Spinach-Colored Fresh Pasta

Spinach-Colored Fresh Pastan is a dairy free and lacto ovo vegetarian recipe with 4 servings. For $1.36 per serving, this recipe covers 33% of your daily requirements of vitamins and minerals. This main course has 374 calories, 16g of protein, and 8g of fat per serving. Head to the store and pick up all purpose flour, kosher salt, spinach, and a few other things to make it today. 10 people have made this recipe and would make it again. From preparation to the plate, this recipe takes around 1 hour and 10 minutes. It is brought to you by Serious Eats. Taking all factors into account, this recipe earns a spoonacular score of 88%, which is great. Similar recipes are Beet-Colored Fresh Pasta, Orange Tomato Paste-Colored Fresh Pasta, and Tuscan Tri-colored Salad With Fresh Mozzarella.

Servings: 4

 

Ingredients:

10 ounces all purpose flour

1 teaspoon kosher salt, plus more for salting water

1 bunch fresh spinach (approximately 10 ounces), rinsed and stems trimmed

4 tablespoons spinach purée

1 whole large egg

5 yolks

Equipment:

bowl

pot

food processor

salad spinner

dough scraper

plastic wrap

baking paper

cutting board

rolling pin

pasta machine

baking sheet

kitchen towels

chefs knife

wooden spoon

chopsticks

Cooking instruction summary:

Procedures

1

Bring a large pot of water to a boil. Meanwhile, fill a large bowl with cold water and ice. Add rinsed and trimmed spinach and cook 15-30 seconds. Drain and plunge spinach into bowl of water. When spinach is cold, drain and spin in salad spinner. Using a hand-blender or food processor purée the spinach until smooth.

2

To Make the Dough: On a large, clean work surface, pour flour in a mound. Make a well in the center about 4 inches wide. Pour whole egg, egg yolks, spinach purée, and salt into well and, using a fork, beat thoroughly. When combined, gradually incorporate flour into the eggs until a wet, sticky dough has formed.

3

Using a bench knife, scrape excess dough from fork and fingers. Begin to fold additional flour into the dough with the bench knife, turning the dough roughly 45 degrees each time, until dough feels firm and dry, and can form a craggy-looking ball, 2 to 5 minutes.

4

Press the heel of your hand into the ball of dough, pushing forward and down. Rotate the ball 45 degrees and repeat. Continue until dough develops a smooth, elastic texture similar to a firm ball of Play-Doh. If dough feels too wet, add flour in 1 teaspoon increments. If dough feels too dry, add water slowly using a spray bottle.

5

Wrap ball of dough tightly in plastic wrap and rest on countertop for 30 minutes.

6

To Roll the Pasta: Meanwhile, place a sheet of parchment paper on a tray or cutting board and dust lightly with flour. Unwrap rested dough and cut into quarters. Set one quarter on work surface and re-wrap remaining dough. With a rolling pin, flatten the quarter of dough into an oblong shape about 1/2 inch thick.

7

Set pasta maker to widest setting and pass dough 3 times through the machine at this setting.

8

Place dough on a lightly floured work surface. Fold both ends in so that they meet at the center of the dough, and then fold the dough in half where the end points meet, trying not to incorporate too much air into the folds. Using rolling pin, flatten dough to 1/2-inch thick. Pass through the rollers 3 additional times.

9

Narrow the setting by 1 notch and repeat Step 9. Repeat once more (the dough should now have passed through the third widest setting). Continue passing the dough through the rollers, reducing the thickness by 1 setting each time until it reaches the desired thickness. It should now be very delicate and elastic to the touch, and slightly translucent.

10

Place rolled dough onto a work surface or baking sheet lightly dusted with flour or lined with parchment paper, folding the dough over as necessary so that it fits; sprinkle with flour or line with parchment between folds to prevent sticking.

11

Cover dough with plastic wrap or a kitchen towel to prevent drying, then repeat Steps 7 through 11 with remaining dough quarters. If making noodles, cut dough into 12- to 14-inch segments.

12

To Cut Noodles: Adjust pasta machine to noodle setting of your choice. Working one dough segment at a time, feed dough through the pasta-cutter. Alternatively, cut folded dough by hand with a chef's knife to desired noodle width.

13

Divide the cut noodles into individual portions, dust lightly with flour, and curl into a nest. Place on parchment-lined rimmed baking sheet and gently cover with kitchen towel until ready to cook. Pasta can be frozen directly on the baking sheet, transferred to a zipper-lock freezer bag, and stored in the freezer for up to three weeks before cooking. Cook frozen pasta directly from the freezer.

14

To Cook: Bring a large pot of salted water to a rolling boil. Add pasta, stir gently with a wooden spoon, chopsticks, or a cooking fork, and cook, tasting at regular intervals until noodles are just set with a definite bite, about 1 1/2 to 2 minutes. Drain, toss with sauce, and serve.

 

Step by step:


1. 1

2. Bring a large pot of water to a boil. Meanwhile, fill a large bowl with cold water and ice.

3. Add rinsed and trimmed spinach and cook 15-30 seconds.

4. Drain and plunge spinach into bowl of water. When spinach is cold, drain and spin in salad spinner. Using a hand-blender or food processor purée the spinach until smooth.

5. 2

6. To Make the Dough: On a large, clean work surface, pour flour in a mound. Make a well in the center about 4 inches wide.

7. Pour whole egg, egg yolks, spinach purée, and salt into well and, using a fork, beat thoroughly. When combined, gradually incorporate flour into the eggs until a wet, sticky dough has formed.

8. 3

9. Using a bench knife, scrape excess dough from fork and fingers. Begin to fold additional flour into the dough with the bench knife, turning the dough roughly 45 degrees each time, until dough feels firm and dry, and can form a craggy-looking ball, 2 to 5 minutes.

10. 4

11. Press the heel of your hand into the ball of dough, pushing forward and down. Rotate the ball 45 degrees and repeat. Continue until dough develops a smooth, elastic texture similar to a firm ball of Play-Doh. If dough feels too wet, add flour in 1 teaspoon increments. If dough feels too dry, add water slowly using a spray bottle.

12. 5

13. Wrap ball of dough tightly in plastic wrap and rest on countertop for 30 minutes.

14. 6

15. To

16. Roll the Pasta: Meanwhile, place a sheet of parchment paper on a tray or cutting board and dust lightly with flour. Unwrap rested dough and cut into quarters. Set one quarter on work surface and re-wrap remaining dough. With a rolling pin, flatten the quarter of dough into an oblong shape about 1/2 inch thick.

17. 7

18. Set pasta maker to widest setting and pass dough 3 times through the machine at this setting.

19. 8

20. Place dough on a lightly floured work surface. Fold both ends in so that they meet at the center of the dough, and then fold the dough in half where the end points meet, trying not to incorporate too much air into the folds. Using rolling pin, flatten dough to 1/2-inch thick. Pass through the rollers 3 additional times.

21. 9

22. Narrow the setting by 1 notch and repeat Step

23. Repeat once more (the dough should now have passed through the third widest setting). Continue passing the dough through the rollers, reducing the thickness by 1 setting each time until it reaches the desired thickness. It should now be very delicate and elastic to the touch, and slightly translucent.

24. 10

25. Place rolled dough onto a work surface or baking sheet lightly dusted with flour or lined with parchment paper, folding the dough over as necessary so that it fits; sprinkle with flour or line with parchment between folds to prevent sticking.

26. 11

27. Cover dough with plastic wrap or a kitchen towel to prevent drying, then repeat Steps 7 through 11 with remaining dough quarters. If making noodles, cut dough into 12- to 14-inch segments.

28. 12

29. To

30. Cut Noodles: Adjust pasta machine to noodle setting of your choice. Working one dough segment at a time, feed dough through the pasta-cutter. Alternatively, cut folded dough by hand with a chef's knife to desired noodle width.

31. 13

32. Divide the cut noodles into individual portions, dust lightly with flour, and curl into a nest.

33. Place on parchment-lined rimmed baking sheet and gently cover with kitchen towel until ready to cook. Pasta can be frozen directly on the baking sheet, transferred to a zipper-lock freezer bag, and stored in the freezer for up to three weeks before cooking. Cook frozen pasta directly from the freezer.

34. 14

35. To Cook: Bring a large pot of salted water to a rolling boil.

36. Add pasta, stir gently with a wooden spoon, chopsticks, or a cooking fork, and cook, tasting at regular intervals until noodles are just set with a definite bite, about 1 1/2 to 2 minutes.

37. Drain, toss with sauce, and serve.


Nutrition Information:

Quickview
371k Calories
15g Protein
8g Total Fat
58g Carbs
40% Health Score
Limit These
Calories
371k
19%

Fat
8g
13%

  Saturated Fat
2g
17%

Carbohydrates
58g
20%

  Sugar
0.78g
1%

Cholesterol
290mg
97%

Sodium
690mg
30%

Get Enough Of These
Protein
15g
31%

Vitamin K
482µg
459%

Vitamin A
9748IU
195%

Folate
362µg
91%

Manganese
1mg
70%

Selenium
41µg
59%

Vitamin B1
0.68mg
45%

Vitamin B2
0.71mg
42%

Iron
6mg
38%

Vitamin C
28mg
34%

Vitamin B3
4mg
25%

Magnesium
97mg
24%

Phosphorus
237mg
24%

Potassium
674mg
19%

Vitamin E
2mg
19%

Fiber
4g
16%

Vitamin B6
0.33mg
16%

Calcium
145mg
15%

Copper
0.26mg
13%

Vitamin B5
1mg
12%

Zinc
1mg
11%

Vitamin D
1µg
10%

Vitamin B12
0.55µg
9%

covered percent of daily need
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Food Trivia

The fig is also a fertility symbol and the Arab association with male genitals is so strong that the original word 'fig' is considered improper.

Food Joke

The Passover test [My thanks to Jeff G for the following] Sean is waiting for a bus when another man joins him at the bus stop. After 20 minutes of waiting, Sean takes out a sandwich from his lunch box and starts to eat. But noticing the other man watching, Sean asks, "Would you like one? My wife has made me plenty." "Thank you very much, but I must decline your kind offer," says the other man, "I’m Rabbi Levy." "Nice to meet you, Rabbi," says Sean, "but my sandwiches are alright for you to eat. They only contain cheese. There’s no meat in them." "It’s very kind of you," says Rabbi Levy, "but today we Jews are celebrating Passover. It would be a great sin to eat a sandwich because during the 8 days of Passover, we cannot eat bread. In fact it would be a sin comparable to the sin of adultery." "OK," says Sean, "but it’s difficult for me to understand the significance of what you’ve just said." Many weeks later, Sean and Rabbi Levy meet again. Sean says, "Do you remember, Rabbi, that when we last met, I offered you a sandwich which you refused because you said eating bread on Passover would be as great a sin as that of adultery?" Rabbi Levy replies, "Yes, I remember saying that." "Well, Rabbi," says Sean, "that day, I went over to my mistress’s apartment and told her what you said. We then tried out both the sins, but I must admit, we just couldn’t see the comparison."

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