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Jump to navigation Jump to search For list of dishes prepared using pasta, see List of pasta dishes. There are many different varieties of pasta. For example, the cut rotelle is also called ruote in Italy and wagon wheels in the United States. Manufacturers and cooks often invent new shapes of pasta, or may rename pre-existing shapes for marketing reasons.
Long pasta may be made by extrusion or rolling and cutting. Made with whole wheat rather than durum. Hollow straws Translated from Italian: buco, meaning “hole”, and Italian: bucato, meaning “pierced”. Often coiled around a twig of local weed. Very thin spaghetti, often coiled into nests. Little ribbons: from affettare, “to slice”. Possibly from Latin lasanum or Greek lasonon, “Cooking pot”, or the Greco-Roman laganum, a flat piece of bread.
Long rectangular ribbons with ruffled sides. From Tuscan papparsi, “to pig out”. In Savonese dialect the name refers to the ribbons used as ornaments by dressmakers. In Genovese dialect however the word means napkin and refers to the size and shape of the pasta. Very thick, irregular and long, hand-rolled pasta. A long, thin, cylindrical pasta of Italian origin, made of semolina or flour and water. Spaghettini and spaghettoni are slightly thinner or thicker, respectively.