Best Fresh Egg Pasta Gluten Free Recipes

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FRESH EGG PASTA-GLUTEN FREE



Fresh Egg Pasta-Gluten Free image

This recipe from "More from the Gluten-Free Gourmet", by Bette Hagman is being posted by request. I have not tried it, but I know somebody who swears by it and her husband who has no dietary restrictions agrees. If there is one gf pasta recipe to try, this is it, because as far as I know, there are no commercially made gf wide egg noodles on the market.

Provided by GinnyP

Categories     Spaghetti

Time 30m

Yield 6-8 serving(s)

Number Of Ingredients 7

1/2 cup tapioca flour
1/2 cup cornstarch
3 tablespoons potato starch
3/4 teaspoon salt
4 1/2 teaspoons xanthan gum
3 large eggs (or 4 or 5 egg whites)
1 1/2 tablespoons vegetable oil

Steps:

  • In a medium bowl, combine flours, salt, and xanthan gum.
  • Beat the eggs lightly and add the oil.
  • Pour the egg-oil liquid into the flour mixture and stir.
  • This will feel much like pastry dough.
  • Work the dough into a firm ball.
  • Knead for 1 or two minutes.
  • Place the ball of dough on a potato starch-floured (rice flour turns noodles gray) breadboard and roll as**thin as possible**.
  • This dough is tough and, when almost transparent, will still handle well.
  • Cut into desired shape.
  • For fettuccine and spaghetti, slice very thin strips.
  • For a noodle casserole, make slightly wider noodles.
  • If using for lasagne, cut into 1 1/2-by-4-inch rectangles.
  • To cook pasta: Cook in salted boiling water, to which 1 tablespoon of oil has been added, for about 10 to 12 minutes depending on the thickness and size of your pieces.
  • You will have to test for doneness.
  • Drain and rinse well.

Nutrition Facts : Calories 124.3, Fat 5.8, SaturatedFat 1.2, Cholesterol 93, Sodium 329.9, Carbohydrate 14.1, Fiber 0.4, Sugar 0.3, Protein 3.5

GLUTEN-FREE FRESH PASTA RECIPE



Gluten-Free Fresh Pasta Recipe image

Homemade gluten-free pasta is often gummy, gritty, and disappointing. Not this version. Made with brown rice flour, tapioca starch, and xanthan gum, it results in beautiful, tender noodles once cooked.

Provided by Elizabeth Barbone

Categories     Pasta

Time 40m

Yield 4

Number Of Ingredients 5

1 1/2 cups (7 1/2 ounces) brown rice flour, plus more for dusting
1/2 cup (2 ounces) tapioca starch
1 teaspoon xanthan gum
4 large eggs
Kosher salt

Steps:

  • In a large bowl, whisk together brown rice flour, tapioca starch, and xanthan gum. Add eggs. Switch to a wooden spoon and stir until a dough forms. Generously dust your counter with brown rice flour. Turn dough out onto counter and knead a few times until fairly smooth.
  • Divide dough into 4 equal pieces and work with 1 piece at a time, keeping the rest covered. Press the dough to flatten it slightly. Using a pasta machine set at the widest setting, run the dough through 2 times. Continue rolling dough through successively narrower settings until you reach the second-to-last setting.
  • Cut dough sheet in half horizontally and pass each through the fettuccine cutter. (The spaghetti setting is too thin for this gluten-free pasta.) Dust pasta with brown rice flour and place on a rimmed baking sheet. Repeat with remaining dough pieces.
  • Bring a pot of salted water to a boil. Cook pasta until tender, about 5 minutes. Serve immediately with your choice of sauce.

Nutrition Facts : Calories 318 kcal, Carbohydrate 54 g, Cholesterol 186 mg, Fiber 3 g, Protein 10 g, SaturatedFat 2 g, Sodium 233 mg, Sugar 1 g, Fat 6 g, ServingSize Serves 4, UnsaturatedFat 0 g

HOMEMADE GLUTEN-FREE CLASSIC EGG PASTA



Homemade Gluten-Free Classic Egg Pasta image

Number Of Ingredients 5

10 ounces (280g; about 2 cups) all-purpose King Arthur gluten-free flour*, plus more for dusting
2 whole large eggs (110g; about 4 ounces)
4 yolks from 4 large eggs (70g; about 2.5 ounces)
1 teaspoon kosher salt, plus more for salting water
salt and oil of choice for boiling (last step)

Steps:

  • Most people will tell you to work on a large, clean work surface; if you want to do that, great. If you don't want dough everywhere, and want an easier time mixing your dough I recommend a wide mouth bowl as long as the bottom is flat and at least 8" across. I used the largest of this set. From there, pour flour in a mound - then use your fingers to push flour out of the center, into a "well." Make the well in the center about 4 inches wide. In separate bowls, separate eggs then combine the wet ingredients and beat with a fork. Pour lightly beaten eggs and salt into well. Use the fork to scoop the edge of the flour into the center of the well, a little bit at a time, gently beating and combining the eggs and flour as you turn the bowl. If you don't use a bowl, you'll need to rotate your arm around the flat surface... see why I recommend breaking with tradition?! When combined, gradually incorporate flour into the eggs until a wet, sticky dough has formed. About half way through your dough will start to come together well, and then about 3/4 through will start to get too crumbly to combine. That's when to dump it out onto the working surface and start to combine with your hands.
  • Using your hands, scrape excess dough from fork and fingers out of the bowl. Begin to fold remaining flour from the bowl into the dough, turning the dough roughly 45 degrees each time, not yet pressing the dough out but working the smaller crumbs of dough into the ball until about 95% is in the ball, 2 to 5 minutes. You don't want to overwork the dough and still have the true working of the dough next, so do this as gently and quicky as you can to simply combine flour with eggs.
  • Next, sprinkle a tad of flour on the surface if it's porous, to prevent dough from sticking. Once combine, press the heel of your hand into the ball of dough, pushing forward and down and into and upward motion as you push fully out. Then with the tips of your fingers pull that edge back into the ball, folding in on itself. Rotate the ball 45 degrees and repeat; about 8-12 times total; until dough develops a smooth texture similar Play-Doh. If dough feels too wet, add flour in 1 teaspoon increments. If dough feels too dry, add egg yolk 1/4 of a yolk at a time.
  • For gluten pasta you wrap in plastic and let rest for the proteins to develop. GOOD NEWS, we don't need to do any of that. GF pasta actually ends up being more quick and easy because of this!
  • If working on a porous surface, place a sheet of parchment paper on a tray or cutting board and dust lightly with flour. I used granite that has been properly sealed and had no issues working on the surface and didn't even need to dust with flour. Be aware as you work and see if the dough is drying out from too much dusted flour (don't want that) or sticking to the surface (and needs a dusting). Cut dough ball into quarters. Set one quarter on work surface and cover remaining dough with slightly damp towel. With a rolling pin, flatten the quarter of dough into an oblong shape about 1/2 inch thick. The goal here is as long and evenly flat as possible.
  • Set pasta maker to widest setting (8) and pass dough 2 times through the machine at this setting with your Kitchen Aid mixer on level 4 for motor speed (we will maintain this speed throughout).
  • If your dough stays together and doesn't tear at the edges, you're ready to go to the next step. If it is pulling and separating, you want to make the dough less wide, and try again. You would 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. The key here is reducing width, so press the torn edge inward and combine with the layer it just combined with. Then, when the shape is thin enough, and less wide, pass through the rollers again (2 times at width 8).
  • Narrow the setting by 1 double notch (6) and repeat Step 7. Ideally, not needing to roll out any further at this point. For us, at level 6 we ran it through, reduced the width to 4, then ran it through again. Continue passing the dough through the rollers, reducing the thickness each time until it reaches the desired thickness. We recommend stopping at 4 if you're going to use a pasta cutting attachment, or going from a 4 to a 3 if making your own and cutting by hand (like ravioli, lasagna, or wide noodles) It should now be very delicate, and slightly translucent.
  • Place rolled dough onto a work surface, loosely folding the dough over as necessary so that it fits; cover with the slightly damp cloth until ready to cook or store.
  • Keep dough covered with slightly damp kitchen towel to prevent drying, then repeat Steps 5 through 9 with remaining dough quarters. If making noodles, cut dough to preferred size segments (12-14" long is recommended).
  • 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.
  • Divide the cut noodles into individual portions and curl into a nest. return under towel until ready to cook. Pasta can be refrigerated for 48 hours (the eggs are raw, don't eat them or leave them in the open air) or 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.
  • Bring a large pot of very salty water to a rolling boil. Add oil before adding in the pasta. There's no flavor in this pasta, you've got to add it to the water, trust me; and the oil will help prevent sticking! Add pasta, stir gently with a spider, wooden spoon, chopsticks, or a cooking fork, and cook, tasting at regular intervals until noodles are just set with a definite bite, about 1 minutes. Drain, toss with oil or butter, then sauce, and serve.

GLUTEN-FREE FRESH PASTA



Gluten-Free Fresh Pasta image

Nutty chickpea flour and a gluten-free all-purpose flour blend team up to build an easy-to-work-with homemade gluten-free pasta dough.

Provided by Kendra Vaculin

Yield About 1 lb. pasta dough

Number Of Ingredients 5

1 cup gluten-free flour blend (such as Bob's Red Mill Gluten Free 1-to-1 Baking Flour)
¾ cup chickpea flour
1 tsp. Diamond Crystal or ½ tsp. Morton kosher salt
3 large eggs
2 Tbsp. extra-virgin olive oil

Steps:

  • Whisk together gluten-free flour blend, chickpea flour, and salt in a large bowl. Whisk eggs and oil in a small bowl to combine.
  • Add egg mixture to dry ingredients and stir with a fork to incorporate; mixture will be crumbly. Tip out onto a surface and knead until a smooth dough forms, about 3 minutes. Form dough into a ball and wrap tightly in plastic. Chill at least 1 hour and up to 1 day to allow flour to hydrate (the longer you can let it rest, the better).
  • Roll out pasta according to pasta machine directions or roll out and cut by hand.

FRESH GLUTEN-FREE PASTA



Fresh Gluten-Free Pasta image

When you find out you cannot eat gluten, one of the first foods you worry about living without is pasta. There's a certain mourning involved, imagining a trip to Italy without a mound of fresh fettuccine. Guess what? The Italians make great gluten-free pasta, since many of their citizens have celiac sprue. You can buy a package of gluten-free pasta at the farmacia and take it to the best restaurant in town, where they will make the pasta of the day for you. When we first started making pasta, we tried our favorite gluten pasta recipes with gluten-free flours, without much success. It took us about fifteen different recipes and wranglings with flour combinations before we figured out the right ratio of flours to liquids. Now, at least once a week, when we want a quick meal, we pull out flours and make homemade pasta.

Provided by Shauna James Ahern

Categories     Mixer     Vegetarian     Wheat/Gluten-Free     Dinner     Sugar Conscious     Kidney Friendly

Yield Feeds 4

Number Of Ingredients 8

2/3 cup (70g/2.5oz) corn flour
1/2 cup (70g/2.5oz) quinoa flour
1/2 cup (60g/2.125oz) potato starch
2 teaspoons xanthan gum
1 teaspoon guar gum
1 teaspoon fine sea salt
2 large eggs
4 egg yolks from large eggs

Steps:

  • Combining the Flours
  • Sift the corn flour, quinoa flour, and potato starch into a large bowl. Add the xanthan gum, guar gum, and salt and stir. Sift the entire mixture into the bowl of a stand mixer.
  • Forming the Pasta Dough
  • Put the eggs and egg yolks into the bowl of dry ingredients. Run the stand mixer on medium speed with a paddle attachment until the dough feels fully formed, about 3 minutes. The final dough should feel firm yet still pliable, a little like playdough.
  • Making the Pasta
  • If you are using a pasta machine, cut the ball of dough into quarters and roll out each piece of dough to about a 1/2-inch thickness. We like to roll out each piece between 2 pieces of parchment paper. Lightly flour both sides of the dough with a bit more potato starch. Run the dough through the machine, increasing the setting each time, until the dough is paper-thin and long. If the pasta sheet starts to break, it is thin enough.
  • If you are making the dough by hand, we suggest you cut the ball of dough into 8 pieces, and then cut each of those pieces in half, so they are about the size of golf balls. Roll out each piece of dough as thin as you possibly can.
  • For fettuccine, use the fettuccine setting on the pasta machine. If you are cutting the dough by hand, you want ribbons of pasta, about 1/4-inch wide. For spaghetti, use the spaghetti setting on the pasta machine. If you are cutting the dough by hand, you want thin strings of pasta.
  • For ravioli, cut the rolled-out pasta into 2-inch-square pieces. Dollop the filling in the middle of a square of pasta. Brush the edges of the pasta with an egg wash. Place another pasta square on top and press down, crimping the edges. (Having a ravioli cutter on hand helps with this process.)
  • For lasagna, leave the pasta in long sheets.
  • To cook the pasta, bring a large pot of salted water to a boil. Put the pasta shape of your choice into the boiling water. When the pasta rises to the surface, take a little piece and taste it. You should be able to bite into it without it falling apart. (With gluten-free pasta, it's a fine line. One moment it's al dente, and the next it's one big ball of mush, so watch the pot.) Cooking times will vary for the different shapes. Fettuccine generally takes 4 to 5 minutes, spaghetti 3 to 4 minutes. Ravioli takes a little longer, about 5 to 6 minutes. The cooking times will differ in each kitchen, depending on how thin you were able to roll out the dough. Let your taste be the judge.

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