tenspeed
Executive Chef
I pulled the old pasta machine (mix and extrusion type) out of storage and successfully made some pretty good pasta. As it takes a little bit of work to clean the machine after use, I would like to make a larger batch and refrigerate or freeze some for use at a later date. I asked my friend Mr. Google, and got answers all over the map. Williams-Sonoma says you can keep fresh pasta for up to two days in the refrigerator or up to two weeks in the freezer (which seems ridiculously short to me), and other sources go as long as 14 days in the fridge and indefinitely in the freezer. They don't seem to differentiate between water and egg pasta.
I know that you can keep bread dough up to two weeks in the fridge, so it would seem that the same would apply to water and flour pastas. Not sure if the same would apply to egg pasta. It seems reasonable that you could keep either indefinitely in the freezer.
When I made the pasta, I dried it on a rack for 30 min. or so to dry it enough so that it wouldn't stick together but still flexible, and then put it in a plastic bag for a couple of hours until I was ready to cook it. I'm planning to do the same with the batch for storage. I'm not planning to dry it completely, as at that point I might as well get the box from the supermarket.
Any pasta experts out there that could shed some light on this, particularly regarding egg pastas?
I know that you can keep bread dough up to two weeks in the fridge, so it would seem that the same would apply to water and flour pastas. Not sure if the same would apply to egg pasta. It seems reasonable that you could keep either indefinitely in the freezer.
When I made the pasta, I dried it on a rack for 30 min. or so to dry it enough so that it wouldn't stick together but still flexible, and then put it in a plastic bag for a couple of hours until I was ready to cook it. I'm planning to do the same with the batch for storage. I'm not planning to dry it completely, as at that point I might as well get the box from the supermarket.
Any pasta experts out there that could shed some light on this, particularly regarding egg pastas?