How to Make Homemade Pasta Without a Machine

eHow may earn compensation through affiliate links in this story. Learn more about our affiliate and product review process here.

Making homemade pasta should definitely be on your culinary bucket list (if it's not there already). Not because it's so difficult that it's something to aspire to, but because it's so satisfying you'll be glad you did it. Creating beautiful chewy noodles made from simple ingredients gives you a feeling of accomplishment that's hard to compete with. The fact that this simple technique hasn't changed much in hundreds of years gives you a feeling of connection with generations of cooks who went before you. It's also inspiring proof that some things are so great, they really don't need to be improved upon.

Advertisement

Image Credit: Jackie Dodd

Video of the Day

Image Credit: Jackie Dodd

Things You'll Need

  • 2 cups flour (see tip below)

  • 1 teaspoon salt

  • 3 large eggs

  • Rolling pin

  • Dough scraper/chopper

Tip

You can use all-purpose flour, 00 flour, or 1 cup 00 flour and 1 cup Semolina flour. Play around with flour combos to see what you like best.

Step 1: Stir Together Salt and Flour

On a flat work surface, stir together the flour and salt in a mound.

Video of the Day

Image Credit: Jackie Dodd

Step 2: Make a Well

Make a deep well in the center of the mound, making sure the walls are fairly thick but the well is large enough to hold three eggs.

Advertisement

Image Credit: Jackie Dodd

Step 3: Add the Eggs

One at a time, crack the eggs into the center of the well.

Advertisement

Image Credit: Jackie Dodd

Step 4: Stir

Stir the eggs in the center, gradually adding the flour from the walls until all the flour has been moistened.

Advertisement

Image Credit: Jackie Dodd

Step 5: Form Into a Ball

Pull together the flour and eggs, kneading it into a ball.

Advertisement

Advertisement

Image Credit: Jackie Dodd

Step 6: Start Kneading

Knead the ball of dough firmly with both hands.

Advertisement

Image Credit: Jackie Dodd

Step 7: Knead Some More

Continue kneading until the ball is smooth and elastic; this will take about 15 minutes. It's hard to over-knead dough by hand, if you think it needs to be kneaded more, it does. This process creates a nice, chewy pasta instead of what would taste like boiled pie crust.

Advertisement

Image Credit: Jackie Dodd

Step 8: Form Into a Ball

Once the pasta dough is smooth and elastic, form into a ball

Image Credit: Jackie Dodd

Step 9: Rest

Cover the dough and allow it to rest for at least one hour.

Advertisement

Image Credit: Jackie Dodd

Step 10: Divide

Divide the dough into 4 equal pieces. Cover the pieces you aren't working with to prevent them from drying out.

Image Credit: Jackie Dodd

Step 11: Roll

One at a time roll the dough pieces into very thin rectangles.

Image Credit: Jackie Dodd

Step 12: Fold

Fold the dough into a flat roll about two inches wide.

Image Credit: Jackie Dodd

Step 13: Cut

Cut the pasta into even ribbons, from 1/8-inch to 1/2-inch depending on preference. Stay consistent once you pick a size to insure that your pasta cooks evenly.

Advertisement

Image Credit: Jackie Dodd

Step 14: Unfurl

Unfurl the pasta into long noodles.

Image Credit: Jackie Dodd

Step 15: Cook Immediately or Dry

If you plan to cook immediately, move to step 16. If you want to dry for later use, either coil the pasta into loose nests and allow to dry, or hang the pasta over a drying rack, coat hanger, or other bar to dry until very brittle. Remember that no matter how you dry the pasta, this will be the shape it will need to stored in, very long pasta will need a very long storage container. You can place pasta nests into freezer bags and freeze for months.

Image Credit: Jackie Dodd

Step 16: Cook It

Bring a pot of heavily salted water to boil (you want the water as salty as the sea). Add your fresh or dried pasta, boiling until al dente (this will take longer for dried pasta and only a few minutes for fresh).

Image Credit: Jackie Dodd
Image Credit: Jackie Dodd

Step 17: Serve

Serve immediately with desired sauce.

Advertisement

Image Credit: Jackie Dodd

Your Pasta Might Like...

How to Make Tomato Sauce From Fresh Tomatoes

Image Credit: Caroline Stegner

How to Make Pesto with Any Herb

Image Credit: Julia Mueller

How to Make Roasted Garlic Pasta Sauce

Image Credit: Ashley Manila

Advertisement

Report an Issue

screenshot of the current page

Screenshot loading...