Anonymous wrote:I bought a pasta pot just because it was a really great deal around Christmas, and love it. Yours sounds different though. Mine is just a regular pot (no insert) with holes in the lid on one side to drain water out when pasta is finished cooking. I use it as a regular pot more than for pasta, but it's great when I do cook pasta.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In my mil's defense, I was helping her with the pasta at her house for a formal dinner, so I get that she wanted things done a certain way. She's old school and she likes to prepare things the "proper" way. I'm a shortcut kind of person and I love making one pot meals and I clean as I go. After my mil makes a meal, the kitchen looks like it exploded and it takes a major clean up afterwards. Just different styles of cooking.
I'm all for learning from her, but the pasta thing just boggled my mind and I wondered if there was reasoning to why she wanted it done that way. And I wondered if someone could simply explain to me the proper way I'm supposed to use a pasta pot. I can't ask her these things. She's horrible at explaining things - she's either secretive or acts like "how come you don't already know this, are you a comple idiot?" She doesn't say that but that's her tone.
And you guys did explain how to use the pasta pot so thank you. So you dump right into the serving bowl from the colander insert- that makes sense. And for some reason it never occurred to me to bring BOTH pots to the sink. And pior to this, I never knew you could rinse pasta. I always just did a quick drain in the sink and threw it back in the pot with a little leftover pasta water to keep it from sticking until I was ready to combine with the sauce.
Don't rinse the pasta, as others have already stated.
This will not steam anything since the vegetables will be sitting in the water.
Also, pasta pots are nice if you're steaming vegetables, especially big batches or batches that take up a lot of space, like a bunch of asparagus, spinach, etc.
Anonymous wrote:1. Most people don't use nearly enough water when cooking pasta.
2. They also don't salt the water enough.
3. You don't Drain the water from the pasta. You take the pasta from the water. Ergo having a pasta insert allows you to remove all the pasta the water in one go without dumping off the pasta water (at least some of which you will need for the sauce)
4. You don't dump the pasta back into the pot in which you just cooked it. You put it in the sauce to finish cooking so it picks up the flavor of the sauce, thickens it, and finished cooking the pasta.
5. You also add back some of the pasta cooking water which adds body to the sauce (due to the starch in the water), gives it a sheen (same), and sort of melts/melds everything together. In the last few minutes you also can then toss in fresh chopped herbs and grated (freshly done) cheese to taste.
There. All said nicely and with no undertone.![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In my mil's defense, I was helping her with the pasta at her house for a formal dinner, so I get that she wanted things done a certain way. She's old school and she likes to prepare things the "proper" way. I'm a shortcut kind of person and I love making one pot meals and I clean as I go. After my mil makes a meal, the kitchen looks like it exploded and it takes a major clean up afterwards. Just different styles of cooking.
I'm all for learning from her, but the pasta thing just boggled my mind and I wondered if there was reasoning to why she wanted it done that way. And I wondered if someone could simply explain to me the proper way I'm supposed to use a pasta pot. I can't ask her these things. She's horrible at explaining things - she's either secretive or acts like "how come you don't already know this, are you a comple idiot?" She doesn't say that but that's her tone.
And you guys did explain how to use the pasta pot so thank you. So you dump right into the serving bowl from the colander insert- that makes sense. And for some reason it never occurred to me to bring BOTH pots to the sink. And pior to this, I never knew you could rinse pasta. I always just did a quick drain in the sink and threw it back in the pot with a little leftover pasta water to keep it from sticking until I was ready to combine with the sauce.
Don't rinse the pasta, as others have already stated.
This will not steam anything since the vegetables will be sitting in the water.
Also, pasta pots are nice if you're steaming vegetables, especially big batches or batches that take up a lot of space, like a bunch of asparagus, spinach, etc.
Anonymous wrote:In my mil's defense, I was helping her with the pasta at her house for a formal dinner, so I get that she wanted things done a certain way. She's old school and she likes to prepare things the "proper" way. I'm a shortcut kind of person and I love making one pot meals and I clean as I go. After my mil makes a meal, the kitchen looks like it exploded and it takes a major clean up afterwards. Just different styles of cooking.
I'm all for learning from her, but the pasta thing just boggled my mind and I wondered if there was reasoning to why she wanted it done that way. And I wondered if someone could simply explain to me the proper way I'm supposed to use a pasta pot. I can't ask her these things. She's horrible at explaining things - she's either secretive or acts like "how come you don't already know this, are you a comple idiot?" She doesn't say that but that's her tone.
And you guys did explain how to use the pasta pot so thank you. So you dump right into the serving bowl from the colander insert- that makes sense. And for some reason it never occurred to me to bring BOTH pots to the sink. And pior to this, I never knew you could rinse pasta. I always just did a quick drain in the sink and threw it back in the pot with a little leftover pasta water to keep it from sticking until I was ready to combine with the sauce.
Anonymous wrote:So there was nothing in the pot except water and you weren't allowed to use a lid to boil it? Did she think the water would be ruined by being boiled too fast?
Anonymous wrote:I'm shocked MIL served buttered pasta at a formal dinner party.
Anonymous wrote:I use my huge pasta pot occasionally, without the insert, for making chicken stock. For pasta, I use a pot about half the size and perfect for cooking a pound of pasta.