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Home ยป Posts ยป The Loon Log

How Pasta Got Its Groove Back

Published: Apr 25, 2013 ยท Modified: Oct 22, 2019 by Cindy Saav ยท This post may contain affiliate links

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Iโ€™m not going to sugar coat this in any way. ย When Kris started to make fresh pasta, it use to bug the crap out of me โ€“ all for selfish reasons of course.

His first pasta making experiments began in the West Village. ย He bought this contraption that probably cost more than we could afford, but that never stopped Kris before when it came to his kitchen gadgets. ย We would have to eat dirt for a week, but hey, it was mixed in the Cuisinart! ย Donโ€™t even get me started on William-Sonoma. ย Through the years, Iโ€™ve learned to deal with it (Itโ€™s called a dry vodka martini straight up with olives, thank you).

Anyway, his first pasta maker was something called a โ€œpasta exuder.โ€ I know, it sounds nice doesnโ€™t it? Something that exudes pastaโ€ฆyum! It was also huge and made a lot of racketโ€ฆperfect for a dinky apartment in the Village. It would push something that was supposed to be pasta out of these holes through the end of it. ย I thought it was hystericalโ€ฆKris not so much. ย That was a great investment.

This kind of put the kibosh on fresh pasta making for a while, which was fine by me. ย Iโ€™m a boy from South Dakota, so pasta night growing up was boiled spaghetti out of a box with a Ragu knock-off for the sauce. ย The sauce usually went straight from the fridge directly onto the pasta. Mom was fancy like that. ย Wait till you hear about The Loon family Thanksgivingsโ€ฆitโ€™ll probably require a couple of entries in the Loon Log.

So I was safe from the pasta making for a few years until that fateful Christmas in Texas in the late 90s. ย Krisโ€™ niece, Kristin, was a very attentive child and always paid close attention to what we wrote on our Christmas gift lists โ€“ unlike her brother who would fly by the seat of his pants (Thanks, Kyle, for the stainless steel bullet shaped salt-n-pepper shakersโ€ฆI use them all the time). ย Anyway, Kristin bought Kris this manual pasta rolling machine. ย It was very nice and very heavy. ย I think we paid extra on the flight home because our luggage was overweight, but Kris made sure we had it. ย My salt-n-pepper shakers fit nicely in my pocket.

Now that Kris had the pasta roller, he was determined to develop the perfect pasta dough. ย After the first few tries, the pasta roller malfunctioned, so I had to be brought into the process to help. ย It was fun at first, you know, like those Italian-esque commercials where everyone is in the kitchen laughing, rolling pasta, flour everywhere and hugging the dog. ย Well, that lasted for about three more rounds of pasta. ย The routine became arduous and my forearm started to form a constant bruise because as he cranked the handle he would always hit my arm. Iโ€™m such a victim.

The manual pasta rolling continued until winter of 2007. It was a wonderful season that year โ€“ civil-unions became legal in New Jersey, and I formed a permanent callous on my forearm. ย That December, Kris and I invited a few friends and family to a small town on the Delaware River in New Jersey called Lambertville where we were officially civil unionized. ย I remember it very clearly โ€“ the snow was falling, the restaurant was adorable and our dear friends gave us a way too generous gift certificate toโ€ฆ.wait for itโ€ฆ.William-Sonoma!

I donโ€™t even think we were done with the third course before Kris had already made up his mind on what he was going to buy with OUR gift certificate. ย I, of course, wanted to buy copious amounts of peppermint bark. ย In the end, the KitchenAid standing mixer became a part of our family.

If I knew then what I know now, I would have made that purchase faster than you can say โ€œred velvet cupcakesโ€ because a little while later, we purchased the pasta roller attachment. ย My years of being enslaved as a pasta roller were over!

Every now and again, when Iโ€™m feeling nostalgic, Iโ€™ll bring the dog into the kitchen and help Kris make his spinach pasta which is my favorite. ย Weโ€™ll laugh, toss some flour around, talk with Italian accents and hug the dog.

Then Iโ€™ll get bored and go sit on the couch.

-The Loon

Want another classic Loon Log entry? How about: Mi Nombre es Albondiga (My Name is Meatball)ย OR The First Cooking of the Stock OR Fried Rice and Free Wine!

More The Loon Log

  • Mi Nombre es Albรณndiga (My Name is Meatball)
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