 150-200g sized bit each) and are removed after cooking. You can omit them if you don't have them available, but it's best to include them.

Both Zserbo.com and Zsuzsa's Cookbook have simple recipes along with averagely complicated ones, but obviously they assume typical kitchen skills. If you don't know what roux is, or how brown sauteed onions should look like, you should watch some basic tutorial videos on YouTube, there are plenty.

One commonly used thickening ingredient in Hungarian recipes (mostly for soups and 'főzelék', which is a thick vegetable stew) is roux, either in itself or with paprika mixed in it. In the latter case, only mix in the paprika once the roux is nearly done, for the last 10-20 seconds or so, otherwise the spice will burn and turn bitter. And it should be done over low flame from the beginning.

Hungarian recipes greatly prefer lard over oil for cooking, so if you have that available, use that. If you don't, do search out sunflower or rapeseed oil, don't use olive.

As far as paprika brands go, almost everything pre-packaged will be crap, and I doubt the few good ones go for exports, because they are usually from smaller companies. However do go to a gourmet/import food deli for the best chances. If you fail, unsmoked Spanish paprika (pimentón dulce) is quite close in flavor and should be easier to find.

The most basic recipe I can think of is lecsó. But since it's not much more than (ideally flavorful) veggies cooked together, you will find it almost identical to peperonata. The only difference is that we use Hungarian wax peppers instead of the too sweet bell peppers, and which you can further flavor it by adding beaten eggs and/or sausages.

The second easiest ones are any of the soups. Goulash soup is quite easy, as are others, pick any one here.

Meat stews take a while to cook, especially if you're using pork or beef instead of chicken, but the cooking process itself is simple as well. Foreigners incorrectly believe 'goulash' is a meat stew, but we actually call that 'pörkölt'.

Good luck!

u/tihoni · 7 pointsr/kitchener

My recommendation is to get one of these for $10 next time you're on Amazon.

https://www.amazon.ca/dp/B00004UE89/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_awdb_t1_695RBb5STV29C

Spätzle recipe is very simple, and nothing in a plastic bag comes even close to fresh, homemade ones. By the time the water comes to boil, you will have whipped up a batch. Grate them into boiling water, scoop up when they surface, and that's it. Enjoy!

Oh, and for the rest of you who have no clue what we're talking about, please order Käsespätzle or Paprikash with a side of spätzle next time you're deciding where to dine out!

u/nomnommish · 7 pointsr/IndianFood

If you want to absolutely floor your BF, then consider making kothu roti. It is a very popular street food dish in Sri Lanka, and has tons of variations. Kothu means "chopped" or "cut". It is originally a leftover dish. The idea is to take leftover flatbreads such as roti or plain paratha (you can buy them in an Indian store - fresh or frozen), fine dice the roti or paratha, stir fry it with Sri Lankan spices (such as curry leaves, garlic, turmeric powder, and coriander powder) and, add an egg and any leftovers such as yesterday's chicken or sausages, and stir fry it for a couple of minutes. If you see the video above, the street food kothu vendors will then continue to mix and chop the stir fry while making a clanging sound with their spoons/scoops.

Sri Lankan cuisine is very similar to Tamil and Kerala cuisine (part of South India and very close to Sri Lanka as well). In my previous reply, the video I shared was about North Indian cooking. When most people talk about "Indian food" or what they eat in an Indian restaurant, they usually refer to North Indian food, in fact, specifically Punjabi food.

Tamil and Kerala and Sri Lankan cuisines are quite different from your typical "Indian food" aka Punjabi food. The spices are different, the cooking techniques are different, the ingredients are quite significantly different. And the food is a lot more coastal cooking - lots more seafood and coastal/tropical flavors and ingredients like using fresh and dessicated coconut, coconut milk, etc. Tamarind is also extensively used as the acid or souring agent, and black peppers are mainly used for spice.

On a side note, South Indian and Sri Lankan cooking is ancient and predates the adoption of "New World" vegetables like chili peppers, tomatoes, potatoes etc. I mean, a lot of recipes have adopted these veggies over time, but a lot of them still use the more traditional spices and vegetables like black pepper and tamarind.

If you want to learn more about South Indian cooking, look at Vah Chef's videos on youtube. He also has a recipe for kothu. Also try making appam and stew. Here's a separate recipe for just appams because the batter is key, and so is the technique. It is like making crepes - a bit hard in the beginning but once you get the hang of it, becomes easier. Similarly, consider making egg curry with a tamarind based curry.

Other staples are sambar (a tamarind based lentil and veggie soup, usually had with rice), and rasam (again a tamarind and tomato based broth, eaten with rice).

If you want a really elevated gourmet but simple to make dish, consider making Chef Vineet Bhatia's pan-fried chicken made with rasam powder, served with idi-appam or string hoppers. This dish is well worth making and is also super elegant. It is literally a Michelin star dish as Vineet Bhatia is a Michelin star chef and I think this is what he serves in his restaurant.

Idiyappams are a South Indian rice noodle dish, and you will need a special press. It costs about $20 and is well worth buying it. You will also need a steamer to cook this. Or an idly steamer.

This is a bit too much effort to be honest. You could just make the chicken-rasam dish above and serve it with white rice (or any other bread). Of you can pair it with lemon rice or tamarind rice

Hope I haven't overloaded you with too much information! This barely scratches the surface of South Indian cooking. You can also google "south indian fish curry" or "south indian prawn curry" or "chettinad recipe". Chettinad is a part of Tamilnadu that is known for its meat and seafood dishes. It is also more on the spicy side, so be warned!

u/Bryek · 6 pointsr/Cooking

There is no slider to push the spaetzle through the holes.... The dough would just sit on top of this thing.

u/DarkChyld · 6 pointsr/Cooking

This one was the one recommended to me when I was in the market for one.

https://www.amazon.com/Marcato-Atlas-Wellness-Pasta-Stainless/dp/B0009U5OSO

u/natelyswhore22 · 4 pointsr/DIY

It was this one: 3-Piece Pasta Roller & Cutter Set Attachment for KitchenAid Stand Mixers,Stainless Steel Pasta Maker Accessory by Gvode https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0721M32GH/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_i_UdD4DbYM6BAJ0

I think we bought it on a daily deal so it was a little cheaper

u/blix797 · 3 pointsr/Cooking

Not sure where yours is from, but from the title of the listing it sounds like it's made of Chinesium. Mine looks exactly the same but was made in Italy, it's held up great for 10 years. Return yours if you can and go for the $60 Marcato model.

If you have a KitchenAid stand mixer, their roller attachment is also legit good, plus it will save your arms. Downside is it's way more of an investment to get all the attachments. I personally really love the extruder.

u/baconfriedpork · 3 pointsr/AskCulinary
u/DarkwingDuc · 3 pointsr/Atlanta

What kind of pasta? If you're only looking to make basic stuff, fettuccine, tagliolini, lasagna, buy one of these, skip the class, and just watch a couple youtube how-to videos. I promise you, it's stupid easy, just takes a little practice.

For cooking classes, I recommend Korean Fusion and Chinese Southern Belles.

u/justsayno2carbs · 3 pointsr/keto

I have a slicer that looks like This one. They're all basically the same thing and they all get the job done. Choose one that fits your budget. I would stay away from a Julienne Peeler. Yes, its the least expensive option but from my experience julienne peelers don't work well and it's a pain in the ass. If you're willing to spend a little bit more for a better product, The Paderno is probably the best option and comes with more blades and is very user friendly. I'm going to get the Paderno for my birthday in May.

u/widgetjam · 3 pointsr/ramen

This looks great. I know how frustrating it is when the noodles don't turn out the way you want. If you're serious about noodles I highly suggest you buy a pasta machine like this one. I can't reccomend it enough

u/Mornduk · 3 pointsr/sausagetalk

This is the one I have, works like a charm for the batches I usually do (5-10 lbs for each flavor). It'll put a smile in your face first time you use it. I got smooth sausage links in 10 mins that were taking over an hour with the grinder stuffing insert. Highly recommended. I also got this "cake press" to push the farce remaining in the main one after a batch. It's a joke in comparison but if I was coming from my first days of using the grinder to stuff, I'd be delighted. Finally I have this funnel for blood sausages, I don't use it anymore as my technique improved and I can use the piston with liquids without creating a mess, but it would also have been better and faster than the grinder stuffer.

u/Chef0053 · 3 pointsr/recipes

It's a lot faster to roll out a larger amount of pasta. you can get it thinner and more precise and cut quicker. I have one that I love when I make fresh pasta, I make a lot and freeze some for later. this is the one I have

[Pasta Machine]
(https://www.amazon.com/Marcato-Machine-Stainless-Silver-Instructions/dp/B0009U5OSO/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1493526504&sr=8-1&keywords=pasta+machines)

u/I_See_Wrong_People · 3 pointsr/AskCulinary

Yeah, absolutely. You need a pasta drying rack. Like this one. http://www.amazon.com/Norpro-1048-Pasta-Drying-Rack/dp/B00004UE7U

Dries fast, should keep for a few weeks no problem.

u/ASnugglyBear · 2 pointsr/boardgames

>Other boxes?

Game boxes or really any boxes can be put in and will be structurally sound to "raise the floor" of a section like you did in your build so you don't have to "dig for pieces". You might have to cut off one wall of the box to make it fit, but that's a great way to get a weight bearing "floor" that's easily reachable if you don't need the empty space in the box for storage. It is a lot faster than building structure elements if you can just cut up a small box you got from packaging at the grocery store, and if lining the box, no one will ever see it.


>Nested trays

I've done that. I have innovation in a bigger box, with one of the actual innovation boxes inside as a holder of play mats.

Use this on almost any cut over 1 inch
T-Square

Use this along the T-Square to make super straight, square lines. The reviews say "make sure and put some excess foam board underneath" but I've gotten by with cardboard and a self healing mat: Linear Foamboard Cutter

If you're making boxes that are to be structurally stable on their own, will be passed about, or will need to support an ailing box, don't skip using this. It makes a perfect glue surface and good looking (but not perfect) corner: Rabbit Cutter. This product packaging shows what a rabbit looks like.

This prevents your table from getting hurt. I believe they all use that chemical (phalates maybe?) to be soft and such, so keep it away from pregnant people and children. A self healing mat

This is more useful on paper itself than long cuts on foam board, as it doesn't stay against the T-Square well. But, for short cross cuts, I think it's superior than Xacto knives and utility knives: [Rotary Cutter](https://www.amazon.com/Fiskars-Comfort-Grip-Rotary-Cutter-45mm/dp/B00DD2W1Q8/ref=sr_1_9?s=office-products&ie=UTF8&qid=1492008006&sr=1-9&keywords=rotary+cutter](https://www.amazon.com/Fiskars-Comfort-Grip-Rotary-Cutter-45mm/dp/B00DD2W1Q8/ref=sr_1_9?s=office-products&ie=UTF8&qid=1492008006&sr=1-9&keywords=rotary+cutter)

u/mr_canoehead · 2 pointsr/food

It's so easy, made some a few days ago. I use a spaetzle maker.

u/whyhellomichael · 2 pointsr/ketorecipes

Kitchen Active Spiral Slicer, ABS Plastic with Stainless Steel Japanese Blades, Black https://www.amazon.com/dp/B00MG6ZEZM/ref=cm_sw_r_other_awd_Qr8Iwb6KEZG98

$10 spiralizer. Buy some zucchini or squash, takes about 1 minute per item. There are fancier ones out there and you can buy them at target or Walmart or where ever you shop.

Just heat them up in some oil, top as you choose. The other option is spaghetti squash, also delicious, but takes baking in the oven to prepare. Really does turn out "like spaghetti."

u/hk93g3 · 2 pointsr/Cooking

This is how I first started making it and then after about the tenth time of making it, I decided to fork out the $30 for a pasta roller/cutter like this and now I crank it out in no time flat.

u/Xetrov1 · 2 pointsr/AskCulinary

I went with this one last month when I was buying a gift for my wife. We've since made ravioli and fettuccine, both of which turned out great. I don't ever want to eat store-bought dried pasta again. I was looking for a well-reviewed machine for <$50, and this fit the bill.

I've made both ravioli and fettuccine "by hand" before, and using the machine resulted in a huge reduction in time/frustration and a huge increase in the quality of the end product. I'd recommend an entry-level hand crank model, like the one I listed. For another $30-40 or so, there are better reviewed models out there, but I have zero complaints from the one I referenced above.

u/juperson · 2 pointsr/recipes

1/4 lb beef liver

1 small onion

1/2 tsp black pepper

1 tsp allspice

1/2 tsp clove

2 eggs

3 cups flour

1 cup milk (add ONLY IF using spaetzle maker)

Grind liver and onion in a blender. Add spices and eggs to the blender and blend. Measure the flour into a mixing bowl then pour the blended mixture onto the flour and mix.

If SCRAPING DUMPLINGS: Add 1-3 tsp of water to make a stiff dough. Remove dough from the mixer and kneed until you have a stiff dough, return the dough to the bowl and push the dough to the edge of the bowl. Scrape dumplings with sharp knife into boiling water (add 1 Tbsp of oil to water to prevent sticking). When dumplings rise to the top of the water remove with a slotted spoon into strainer then spread onto a cookie sheet to cool. Spray with Pam and DO NOT LET THEM DRY OUT. Refrigerate or freeze. I freeze in gallon size ziplock bags.

About 30 minutes before serving time heat bacon grease over med. heat in a large nonstick skillet and toss kneflies in grease to reheat, salt to taste. Cover and stir often to prevent browning and sticking. Serve with turkey or beef gravy.

If using Spaetzle Maker: Do not add water but remember to add the milk.

My spaetzle maker looks like this one

u/prplx · 2 pointsr/food

I do have a hand machine, and that is what I use. http://www.amazon.ca/CucinaPro-150-Imperia-Pasta-Machine/dp/B0001IXA0I

u/ProfessorPoopyPants · 2 pointsr/FoodPorn

In my experience, I've found that following this recipe to the letter yields good results, and although it can be done without it, one of these is basically a necessity. Err on the side of more egg than flour, flour the worksurface nicely, and when you're kneading the dough, knead it like you're trying to make it quantum tunnel through your table. And once you've run it through the cutter and got your first batch of pasta, drape it over a wooden chair, if you have one, or hang it until you're ready to cook all of it.

And jamie's correct about the type of flour you need - tipo 00 or gtfo.

(And since it's a lot of effort to make fresh pasta, a simple and easy sauce is this: Take four tomatoes, fry them in olive oil until they're brown on one side, and then burst them with a wooden spoon. Mix it about, add salt and pepper, and serve with the pasta.)

u/d3rtus · 2 pointsr/FoodPorn

Your spaetzle is nice and long. Mine usually end up 'short'. I'm roughly using 2 cups flour, 2 eggs, 1 cup milk, salt, and using a Norpro. How do you make yours?

u/cynosurescence · 2 pointsr/foamcore

I've become a bit of a foamcore junkie, and my designs have gotten much more complex as time has gone on. I keep meaning to post here, but always forget until my design philosophy changes again and I think "I need to wait until I get more pictures of X", then the cycle repeats.

Part of my evolution has been changing how I do joints. I want to start off by saying this -- unless you are a perpetually unsatisfied perfectionist like me, pinning and gluing is more than enough. In fact, I rarely find pinning necessary if you have a good triangle set in several sizes.

For the love of God, don't dove-tail. It is not worth the time you will spend on it and you will hate yourself after a while. I'm not saying this from direct experience, but given the experimenting I have done, just the thought of cutting dovetails makes me break out in hives.

The middle ground that I have found in both increasing attachment surface while maintaining efficiency is making rabbet cuts with the FoamWerks rabbet tool. Rabbets cut part of the foam board away, leaving an extension that consists of one papered side and a small amount of actual foam. You can glue each joint on two surfaces, so it's much stronger, and has the side benefit of hiding foam edges on all but the top surface.

The rabbet is not perfectly calibrated, so there is always 1-2 mm of excess that needs to be trimmed away, and it changes the way pieces fit together by a few mm, but once you get used to that the process of rabbet cutting your joints only takes an extra minute or so per joint. To me, the aesthetics of it make it worth doing.

ALL OF THAT said, if you just want something functional, and are not using it as some kind of twisted art/engineering project, then square cutting and gluing joints is perfectly fine.

u/CircleTheFire · 2 pointsr/boardgames
u/fun_blame_monster · 2 pointsr/food

creating things from scratch will definitely change your perception of them, and also let you alter the flavors to taste. It can be as hard or as easy as you want. The biggest thing is to just follow the recipes. Other people have done all the hard work, all you need to do is repeat what they did.

For example:

-This pizza dough

-or this pasta sauce, which can serve as a great base to add other flavors. Then, you can customize it even more by making pasta from scratch with one of these.


u/savemejebus0 · 2 pointsr/food

Well done! Isn't fresh pasta the best! Those tomatoes look luscious. What color? What kind?

Edit: When you get back get a machine! I have this one. REALLY well made and cannot beat the price" Had it forever.

u/laquecuelga · 2 pointsr/AskMen

Tomato salad with goat cheese and basil. Dress that with olive oil and just a little bit of salt and freshly ground pepper.

I've found out that making food that people is not used to do anymore at home causes a great impression. For instance I like making pasta from scratch. Having a pasta maker machine and a little bit of practice it is incredibly easy. For me it takes the same amount of time to make pasta from scratch than to cook dehydrated pasta, only cleaning up is a little bit more of work. The flavor of fresh pasta is way better than store-bought noodles and when you point out that you made the noodles, your guests get really impressed.

Same with sauerkraut (or anything pickled), ginger ale, sausages. Most people have no idea how these things are made, because for a couple of generations now, these foods have been bought in a store. So it causes a big impression when somebody actually takes the time to watch a youtube video and then prepare these foods.

u/call_me_cthulhu_ · 2 pointsr/Random_Acts_Of_Amazon

for my entry I made an album

-something from nature: grass, clovers, sticks -something metal: aluminum foil as the campfire flames and metal wire holding some of my sticks on and together with each other - image clipped from a magazine or comic book: the images were clipped from walking dead comics -paint: watercolor. I painted the background, sky, grass, etc -words: dialogue cut from the comics

If I win I'd love this so I can make ravioli.

thanks for the contest and getting me back into painting!

u/StovetopLuddite · 2 pointsr/food

Hey! I bought it on Amazon during Cyber Monday, but it's still cheaper than the original price! It works lovely: Marcato Atlas Wellness 150 Pasta Maker.

I bought it at $50, but it's currently $70 which is still a great price for such great quality

u/Itamaraju · 2 pointsr/pasta

Yes, I think it tastes better and the texture is far superior. In addition, the surface is rougher, so it "picks up" the sauce better. The basic recipe is simple:1 egg per 100g flour, plus water to make a pliant, non sticky dough. Although a true Semolina "00" flour is prefered or a Durham... Truth be told I use good ol' GD unbleached all purpose flour (or maybe half and half with whole wheat)

I failed my first few attempts to hand-cut the dough (or did not have the patience) to make uniform thickness, which is vital. I gave up until I bought a pasta maker.... Now I will never go back to store bought pasta. My machine is a Marcato Atlas 150. It comes with a tagliolini (like a square spaghetti) and fettuccine cutter. For around $79 on Amazon And you can get a bunch of different cutters.

u/sebwiers · 2 pointsr/BDSMcommunity

One each curry comb and butter paddle (actually a gnocchi board, but they look exactly the same). The handle may be a bit weak but that's easy to replace (for me - I do metal and woodworking).


Yes, the butter paddle causes substantial bruising. The effect is much like a cane, just differently shaped injury.

u/ilovethatpig · 2 pointsr/Cooking

Is this the pasta roller you're talking about? I've been wanting to get into making my own pasta and I already have the kitchenaid.

u/Sixtydotnine · 2 pointsr/nutrition

nah a legit pasta maker, like making the pasta from scratch yourself

https://www.amazon.com/Marcato-8320-Machine-Cutter-Instructions/dp/B0009U5OSO

Once you do it, you will consider boxed pasta filth, and you won't ever want to pay to get pasta when you go out to eat, the cost would be absurd

https://www.amazon.com/slp/pasta-storage/o6wvrumoteyq6ye

u/southward · 1 pointr/gaybros

I don't have one yet, but I'd love one of these pasta machines, and a food processor is always handy.

u/sean_incali · 1 pointr/Cooking
u/Pepper-Fox · 1 pointr/Cooking

It's eeeeeeasy. Just need a spaetzle maker, i have this one link then some flour, salt, eggs, and water.

u/JethroMason · 1 pointr/fromscratch

https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B01JIUH2OY/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_i_-IZKDb9S1CDA2

It worked really well for us, although it was much easier with two sets of hands. One to feed the dough, one to crank the machine and one to feed it out. Maybe with more practice I might be able to manage by myself!

The fact it comes with a couple of shaping attachments is very useful - although others might offer more.

u/victorzamora · 1 pointr/Cooking

When I got mine, I researched obsessively. I got a cheap one, and it feels cheap. However, I've had zero problems with it and I'll keep it until I give it away to upgrade a few years from now. This was the only one consistently recommended under $100.
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B000ATUKBK/ref=cm_sw_r_other_awd_10nOwbWMZHQ5K

u/tangmeowmeow · 1 pointr/AskWomen

For pasta maker,try checking out goodwill. I found a perfect pasta maker (under $10) in goodwill and Amazon sells the exact one for almost $70. (https://www.amazon.com/gp/aw/d/B0009U5OSO/ref=s9_top_hm_awbw_b1DO3_g79_i2/163-6104625-6906523?pf_rd_m=ATVPDKIKX0DER&pf_rd_s=mobile-hybrid-11&pf_rd_r=5HW3YZH78QFS00DMYJ9Y&pf_rd_t=30901&pf_rd_p=6b64e573-a66c-5e58-8d8c-c9f5244d3bb2&pf_rd_i=289791)
I would love a set of high quality Japanese kitchen knives as well.

u/Thyrsus24 · 1 pointr/Cooking

I got a spaetzle maker on amazon http://www.amazon.com/gp/aw/d/B00004UE89?pc_redir=1405865560&robot_redir=1 and it made all the difference! Perfect delicious spaetzle every time (I think the package had a recipe on it I've been using even)

u/MannyCoon · 1 pointr/food

I don't like single-use kitchen tools, but I've used my mom's spaetzle grater and it's so worth it!

u/hashmish · 1 pointr/ramen

there is always the expensive and lazier alternative:

https://www.amazon.com/Torchio-Bigolaro-Press-Pasta-Maker/dp/B00GA83U08

no more rollin required, just stuff in the dough and done 😀

u/Dick-Is-Cunt-Kiss · 1 pointr/woodworking

total noob in anything about woodworking here..i want to make simple pasta drying rack (something like this) ..drilling couple of holes shouldnt be big of a problem.,.but i have one question..do i have to treat wood with something or i can leave it just like that?and if yes,what would be recommendation if its going to be in contact with food?

u/BmoreIntelligent · 1 pointr/baltimore

Try making it yourself, it is surprisingly easy and cheap.

https://www.amazon.com/Marcato-Machine-Stainless-Silver-Instructions/dp/B0009U5OSO/ref=sr_1_3?s=kitchen&ie=UTF8&qid=1493825909&sr=1-3&keywords=pasta+machine

That is the machine I got and it works great. Fresh pasta is just eggs, flour and maybe olive oil.

Here is a video that tells you how to make it:

https://stellaculinary.com/cooking-videos/kitchen-preparation-techniques/kp-021-how-make-fresh-pasta

u/godless-life · 1 pointr/germany

You can buy them on Amazon, though rather expensive. They do have a Spätzle Maker from Amazon Basics as well, which seems to be good value for money: https://www.amazon.com/Norpro-3128-Spaetzle-Maker/dp/B00004UE89/

The recipe is simply flour, eggs and lukewarm water. I add salt, pepper and chili flakes as well... Can post 'my' recipe if you care? It's actually super super simple to make, and done in a heartbeat.

u/AeroGold · 1 pointr/food

You can get a spaetzle maker for cheap at a lot of ethnic stores (my mom got one in Chinatown of all places). And its pretty damn easy to make: recipe I use a lot.

If you don't want to buy the spaetzle maker, you can also use a good a metal colander over a pot of water. The recipe I linked to above also has a "How to Make Spaetzle" demo video.

It's very delicious and very cheap/easy to make. The only downside is waiting about 20-30mins after mixing the ingredients before you cook. Good luck!

u/Megmca · 1 pointr/funny

When my brother and I were bad my parents would use those wooden paddles you use for making butter balls.

u/tr1ppn · 1 pointr/Random_Acts_Of_Amazon

Trying again without links:

So, I decided that I don't feel like spending more time on this, and I got most of them, so let's roll with it.
___

Riddle 1

Wine

[Item - Spaetzle Maker] amazon.com/dp/B00004UE89/ref=wl_it_dp_o_pC_nS_ttl?_encoding=UTF8&colid=2RQMTOPDX95LA&coliid=I3T5XA41NPA20B

So this is kind of a stretch, but hear me out. Over the weekend, I let the "German" in me out, and I cooked a wonderful meal consisting of schnitzel (pork shoulder blade, fried to perfection) and a side of spaetzle (German dumplings). That evening, I also bought a bottle of Roscato (a sweet red wine from Italy) to have with dinner, and it was DELICIOUS. While making the meal and drinking the wine, I mentioned to my wife how great it would be to have a spaetzle maker. She agreed, so it's on the WL.

___
Riddle 2

A doormat (though based on theme it should really be a broom, but that doesn't make sense in your riddle)

[Item - Subaru Floor Mats] amazon.com/dp/B004HGXWXU/ref=wl_it_dp_o_pC_nS_ttl?_encoding=UTF8&colid=1462GJGC40KP1&coliid=IAIIHKXJYAGUI

So on Thursday I bought myself a new-to-me 2011 Subaru Legacy. It's pretty cool minus the issues with the key, but besides the $100 I had to spend to "fix" it, it's grand. I noticed when checking out the car that it had gray Jetta floor mats. Note that my car has black leather interior, and is a Subaru, not a VW Jetta. I found these, they have good reviews, so I put them on my WL as something to get for my new car so I can get rid of those awful floor mats.
___
Riddle 3

A hat

[Item - Sunglasses] amazon.com/dp/B005P195KU/ref=wl_it_dp_o_pC_nS_ttl?_encoding=UTF8&colid=P31L4QN6S6PK&coliid=I2DOHRI12MKZ6T&psc=1

There are two things every good baseball/softball/wiffleball player needs. A good hat, and a good pair of sunglasses. I always wear a hat (thanks a lot, male pattern baldness), so I've got plenty of those (need to get a new one, but Amazon doesn't have the one I want). What I don't have is a good pair of sunglasses for playing ball outside. My aviators are scratched, and, well, wearing aviators to play sports doesn't exactly work well. These are sitting on my WL for that day where I finally go "DAMMIT I NEED SUNGLASSES TO GO WITH MY HAT."
___
Riddle 4

A book

[Item - A+ Cert Study Book] amazon.com/dp/1118324056/ref=wl_it_dp_o_pC_nS_ttl?_encoding=UTF8&colid=E9RD1GO4V1KF&coliid=I3I1EOQ0P5X4TS

So this one is REALLY lame compared to my other stories. For this, it's an ACTUAL BOOK (how lame). I work in IT, and one of the most BASIC qualifications for most jobs is CompTIA A+ certification. I know that with a brief refresher I could pass the test pretty easily, but I don't want to take any risks, and would rather study up and blow it out of the water. I need this book in order to help me do that.
___
Riddle 5

This one I'm not sure about, but I can't take any more time to figure it out (thanks a lot, work). A trunk? that seems to make the most sense based on the theme here....

[Item - LEGO VW Camper Van] amazon.com/dp/B0050R0XEG/ref=wl_it_dp_o_pd_nS_ttl?_encoding=UTF8&colid=2KY51TV5KVQCC&coliid=I1FBGVJXQ9BEYK)

This one is a real stretch. When I went through this the first time, I thought that you were looking for "A car" (boot//trunk//place to store stuff or even hide in), but then when I looked at the theme of everything, I decided that was wrong. I changed my mind and went with a trunk. To combine those two things, here's the LEGO version of a car, which has a trunk, and also has a little suitcase on the top of it, as it is meant for camping and camping activities - a great place to hide away from everything!
___
Bonus

A cape!

[Item - LEGO Movie Batman figure] amazon.com/dp/B002U2UFB0/ref=wl_it_dp_o_pC_S_ttl?_encoding=UTF8&colid=2KY51TV5KVQCC&coliid=I2J6HQ9IEA6T9E)

What better way to exemplify the answer of "A cape" to a riddle than with a legit superhero. I actually bought this little batman for a friend of mine, and after putting it together, thought I should have one myself. He has two faces, a cape, the bat helmet, and a batarang. This character is simply awesome in the movie, and looks pretty damn awesome to boot! (Get it? Boot? From the last riddle? ^(I get it ... it's not funny...))
___

No WL Additions were made for this, I improvised and managed to connect everything to something already on my WL. Thanks for the contest!!!

u/PantyThief_7 · 1 pointr/Charcuterie

I use this one. It's really cheap and gets the job done. A full tube is about 230 g.

LiebHome Food Grade Quality Manual Sausage Maker Meat Stuffer Filler Hand Operated Salami Maker Funnel Hand Tools (Sausage Stuffer Barrel) https://www.amazon.com/dp/B075LNY8DD/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_s.DYAb011PHKH

Also, I've been making salamis with freshly ground pork from my butcher and I ask to grind in extra fat. I may get a grinder someday, but it hasn't cost me more to ask them to grind it for me. Until then, I will continue to do so.

u/sharriston · 1 pointr/EatCheapAndHealthy

Amazon has one that works pretty well. Spaetzel maker

u/Rumbottlespelunker · 1 pointr/food

check these out. They work great, but are a bit tough to clean.

u/MrTeDDi3 · 1 pointr/IronChef

Yep. First time posting, and I sorta missed that originality memo.

As for acid in the salad, I let the tomatoes carry that component. Now that you mention it, it probably could have gone for a spritz of lemon.

This is my pasta machine. It is a thing of beauty. If you shop around, you can find it for much cheaper than Amazon.

Thanks for the review!

u/ThatGuyInSanJose · 1 pointr/whatisthisthing

It looks like an add-on to a Marcato noodle maker

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0009U5OSO

u/whatrosasaid · 1 pointr/Random_Acts_Of_Amazon

My family makes lasagna every year by hand at Christmas. We usually average 70lbs of it. No joke. Don't worry, it's for a party, we don't eat all of it ourselves. That being said, one of these is a must have if you wanna get down to pasta making roots. It makes the process fun, and gives your arm a workout (and looks much better doing so than a shake-weight)

u/AchillesFoundation · 1 pointr/gadgets

We have an Imperia. It's really well made. It's a lot more heavy duty than the Norpro that seems to be really popular for not that much more money. It feels almost identical to my grandma's as far as weight and quality, and works just as well.

For reference, we've made pounds of pasta with it so far. This includes hundreds of ravioli's (I HIGHLY recommend a ravioli press). I buy my semolina flour from Amazon, since it comes out way cheaper than the grocery store. I find a 50/50 mix of semolina to regular flour makes a nice, manageable consistency.

Happy eating, and good luck!

u/IrrawaddyWoman · 1 pointr/1200isplenty

There are lots of ways to form them. A cheese grater works too. We have a gnocchi board to use too. My nonna always says that you just have to add the grooves and textures so the sauce will stick to them.

https://www.amazon.com/Fantes-Gnocchi-Beechwood-8-Inches-Original/dp/B0019R7SPS/ref=mp_s_a_1_3?ie=UTF8&qid=1549738034&sr=8-3&pi=AC_SX236_SY340_QL65&keywords=gnocchi+board&dpPl=1&dpID=41XCbtS-sjL&ref=plSrch

u/wingsta · 1 pointr/ketorecipes

If you are looking for a cheap pasta maker I came across this for $16.99 on ebay with free shipping. Not sure how long the sale would last. http://www.ebay.com/itm/Stainless-Steel-Fresh-Pasta-Maker-Roller-Machine-for-Spaghetti-Noodle-Fettuccine-/401082713240?rmvSB=true

The same machine is $24.99 (and even that is cheap for a pasta maker) on Amazon and have decent reviews http://www.amazon.com/Pasta-Maker-Machine-Heavy-Stainless/dp/B01COGM5YQ/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1459182470&sr=8-1&keywords=oxgord+pasta+maker

u/MaggieMae68 · 1 pointr/Cooking



I love my Kitchenaid attachment for pasta since it's easier for one person to use. But if you're more dexterous than I am (or less klutzy) and can manage a hand crank version. this is the one I used for years and still have.

https://www.amazon.com/Marcato-Machine-Chrome-Cutter-Instructions/dp/B0009U5OSO

u/furudenendu · 1 pointr/AskCulinary

How about this?

u/LazyG · 1 pointr/Cooking

Well, while for risotto with a meat stock i advocate no creamy elements other than the parmesan at the end, for a mushroom risotto i like adding a bit of mascarpone at the end.

I rehydrate the dried porcini in boiling water, till soft, then saute together with a big bunch of chestnut mushrooms and some butter. Obviously reserve the mushroom liquor to add to the veg stock you are using. You can even get porcini stock cubes from some italian stores.

I split the mushrooms between added once the rice is getting toward cooked, and maybe 1/4 reserved to put on top of the finished dish. Then a big handful of parmesan and a couple of spoons of mascarpone once the rice is done and you have taken it off the heat.


Pasta is well worth it, but you need a roller. Also do not cheap out on the roller, cheap ones suck. Basic is Imperia Cucina pro. ALso acceptable are the roller attachments for kitchenaids.

WHen you make it yourself, just be sure to use some 00 flour and work it until it is nice and springy. You will make dodgy quality the first time ro two but after that it is incredibly satisfying. While not seasonal I love making a primavera-ish pasta. Take a big bunch of asparagus spears, and cut off the tips and reserve. Boil the stems and a big handful of peas until just done, then pure up with some butter, parmesan, salt and pepper. Then in a pan saute diced leek, carrot, onion and celery. Add the puree and the asparagus tips and a few more peas, also boiled to just done. Mix most fo it through and keep a little for the top and a few parmesan shavings. It looks like this http://imgur.com/zqJQ0Bg It also works with bought fresh pasta but so much better home made.

u/MortallyHolyRunaway · 1 pointr/Random_Acts_Of_Amazon

It's was so fun! I have a pasta maker so that made it sooo easy. What are some great is my recipe makes about 4 to 6 servings and you don't have to dry it before you cook it, you only do that if you want to use it in a few days.
This is the pasta maker I use.
And this is the pasta I made.

u/tletnes · 1 pointr/whatisthisthing
u/danimalle · 1 pointr/EatCheapAndHealthy

Thanks. Yeah. Pasta is hard to give up. You could cheat the white carb rule a little by making homemade handcut whole wheat pasta someday. You are both probably too busy now but it sure is fun and tastes great. I got to the point I could make fresh pasta for two in the time it took the water to get to a boil. Then it cooks in under two minutes. I have celiac now so I can only make oat pasta (which is weird) but as I recall the recipe was a scant cup of flour with two eggs or a half cup white wine or water and some salt blended into a dough you knead mercilessly. Then you roll it flat like pie dough and cut it into narrow strips with a big knife or a pizza cutting wheel. You can also flour the surface of the dough and fold or roll that and slice it like cookies off a roll of cookie dough then shake them out loose. If you have time let the strips dry a bit either drapped over an open cabinet door, flat on a cutting board or piled in a loose nest. Then when a bit dry on the surface throw into boiling water and scoop it out with a slotted spoon after it floats up in a minute and a half to two minutes depending on how thin you rolled it. If you use the yellow colored “semolina” wheat it is divine. Durum bread flour also gives an nice al dente texture. If you buy a cheap hand roller press/cutter the results will look professional. Don’t get an expensive electric extrusion pasta maker though... extrusion pasta is not as good a rolled pasta. Learn to make pasta together and you will be a very happy chubby couple ;0) This is the only machine you need: https://www.amazon.com/OxGord-Pasta-Maker-Machine-Fettuccine/dp/B01COGM5YQ

u/Michaelpi · 1 pointr/Cooking

This is one of the best dish's in Germany, bake it with some cheese and its also very tasty.

you can totally buy a maker in the states, on amazon prime too!

http://www.amazon.com/Norpro-3128-Spaetzle-Maker/dp/B00004UE89/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1415033337&sr=8-1&keywords=spetzel

u/arhoglen · 1 pointr/rpg

I just found on on Amazon Prime for $11.69 for anyone else interested in doing this project!

u/andkeener · 1 pointr/pasta
u/taylormitchell20 · 0 pointsr/ketorecipes

>Spaetzle
>
>Ingredients
>
>1 C Carbalose Flour
>
>2 Eggs
>
>6 T Heavy Cream
>
6 T Water
>
½ t Salt
>
¼ t Pepper
>
⅛ t Guar Gum
>
⅛ t Xanthan Gum
>
⅛ t Grated Nutmeg
>
2 Drops Liquid Sucralose
>
Instructions
>
>Bring a pot of water to simmer.
Put flour & spices together and stir.
Beat eggs then add water, heavy cream, & Sucralose and add to flour.
Batter should be of a medium thick consistency.
Using an old fashioned large holed grater, put about ½ C batter on top, and with grater over the water, run your index finger gently over the dough and let it drop into the water. It will sink and almost immediately float. Cook about 2 minutes.
Remove with a small strainer or spider.
Repeat until finished.
>
>
>4 Servings
>
>171 Calories, 9.8g Protein, 12.7g Carbs, 4.8g Fiber, 7.9g Net Carbs

Somewhat higher in carbs than I'd like for a side dish, but if you plan the rest of the day, 8g of carbs is manageable. I think so at least. Plus, it's totally worth it for this pasta.

Oh yeah, if you don't mind a one use tool, I highly suggest getting a Spaetzle Grater. It will be much easier than the cheese grater method described in the original recipe.

u/punkonjunk · 0 pointsr/Cooking

None, really. You can readily make simple noodles like ravioli, stranded noodles, etc with nothing but your hands and something to roll it out with - roller, or a flat bottle or something.

However, this is an excellent tool for rolling out sheets. from there you can cut them to the size of your raviolis into strips, place filling balls and lay a strip on top, and then press the sides with a fork. Otherwise there are other things on amazon to help as well, but I find them unnecessary.