Mrs. 40 is a very wise woman. May be you should listen to her.
From my book:
-------Pasta-------
Dry pasta and fresh pasta, what’s the difference?
Dry pasta is commercially made in the shapes of Spaghetti, Penne, Farfalle, Tortiglioni, Maccheroni, ziti, bucatini (hollow spaghetti) etc. and it is usually made with durum semolina flour, and practically impossible to make at home, as it requires specific heavy machines. Italian brands are usually sold in boxes of 500 grams (17.5 oz). What supports this pasta is the sauce that you put on top. The sauce is the main and most important element.
Dry egg pasta is also commercially and satisfactorily available or it can be made at home. It is usually sold as “tagliatelle all’uovo” (egg noodles).
Fresh egg pasta is essential to the making of Ravioli, (tortelli, tortelloni, tortellini, agnolotti, anolini, cappelletti, panzerotti, casoncelli, etc. They all belong to the ravioli family. They get their names from specific regions of Italy). In my hometown of Brescia, ravioli are called Casoncelli; in Liguria they are called Panzerotti, in Emilia Romagna they are called Anolini.
It doesn’t really matter what you call them, the stuffing is the important part, and most ravioli are simply topped with melted butter. You go to a lot of trouble to stuff these little things. You certainly don’t want to conceal the taste under a heavy sauce.
Ravioli are the best way to use leftovers (I will never get tired of saying it). They are a little time consuming, but with what you save in ingredients, you will quickly recover the cost of the pasta machine. When making ravioli, it is worth your time to make as many as your filling will allow. Any left over egg pasta can be used to make noodles. I find ravioli making therapeutic.