| Po again. If I can’t get to Italy…. |
| We make our own with flour imported from Italy. |
| My kids much prefer De Cecco. I was shocked they even had a preference but starting in kindergarten they asked for the light blue box with the lady on it. |
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Honestly yes. De Cecco is better than Barilla, but the random stuff in gourmet or Italian grocery stores in the clear bags is the best by far. I don't have a specific brand to rec but if it looks like some random little Italian brand and the label is in Italian, it's good IMO.
I am often of the opinion that generic brands are as good as name brand, but dry pasta really is a place worth splurging. |
| Trader Joe’s sells a fantastic organic pasta imported from Italy |
NP - recent associations with cancer growth https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10935767/ |
DeCecco is widely sold in Italy.... It's barely more expensive than Barilla or other cheaper brands. A box of pasta is typically under $3. I buy DeCecco spaghetti at WF for $2.50. Not sure how this is fleecing dumb rich folks.... |
This is the best strategy. In general, pasta is a commodity product with a very simple and well-known production process. And, unless you're talking about "alternative" pasta (e.g. chickpea, gluten-free, brown rice, whole wheat, or flavored/egg etc the ingredients are the exact same--water and semolina. Only a few very low-end producers use anything other than semolina. Most Italian pasta producers use non-Italian semolina because it's cheaper. However, the use of a bronze die does make the production process more expensive and (imo) improves the texture.
De Cecco does have a slightly higher protein content than a lot of the non-name brand Italian pastas, which is a minor quality indicator (higher-protein semolina is more expensive). I also find that sometimes that non-De Cecco "bronze die" pasta will seem quite slick and a bit questionable as to whether it was really made using a bronze die, although most of the time they're fine. And, someone mentioned it above, but lol at the person saying that they're Italian and De Cecco is a scam because it's expensive. It's a huge brand/producer in Italy, it's not like, say, De Lallo, which is a brand invented by an importer to sell to Americans. The real scams are those 8 dollar packages. You're basically paying 4-5 dollars extra for the fancy packaging and shapes that cost maybe 30 cents more to produce. You're not getting anything better than De Cecco, but if you really don't want to buy De Cecco because it's too popular just get Rummo/La Molisana/Di Martino, etc;. |
| Interesting. We can only afford the generic pasta. |
| I've recently started buying Goodles - it's often on sale at Whole Foods. I don't know that it's premium, but it's good and I like it. |
| We have tried them all and can barely tell a difference. We usually buy the "alleged" premium because it's not that expensive -- but it's probably a waste to be honest. |