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Flour + Water: Pasta [A Cookbook] Hardcover – September 30, 2014
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Chef Thomas McNaughton shares his time-tested secrets to creating simple, delicious, and beautiful artisan pasta—from the best fresh doughs to shaping and cooking every type of pasta. A true celebration of Italy’s pasta traditions, flour + water includes fifty seasonally influenced recipes for home cooks of every skill level. The recipes cover the flavor spectrum from well-loved classics to inventive combinations, such as Tagliatelle Bolognese; Pumpkin Tortelloni with Sage and Pumpkin Seeds; Tomato Farfalle with Chicken Polpettine, Roasted Peppers, and Basil; and Asparagus Caramelle with Brown Butter. With guidance from McNaughton and the secrets of flour + water’s dough room, anyone can learn to make amazing pasta at home.
- Print length288 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherTen Speed Press
- Publication dateSeptember 30, 2014
- Dimensions8.81 x 1.17 x 10.3 inches
- ISBN-101607744708
- ISBN-13978-1607744702
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Editorial Reviews
Review
—Michael Tusk, chef/owner of Quince and Cotogna
“Pasta is my life. And for me, it is always such a rare and beautiful thing when someone else shares your passion and dedication to such a simple thing as a noodle. Thomas not only writes about pasta, but you get the sense when reading flour + water that it is his life too.”
—Marc Vetri, chef and author of Rustic Italian Food
“You might think that a comprehensive tutorial in pasta making would be dry, but you’d be wrong. I read flour + water in one sitting, fascinated by the lively story of one of San Francisco’s great restaurants and the smartly written, easy to follow recipes. This is an enchanting, inspiring book.”
—Daniel Patterson, chef and author of Coi
“There is a romantic, rustic, mysterious consonance about both Thomas and flour + water. It’s easy to lose yourself in each recipe’s seeming simplicity before—WHOOSH!—you’re consumed with complexity, wisdom, expertise, and sincerity you might have never expected. This is my favorite part about great chefs and their food.”
—Christina Tosi, chef/owner Momofuku Milk Bar
“Flour + Water is nothing short of brilliant. For anyone who adores great pasta and wants to truly understand the craft behind it, this gorgeous cookbook is a must-have. Thomas is creative, passionate, and has amazing energy; he also has the hands of a nonna—a rare thing for sure. I’m going to go make pasta!”
—Barbara Lynch, chef and restaurateur
About the Author
THOMAS MCNAUGHTON is the executive chef and co-owner of flour + water, Central Kitchen, and Salumeria in San Francisco. He has worked at some of the most respected restaurants in San Francisco, including La Folie, Gary Danko, and Quince. He has twice been nominated for Rising Star Chef of the Year by the James Beard Foundation.
PAOLO LUCCHESI is a reporter and columnist for the San Francisco Chronicle. Born and raised in South San Francisco, he was the founding editor for Eater San Francisco and Eater National, and has written for Food & Wine, Saveur, and McSweeney’s, among others.
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
From Bologna to San Francisco
Pasta is woven into the cultural fabric of Italy—it pretty much is culture in Italy—but it holds a particularly high place in the hierarchy in Bologna. It was there that I fell in love with pasta—and where I really learned to make pasta.
The dominance of pasta in Bologna is evident within minutes of walking around the city. Just like taquerias inhabit every corner of the Mission in San Francisco, and the neon signs of pizza-by-the-slice joints light up Manhattan neighborhoods, so does fresh pasta rule the windows of Bologna markets. Sold by weight or by the bundle, fresh pasta is inescapable there. It comes in a rainbow of dough colors, and in all sizes, though you can be assured every shop proudly displays the requisite pasta signature of Bologna: nickel-sized tortellini. You might even see old ladies in the window, rolling out fresh pasta for tourist passersby.
But as someone once told me, Italy is “under the table.” In other words, to really, truly understand the essence of anything in Italy, you have to look a little harder, immerse yourself, and start to peel back the layers. Look past the Disneyland-like gloss of touristy restaurants in the city center with the overpriced microwaved tagliatelle Bolognese. Instead, seek out the under-the-radar olive grove in the countryside that has quietly been making oil in the same way for decades, or the hobbyist miller who taught himself how to produce the best flour in the area. Or see it in the the pair of young brothers at Zavoli Farms who are single-handedly maintaining tradition by raising indigenous heritage breed pigs in the easternmost, sun-kissed hills of Emilia-Romagna while pushing forward by experimenting with new techniques for making salumi.
As it happens, my “under the table” moment in Bologna actually took place above its streets. Having found myself in Italy looking for a change of pace from the fine dining kitchens of San Francisco, France, and Germany, I met a gregarious Bolognese native named Marcello via John Pauley, a chef I met while working at La Folie in San Francisco. Marcello had an available room in Bologna. Once he found out I was a cook looking to learn about Italian cuisine, he wasted no time in referring me to a place that would change the course of my career: Bruno e Franco la Salumeria.
The salumeria itself is glorious, its shelves stocked with jars of vibrant green olives, giant wheels of pungent cheese, and myriad cured pork products, all procured from the best in the region. Across the street is a little second-story room overlooking the salumeria. The street-level entrance is completely unmarked save for a hidden little buzzer. You wouldn’t find it if you weren’t looking for it; it cryptically reads “Laboratorio.”
Up a narrow flight of stairs lies the salumeria’s pasta “laboratory”—a small workshop consisting of a few tables and little else. It’s where all the fresh pasta sold in the salumeria is made. In old-school Bologna, the laboratorio and the salumeria have a symbiotic relationship; one exclusively makes the product and the other exclusively sells it. Compared to the splendor of the salumeria, the pasta lab room is incredibly bare bones, and despite the name, there’s nothing scientific or laboratory-like about the place. It is more like a glimpse into the past.
Inside, there are a dozen Italian ladies of all ages dressed in pastel pink chef coats, making fresh pasta in the same way they did the day before, and the day before that, and the day before that. They only make a handful of pasta types: Bologna’s sacred tortellini are the most prolific output of the room. Rounding out the day’s work are batches of tagliatelle, passatelli, paglia e fieno (straw and hay), Roman-style gnocchi, and finally, depending on the day, maybe a few orders of ready-to-bake cannelloni. The entire day’s production will sell out downstairs in the salumeria, and it will be restocked the next day.
Spanning several generations, the women themselves are the tableau of Bologna, and of Italy. Some of them come from an older generation, the generation that grew up in the war-ravaged years of the 1940s and 1950s, when food was scarce. They speak softly with an air of authority, often drifting off into dialect, basically acting like the Italian nonna you always imagined, telling winding anecdotes and politely answering your dumb question in that old, Italian matter-of-fact way that makes the question seem even dumber. Other ladies are younger. Some came from other careers; some have known nothing but pasta making. Some are natives of Bologna; some moved here from elsewhere in Italy. The ones from the south, for example, spark arguments about which region’s cuisine is better. Whatever their origins, they all tell bawdy jokes, they gossip about town, they smoke in the bathroom during breaks. Many are mothers, since a job making pasta is amenable to family life. Their workday starts at dawn, allowing them to leave in time to pick up the children from school.
They are all wonderful and charismatic characters in a marvelous play.
Varying personalities aside, the women are all united through their work at the pasta laboratorio, where they work as a single, perfectly functioning unit. One rocks back and forth as she rolls out sheet after sheet of fresh handmade pasta dough with her mattarello, a long wooden Bolognese rolling pin. The women use matarelli made especially for the laboratorio by a blind woodworker down the block; mechanical pasta machines are frowned upon, to say the least. Another woman is mixing gnocchi dough by hand in the corner, while a third, working at the window, wields a weathered knife to precisely slice pasta dough into the uniform shreds of tagliatelle.
The rest of the ladies hover around a table near the entrance, methodically forming the day’s worth of tortellini to be sold downstairs. While they twist the circular shapes, their constant chatter fills the room. The pasta lab is a time capsule—a fully functioning preservation of Bolognese culture and tradition.
It is true craftsmanship. There are no assigned jobs, but each woman floats from one table to the next. Maybe the youngest one—or the one who came to work late that day—will get stuck making the cannelloni; forming the filled pasta is the messy, labor-intensive job that no one else wants to do. The voices of the ladies barely overshadow the rhythmic, dull sounds of the rolling pin slowly doing its dance, stretching the pasta dough over the wooden table, forming their sfoglia—the sheet of fresh pasta dough. When the dough is completely flattened into a massive, imprecise four-foot-wide sheet, it is slid over to another table, where the tortellini are formed by other ladies.
Every hour or so, the teenage kid from the downstairs salumeria arrives to take a few trays of pasta down to the salumeria, looking at me and gently sighing how glad he is that he didn’t
have to be the only guy upstairs in the lab anymore. He confesses, in his broken English, that he felt uncomfortable when the ladies would discuss, as he put it, “feminine topics.” He smiles and takes the trays of pasta downstairs to the display case.
I found myself in the pasta lab by chance, and I stayed for months. The ladies became family, though I’m pretty sure they made fun of my Italian language skills (or lack thereof). After working as a fine dining soldier for years, I felt myself yearning for a change, for something more soulful, more personal. I found it in the unlikeliest of laboratories, along with a new pasta passion.
--------------------------------------------------
Eggplant Mezzalune with Cherry Tomatoes
Growing up in New Jersey, I was subjected to bastardized versions of Italian food throughout my childhood, much of which involved massive amounts of coagulated cheese and cloyingly sweet tomato sauce. One of the pillars of East Coast Italian-American cuisine is, of course, eggplant Parmesan—fried slices of breaded eggplant, buried in an avalanche of
red sauce and melted cheese.
Many of our dishes at Flour + Water have roots in familiar flavor combinations, and this is my Northern California take on those eggplant Parmesan flavors—tomatoes, eggplant, melted cheese—with a key twist of smokiness from the treccione scamorza, a smoked mozzarella cheese. (If you can’t find treccione scamorza, use another smoky soft cheese, like smoked mozzarella; in a pinch, any good mozzarella will suffice as well.)
Eggplant always lends itself beautifully to smoky flavors, and it’s a common flavor pairing in southern Italy, where smoked soft cheeses are abundant. If you ask a southerner—like Angela Moncada, one of the ladies in the pasta laboratorio whose family came from Sicily to Bologna—about the best home-cooked southern dishes, melanzane alla parmigiana is invariably at the top of the list. What’s not so common in southern Italy are stuffed pastas. But here, we incorporate those southern flavors in a stuffed pasta shape named mezzalune (half moons).
Mezzalune are probably the most basic stuffed pasta shape in this book—just one fold of a circle—and a great way to get your feet wet in the stuffed pasta realm.
Serves 4
Equipment
Blender + Baking sheets + Pasta machine
Rolling pin + 2½-inch ring mold or cookie cutter
Piping bag (optional) + Spray bottle
Store-bought option
Any fresh, cheese-stuffed pasta
Eggplant Filling
2 large globe eggplants, halved lengthwise (700 grams)
Olive oil
Kosher salt
¾ cup treccione scamorza cheese, finely diced (131 grams)
¼ cup grated Parmigiano-Reggiano cheese
Grated zest and juice of 1 lemon
Freshly ground black pepper
Tomato Sauce
3 tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil
1 medium clove garlic, very thinly sliced
1 cup cherry tomatoes, stemmed (150 grams)
Freshly squeezed lemon juice (optional)
Mezzalune
1 recipe Rav Dough (page 7)
1½ tablespoons Aleppo pepper
Marinated Cherry Tomatoes
1 cup cherry tomatoes, halved (200 grams)
Sea salt
Cracked black pepper
1 tablespoon extra-virgin olive oil
To Finish
2 tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil
Kosher salt
1¼ cups loosely packed whole fresh basil leaves
Freshly grated Parmigiano-Reggiano cheese, for finishing
Preheat the oven to 325°F.
To make the filling, with a knife, score a shallow crosshatch pattern in the flesh of the eggplant to allow steam to penetrate while cooking. Lightly season the eggplant flesh with olive oil and a pinch of salt. Place the eggplant halves, face down, on a baking sheet. Roast in the oven until the flesh is soft and fully tender when pierced with a knife, about 25 minutes. Scoop out the flesh and add to the jar of a blender. Puree until smooth.
Quickly transfer the eggplant puree to a mixing bowl while still hot, and, with a wooden spoon, stir in the treccione scamorza and Parmigiano-Reggiano. Mix until the cheeses are melted and
well incorporated. Add the lemon zest and juice and season with salt and pepper. Refrigerate the filling until ready to use. The filling can be refrigerated up to 3 days.
To make the sauce, add the olive oil and garlic to a cold sauté pan and cook over medium-high heat until the garlic starts to brown, 2 to 3 minutes. Add the whole cherry tomatoes and cook until they start to blister and their skin just starts to break. Don’t overcook—you want a fresh tomato sauce, not a concentrate. Transfer the tomato mixture to the jar of a blender and puree until smooth. Season to taste; if your tomatoes aren’t very acidic, add a squeeze of lemon juice. Set aside.
Dust 2 baking sheets with semolina flour and set aside. To make the pasta, follow the instructions for the Rav Dough (page 7), incorporating the Aleppo pepper with the dry ingredients. Using a pasta machine, roll out the dough until the sheet is
just translucent (see page 10). Cut a 2-foot section of the dough sheet and cover the rest of the dough with plastic wrap.
Using a 2½-inch-diameter ring mold or round cookie cutter, cut out rounds of dough.
Using a piping bag or a spoon, place a teaspoon of filling in the middle of a dough round, leaving ¼ inch of dough bare around the edge. Fold the circle in half to create a half-moon shape. Use a spritz of water from a spray bottle to help seal it if necessary. Start the seal at the top crest of the half-moon (12 o’clock): gently but firmly seal the dough, removing the
air pocket by moving your fingers down the edges on both sides simultaneously, caressing the filling to create a tight, airless pillow.
Put the mezzalune on a flat surface and crimp the edges with a fork. Working quickly, place the mezzalune, slightly apart, on the prepared baking sheet. Don’t let the mezzalune touch each other or they may stick together. Repeat until you run out of dough or filling. You should get about 45 to 50 pieces. Let them sit uncovered while you make the marinated tomatoes. The tomatoes should be made no more than 30 minutes before using them or they will start to break down.
To prepare the marinated tomatoes, season the tomatoes generously with salt, pepper, and the olive oil. Allow to marinate for 20 minutes before plating.
To finish, bring a large pot of seasoned water to a boil (see page 18). Add the 2 tablespoons olive oil and ½ cup pasta water to a cold 12-inch sauté pan. Place the pan over high heat and bring to a simmer.
Drop the filled mezzalune in the large pot of boiling water. Once the pasta is cooked 80 percent through, until almost al dente, 2 to 3 minutes, transfer to the sauté pan using a hand-held strainer and stir to incorporate. Reserve the pasta water. Add the tomato sauce to the pan and season with salt. Bring the sauce back up to a simmer and cook until the sauce coats
the back of a spoon and the pasta is tender, 2 to 3 minutes. Remove from the heat.
To serve, divide the pasta and sauce between four plates. Garnish each serving with fresh basil, marinated cherry tomatoes, and freshly grated Parmigiano-Reggiano.
Product details
- Publisher : Ten Speed Press (September 30, 2014)
- Language : English
- Hardcover : 288 pages
- ISBN-10 : 1607744708
- ISBN-13 : 978-1607744702
- Item Weight : 2.68 pounds
- Dimensions : 8.81 x 1.17 x 10.3 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #40,615 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #19 in Pasta & Noodle Cooking
- #48 in Seasonal Cooking (Books)
- #62 in Italian Cooking, Food & Wine
- Customer Reviews:
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Customer Reviews, including Product Star Ratings help customers to learn more about the product and decide whether it is the right product for them.
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Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonCustomers say
Customers find the cookbook beautifully laid out with well-done recipes, particularly praising the ravioli and pasta dough sections. The book is easy to follow and serves as a great guide for beginners, while providing detailed information about professional techniques. They appreciate the history of pasta and the well-written content, with one customer noting it's the best book on classic pastas. While customers enjoy the story, they find the book not worth the price.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
Customers appreciate the book's beautiful layout and well-done photography, particularly noting that the recipes include many pictures and that the sauces are presented in a nice way.
"...I though the recipes for sauces are quite well done. I especially enjoyed the Bolognese Ragu and will likely use it as a standard...." Read more
"...workable and he offers substitutions, ideas and options to make the recipes simpler. My first try was Tagliatelle Bolognese...." Read more
"...also enjoyed just sitting down and leafing through the book and enjoying the images. A great gift for the cook in the family." Read more
"...The instructions were clear and straightforward, and the book is beautifully designed and printed. Get it, even if you're not making your own pasta...." Read more
Customers love the recipes in this cookbook, particularly praising the ravioli and pasta dough, and noting that homemade pasta tastes like no other.
"...to properly cook pasta: a sufficient volume of salted water, tasting along the way, describing what al dente really means, and by completing cooking..." Read more
"...to find ingredients, instructions were clear cut and the final result was super super yummy...." Read more
"...anyone who has a friend who likes to eat healthy and is not scared of eating wonderful carbs!" Read more
"...Bolognese and it was, and I am not exaggerating, the best home-cooked meal I've had in years, maybe ever...." Read more
Customers find the cookbook easy to follow and suitable for beginners, serving as a great tool for learning pasta making.
"...His recipe used easy to find ingredients, instructions were clear cut and the final result was super super yummy...." Read more
"...The instructions were clear and straightforward, and the book is beautifully designed and printed. Get it, even if you're not making your own pasta...." Read more
"...and how they got to where they are as well as well as how making great pasta happens. You will not be disappointed!..." Read more
"...Very accessible and easy to understand. You won't be dissappointed." Read more
Customers find the cookbook very informative, with detailed information provided, and one customer notes it teaches professional techniques in depth.
"...cooking in general were well presents and should prove useful to the general reader...." Read more
"...think the recipes are completely workable and he offers substitutions, ideas and options to make the recipes simpler...." Read more
"...The book has some amazing information that takes some serious time reading to get a full understand not just on pasta but what goes into making the..." Read more
"...I cannot say enough great things about the recipes, helpful hints and detailed guidance throughout the recipes. You have to read the entire book...." Read more
Customers enjoy the story in the cookbook, with one finding it very insightful.
"...Beautifully laid out, great pics and stories (I read the whole book in one sitting)...." Read more
"...This was it. Very insightful and of course the recipes make want to get into the kitchen every time I pick it up." Read more
"Love the back story on this restaurant provided by the owners and writers. Have already tried a couple of the recipes...." Read more
"A nice story. With a good back story." Read more
Customers appreciate the writing style of the cookbook, with one noting it is the best and most clearly written book on classic pastas.
"...The author is spot on with what is required to properly cook pasta: a sufficient volume of salted water, tasting along the way, describing what al..." Read more
"...clear and straightforward, and the book is beautifully designed and printed. Get it, even if you're not making your own pasta. The sauce... OMG." Read more
"...One of the best most clearly written books on classic pastas." Read more
"Well written" Read more
Customers appreciate the pasta history in the cookbook, with one customer noting that the recipes will be totally authentic.
"...that has a sparked interest in cooking, and especially eating, homemade pasta." Read more
"...These are classic classic!!! Fabulous find. Your pasta will be totally authentic if you follow these instructions...." Read more
"This book has made me a masterful pasta maker and won some respect among my Italian colleagues." Read more
"Loved the history of pasta,didn't know making pasta was so easy.it was very informative." Read more
Customers find the cookbook not worth the price, with one customer specifically mentioning the overuse of difficult and expensive ingredients.
"...But, I think, the over use of difficult and expensive ingredients are a bit much for the home kitchen...." Read more
"...book is kind of like the restaurant: good, entertaining, but not quite worth the price. It's part memoir, part cookbook...." Read more
"...Not hard to figure what was missing, but this is just unforgivable in a book at this price...." Read more
"I am actually very disappointed in this book...." Read more
Reviews with images

Nice, sturdy book w/lots of pictures
Top reviews from the United States
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- Reviewed in the United States on February 11, 2020I tend to read, in detail, cover to cover any book I purchase. With cookbooks I also try making at least some of the key recipes. I find, no matter my overall opinion, there is usually something to be learned, if one remains open to it.
The book, while hardly game changing, was worth the read and cooking effort. As with most cookbooks that I have read, it has it’s plusses and minuses.
I though the recipes for sauces are quite well done. I especially enjoyed the Bolognese Ragu and will likely use it as a standard.
While the recipes for pasta dough covered four basic types the recipes were not quite to my liking. While I love eggs, the egg based pasta dough (20 yolks) was far too egg laden for my comfort.
The recipes for a variety of pasta dishes by season and region were, for the most part, good and a nice way to present them. But, I think, the over use of difficult and expensive ingredients are a bit much for the home kitchen.
While I have no problem with a chef celebrating, and advertising, his restaurants dishes it might be a good idea to offer the home cook alternatives to the more exotic ingredients. In every such recipe those alternatives do exist. It would be a better book had he, and other chefs of like mind, were to do so. This is not rocket science and Amazon has several books on ingredient substitution worth reading.
The author is spot on with what is required to properly cook pasta: a sufficient volume of salted water, tasting along the way, describing what al dente really means, and by completing cooking the pasta in the sauce pan.
The author’s thoughts regarding pasta and Italian cooking in general were well presents and should prove useful to the general reader. For example, while he describes and celebrates hand rolled pasta he also admits to making machine rolled pasta. His position that hand forming the pasta shapes on a wooded board rings true. The wood board does in fact add a welcome texture to the pasta.
That said, a useful book that only suffers from a few excesses of similar chef cookbooks.
- Reviewed in the United States on January 20, 2020I bought the book a few weeks ago and have tried out a few recipes already. for reference, I'm an experienced home cook, but a complete pasta making novice (as in my first pasta making experience was two weeks ago) and I live in a large city with lots of grocery options.(also, everything is available online these days) i think the recipes are completely workable and he offers substitutions, ideas and options to make the recipes simpler. My first try was Tagliatelle Bolognese. yes, it takes a long time, but there is no such thing as "short-cut Bolognese" unless you want to eat some weird bastardized American version - and if that's the case, you are looking at the wrong book. His recipe used easy to find ingredients, instructions were clear cut and the final result was super super yummy. Pizzoccheri with speck braised Cabbage, Potato and Fontina also turned out well. I couldn't find Savory cabbage so i used regular cabbage. I used speck, but you could use some other smoked pork belly or prosciutto and it would probably turn out just fine. All said, a great buy and I plan on plowing through the rest of the recipes (and gaining 10 lbs)
- Reviewed in the United States on May 5, 2024Now here's a book that not only contains some great recipes, but is a joy to look at. The paper used is wonderful and when in hand it feels like a quality product. The photography is also very well done. I've made several of the recipes and so far they have been stop on...I have also enjoyed just sitting down and leafing through the book and enjoying the images. A great gift for the cook in the family.
- Reviewed in the United States on December 2, 2015This was a great book, from an American Sicilian I was curious to see how it would be put together. I had seen the book online however had not held it before. The book has some amazing information that takes some serious time reading to get a full understand not just on pasta but what goes into making the perfect pasta. Along with pasta there is information on meats, cheeses, and nonno and nonna's way of doing things.
This book is perfect for someone looking for a different way of eating pasta while also obtaining that Italian cultural influence.
Finally the recipes are broken down into
Summer
Autumn
Winter
Spring
I would recommend this to anyone who has a friend who likes to eat healthy and is not scared of eating wonderful carbs!
- Reviewed in the United States on July 13, 2022I gave my partner the KitchenAid pasta making attachment for his birthday and also got him this book. Simply: OMG. For the first outing, he made Tagliatelle Bolognese and it was, and I am not exaggerating, the best home-cooked meal I've had in years, maybe ever. We're both very good cooks whose mothers are very good cooks, so this is really saying something. It's one of the best meals I've had since I ate at the actual Flour and Water eight years ago. The instructions were clear and straightforward, and the book is beautifully designed and printed. Get it, even if you're not making your own pasta. The sauce... OMG.
- Reviewed in the United States on August 6, 2015I call this book my, "pasta bible". I cannot say enough great things about the recipes, helpful hints and detailed guidance throughout the recipes. You have to read the entire book. You cannot just open to a recipe and make it work. The history of these fabulous men and how they got to where they are as well as well as how making great pasta happens. You will not be disappointed! I own a small Italian deli and market and use several of the recipes through out this book. We sell out every time!! The Bolognese is superb and our best seller by far. Even for the home chef...essential pasta making info that will help you make the silkiest pasta ever! Kudos to Thomas and gang. Some day I will get to the actual Flour + Water establishment!
Top reviews from other countries
- PolinaReviewed in Spain on April 10, 2020
5.0 out of 5 stars Best pasta book!
Very nice book! With good explanations and photos.
- Denise HarkerReviewed in Australia on February 27, 2024
5.0 out of 5 stars Great pasta, from one of the best
This pasta book was recommended to me and it has not disappointed. I love the step by step procedure and the tips to use store bought pasta if preferred.
Well presented, great photos, better recipes. You will not be disappointed.
- GReviewed in Canada on October 24, 2014
5.0 out of 5 stars ) brilliant photos a d mouthwatering recipes
Incredible book. Engaging bit of information on the chef and partners and how flour + water came to be. Staggering number of pasta recipes (didn't know that many different types of pasta exist!) brilliant photos a d mouthwatering recipes. Stays in my "most used" cookbook shelf.
- cherryReviewed in the United Kingdom on July 7, 2020
5.0 out of 5 stars Very good
Love this book, simple explanations on how to make different pastas and lovely recipes
- Pasta loverReviewed in Australia on September 11, 2018
5.0 out of 5 stars Amazingness
Great recipe book. Simple instructions to follow. Amazing food.