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Fresh Fettuccine





Yields
Makes about 1 lb.




Total Time
1 hr

Angelo Garro, an architectural blacksmith living in San Francisco, is legendary for his dinner parties--for which he makes everything from scratch, including the charcuterie and the wine. For fresh pasta, he often uses an extruder, but he made this fettuccine for us by hand. He added a bit of semolina to give it a sturdier texture and a heartier flavor--and seasoned it with his own addictive blend of sea salt, wild fennel, and organic spices, called Omnivore Salt (available on omnivoresalt.com). If you like, use it in place of the cayenne, salt, and black pepper.

You'll need a hand-crank pasta machine for this recipe. Scraps from trimming the dough can be pulsed in a food processor with 1 to 2 tbsp. water until moistened, and then re-rolled.

 8 ounces all-purpose flour (about 1 3/4 cups), plus up to 1 1/2 cups more for dusting pasta
 8 ounces semolina flour (about 1 1/3 cups)
 1/2 teaspoon salt
  Pinch of cayenne pepper
  Pinch of black pepper
 2 large eggs
Step 1
1

In a large bowl, mix together flours, salt, cayenne, and black pepper.

Step 2
2

Make a well in the center and crack in eggs. Mix them gently but thoroughly into flour by scooping up handfuls and rubbing between your palms. Sprinkle in about 1/3 cup water and work it into flour mixture, then press dough into a rough ball. If ball doesn't come together, add more water, 1 tbsp. at a time, until it does (it should feel a little dry).

Step 3
3

Turn dough out onto a work surface and knead it until fairly smooth and no longer sticky, about 2 minutes.

Step 4
4

Set a pasta machine to the widest setting. Cut dough into thirds. Working with 1 dough piece at a time (keep others covered with a dampened kitchen towel), pat into a 1/2-in.-thick oval and feed through machine.

Step 5
5

Fold dough into thirds crosswise and feed through again, starting with an unfolded edge. Fold and feed once more the same way. Sprinkle dough with flour if it feels sticky. Repeat folding and feeding, progressing through 2 or 3 successively narrower settings and rolling dough at least twice on each setting, until dough is as thin as you like (fettuccine is usually 1/16-inch thick). If dough sheet gets too long, cut it in half and roll each half separately.

Step 6
6

Repeat with remaining 2 dough pieces, setting sheets to the side when done and covering with a kitchen towel (dampened if the weather is dry).

Step 7
7

Cut each sheet to about 12 in. long and cover with the towel. Pass each dough sheet, dusted with flour if needed to keep from sticking, through the machine's fettuccine cutter. Lay fettuccine on a baking pan and dust with flour. If it's humid outside, let dry for about 1/2 hour to help keep it from sticking as it cooks.

Step 8
8

To cook, bring a large pot of well-salted water to a boil. Add fettuccine and cook until barely tender, about 2 to 3 minutes.

Step 9
9

Make ahead: Through step 7, up to 2 days, wrapped airtight and chilled; up to 2 months, frozen.

Nutrition Facts

Servings 0


Amount Per Serving
Calories 392Calories from Fat 6
% Daily Value *
Total Fat 2.7g5%

Saturated Fat 0.7g4%
Cholesterol 71mg24%
Sodium 477mg20%
Total Carbohydrate 76g26%

Dietary Fiber 3.2g13%
Protein 13g26%

* Percent Daily Values are based on a 2,000 calorie diet. Your daily value may be higher or lower depending on your calorie needs.