| Spaghetti | |
|---|---|
![]()  | |
| Category | Pasta recipes | 
| Servings | 4 | 
| Time | 30 minutes | 
| Difficulty | |
Cookbook | Ingredients | Recipes
| Cuisine of Italy | Italian-American cuisine
Ingredients
- About four servings of spaghetti - amount may vary by package, but generally about 8 ounces or 224 grams.
 - 1 liter of water per 100 grams of pasta, so about 2.25 liters, or about 10 cups.
 - One container of pasta sauce, usually about 2.5 cups or 24 ounces (optional but recommended).
 - Salt (optional but recommended).
 - Vegetable oil (optional but recommended).
 
Extra ingredients
The following foods go well with spaghetti and can be served mixed together:
- broccoli
 - garlic bread
 - meatballs
 - pineapple tidbits (boiled, grilled, or fried)
 - shredded and/or grated cheese
 - tomato and/or alfredo sauce (can choose one or the other, or mix together)
 
Procedure
- On a stovetop, bring the water to a boil on high heat after adding salt and vegetable oil (see tips below).
 - Reduce heat to medium and add the pasta.
 - While the spaghetti is cooking, pour desired amount of sauce into pan and set stove to medium.
 - Set a timer for 7 minutes. When the timer goes off, fish out a strand of spaghetti and bite into it. What you're going for here is al dente, meaning that the pasta is just soft enough to eat: no longer crunchy in the middle, and not mushy and over-done. A more traditional (but messy) way to see if the spaghetti is done is to throw some strands onto a wall. If they stick to the wall, then the pasta is ready to eat.
 - When the sauce begins to bubble, reduce the heat to its lowest setting and cover.
 - Once the pasta is ready, carefully drain it through a colander into a sink.
 - Serve sauce over pasta in bowls.
 
Tips
- Add some salt to the water before cooking to enhance flavor and to allow the water to boil more quickly.
 - Also add some vegetable oil to the water before cooking to help prevent the spaghetti from sticking together.
 - Add herbs or fruit (such as pineapple tidbits) to the water before it boils to keep with the pasta after straining for extra flavor and texture.
 - Before cooking the sauce, consider sautéing some finely minced onions, garlic, ground beef (or pork/sausage/veal/etc.), cheese (parmesean/mozzarella/etc.), mushrooms, or anything else that catches your fancy. Then add the sauce.
 - In a pinch, you can make plain spaghetti and add ketchup if you do not have any pasta sauce available.
 - Cooking is about experimentation, never be afraid to try anything once!
 
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