is a wholly-owned subsidiary of JPMorgan Chase & Co. “Chase,” “JPMorgan,” “JPMorgan Chase,” the JPMorgan Chase logo and the Octagon Symbol are trademarks of JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A. We don't support third-party browser extensions or plug-ins.We don't support browsers in Compatibility Mode (this only applies to Internet Explorer).If you're using the latest officially released browser version, there might be a slight delay in our supporting this version as we must conduct testing to ensure it not only meets our strict security standards but also supports all our online features and enhancements.The browser has to be an officially released version. We don't support beta or development browser versions.Some features and functions may not operate properly with unsupported browser versions.When updating your browser, consider this:.Once you have this information, update your browser using the links above. Not sure what browser version you're using? Go to to get details about your current browser. Check your browser to see if you have the latest version.See our Online Privacy Policy to learn why we use cookies. It just shouldn't be called "al dente" and that phrase should be used much more sparingly. Americans typically like their pasta like spaghetti cooked to a much softer consistency than al dente. The words "pasta" and "al dente" just go together when talking about food, whether or not they should go together for that particular preparation. Knows pasta, like how catchwords and -phrases are quickly thrown about by most of us. I think that the biggest reason "al dente" is thrown about is that its use signals that the diner knows the subject. By law in Italy any packaged dry pasta has to use hard wheat flour even if that type flour might be traditional for that style of pasta. These are typically packaged as little nests or balls of pasta. Also, hard wheat flour is found in the egg pastas imported from Italy that are often used as a substitute, as I'm apt to make, for fresh pasta. You might find some pastas made in this age-old fashion at restaurants, but it is very much an exception. It is quite rare here, as soft wheat flour - such as all-purpose - requires much less effort to make into pasta by hand. Freshly made pasta using hard wheat flour is a tradition in parts of southern Italy like the orecchiette in Puglia that can be cooked al dente. This is the toothsome texture, neither too hard and certainly not mushy, but a bit chewy. And a cookbook on the subject, Pasta Fresca, similarly related that "fresh pasta will not have the al dente quality of dried pasta, but instead will be meltingly tender to the bite." It is the commercially made dried pasta - pasta secca - made with hard wheat flour like the familiar spaghetti, linguine and penne found in supermarkets is what can be - and, according to Italians, should be cooked al dente. "You cannot do fresh pasta al dente!" screamed the longtime, Italian-bred chef at San Francisco's famed Fior d'Italia some years ago on a Travel Channel show, Pasta Paradises. In a review of an Italian restaurant a few years ago, the doyenne of local food writers raved that "the house-made pastas here are so good, so springily al dente." Not the correct choice of words not the "springily," which my spell-checker flagged, but "al dente." The mistake is forgivable, as most food writers - and most everyone - are quick to use "al dente" when describing pasta whether or not the pasta is actually al dente.Ĭoncerning the attributes of house-made, or freshly made pasta - pasta fresca in Italian - the words "al dente" are never correct.
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