zfranca
Senior Cook
Partial to Barilla, have not seen Colavita aside from the olive oil.
I am also partial to Barilla pasta. Equally good are: De Cecco, DiVella.
Partial to Barilla, have not seen Colavita aside from the olive oil.
There is only one instance in which I MUST use De Cecco. Here is why:I am also partial to Barilla pasta. Equally good are: De Cecco, DiVella.
I'm one of those who doesn't find much difference in dried pastas.
I can taste the difference between fresh and dried but as far as dried goes I get whatever is cheapest, on sale, or I find a coupon to lower the price.
Usually store brand but had $off deals on 2 name brands recently. Barilla Plus and San Giorgio for $.89 a pound. Couldn't really tell a difference over the store brand.
Good, I'm not the only one
We use mostly Barilla with an occasional box of Prince for certain shapes.
I'm one of the minority that prefers his pasta to be cooked through.
I used whatever kind of pasta until I switched to wholewheat. Some wholewheat pasta is really nasty tasting.
Guess those of us with no taste must unite.
On my second trip to Italy ten years ago I realized something I hadn't noticed before: Americans typically pile a lot more sauce on their pasta than Italians, and therefore we don't get as much of the pasta flavor. I'm not saying one way is more "right" than the other, but it might explain why we tend to not care as much about brands.I'm one of those who doesn't find much difference in dried pastas.
As far as sauce, I'm closer to picture #2 than #1. However, I like meatballs with my pasta, which is very American.