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your mother is wants to cook some delicious dishes for your birthday. she wants to cook spagetti, your mother ask you to help her nkow what is the procedure.what are you going to do?​

Sagot :

koist

Explanation:

1. Use a large pot

Pick a roomy pot that gives the pasta plenty of space to move around in. This is a good time to call that eight-or 12-quart stockpot into action.

2. Load up the pot with lots of water

You want five or six quarts of water for a standard 16 oz. package of pasta.

When you’re hungry and want to get to spaghetti time stat, you might be tempted to use less water, so it boils quicker. Don’t. Just like pasta needs a roomy pot, it needs plenty of H2O to totally submerge every strand.

Here’s a tip for making the water boil faster. Put a lid on the pot, but keep it partially uncovered so you’ll hear when the water starts to boil. Leaving a gap will also help keep the water from boiling over before you turn it down.

Ever had a covered pot boil over? We have — very stressful.

3. Salt the water

Salt it good! Don’t just give a single tap of the shaker — you want at least a tablespoon for 6 quarts of water. In fact, a chef we know uses 2 tablespoons of coarse salt for 6 quarts of water! You want it to be sea-water salty. Not that we go around sipping the sea, blech.

But the salty water is essential because it boosts the pasta’s flavor.

4. Bring the water to a full, rolling boil

Again, don’t let hanger make you dump in the pasta when the water is at a mere simmer. You want a vigorous boil. Remember, the pasta is going to cool down the temperature of the water once you drop it in. To bring the water back up to a boil more quickly, put the lid back on.

But the second you hear the water boiling again, take off the lid, and…

5. Stir to keep the pasta from sticking

Don’t stray from the stove to check Insta or see what people are tweeting, or settle in to rewatch another episode of Game of Thrones. You’re on pasta duty, people! Stand guard and stir the pot at least two or three times during cooking.

Don’t let the strands clump. They should swirl, unencumbered and free.

6. Test the pasta two minutes before it’s “ready”

Check the pasta packaging for the cook times. This is where it gets tricky. Ever notice that the instructions give a range of time? For instance, regular dry spaghetti takes between 6 to 8 minutes. Or is that 5 to 7 minutes? Or 10 to 12? Depends on the package and the pasta.

(If you’re cooking at high altitude, that adds yet another variable.)

Start checking the pasta’s doneness on the earlier range of the time frame. Fish out a single strand of pasta using a pasta fork (or whatever — we find a pair of chopsticks is perfect). Let it cool, then bite into it.

How does it feel on your teeth? Does the center resist just enough or is there still a bit of a crunch? Does the pasta have a springy bounce to it? That’s what you want.

Unless you love it softer — sometimes a bowl of slightly soggy noodles tastes like home. But no matter your preference, it’s better to err on the side of al dente because you can fix that if a not-quite-cooked texture isn’t your thing (instructions below).

7. Save a scoop of pasta water

Once you think the pasta is cooked to your liking, take two seconds to do this little step that most home cooks skip: Before you drain the water, scoop out a cup or two in a Pyrex measuring cup or really anything that won’t crack.

This starchy water can work wonders in sauces, to either bind the sauce and pasta together, or to thin down thicker sauces so they’ll coat the noodles.

8. Drain, toss with sauce, and serve hot

Place a colander in the kitchen sink and drain your pasta. Put the drained pasta back into the pot with sauce (or into the saucepan if the sauce is still cooking and the pan is large enough), add your pasta water, and toss to evenly coat. Serve piping hot.

How to fix undercooked pasta: If there’s more bite than you like, put it back in the pot with your saved cooking water (see below), add your sauce, and cook over medium high heat for an extra minute or two. Bonus: The sauce will bind with the pasta and create a new kind of yumminess.

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