Ingredients
- Pasta Dough
- 2c white flour
- ~1-2tbsp olive oil
- pinch of salt
- 3 eggs
- Filling
- ~6oz arugula
- 10oz frozen spinach
- 1/2c ricotta cheese
- 1/2c mozzarella cheese
- 2tbsp butter
- 4 cloves garlic
- lemon juice or white wine - something acidic
- 3/4tsp salt
- 3/4tsp black pepper
Now start a big pot of water boiling. While that heats, (in a separate pot) combine the butter and garlic in a pot and cook until fragrant - about a minute. Add the greens (thawed completely in the microwave) and the acidic liquid (white wine / lemon juice) and cover to wilt everything down. After it's all hot, put everything in a fine mesh strainer and press out any excess liquid - there will be quite a lot. Then put the greens on a cutting board and chop finely. Mix with the rest of the filling ingredients in a big bowl.
Now, roll out the dough to an appropriate thinness. We used a pasta roller we inherited and put the past through on successively smaller gauge pasta sizes. Eventually, we put the pasta sheet on a (lightly oiled) ravioli press. We then added the filling, topped with another sheet of pasta, and pressed out the ravioli. Now, if you don't have all this fancy equipment, you can theoretically do it by hand... you can figure it out. This pasta dough is actually fairly forgiving.
Anyway, when you've pressed out the ravioli, you drop them in the boiling water (keeping the pot covered after you get them in). Cook for about 3-6 minutes, depending on the thickness of the ravioli in question. Then toss with whatever sauce you made (I made a kind of white wine / sage sauce that was OK) and serve.
Thoughts: The pasta dough we used here was nigh perfect. We've had trouble with pasta doughs being too dry in the past, or too brittle, too glutenous, etc. but this one was very malleable, incredibly stretchy, and very VERY forgiving. If I were interested in making pasta in the future, this is the recipe I would use. As far as the ravioli goes, I think it would have been better with goat cheese filling (the original recipe MAY have called for goat cheese). Next time, Claire and I have decided, we will put the filling in a food processor rather than using a cutting board (weird). And a higher cheese to other stuff ratio would also be good. Also it took us a while to get the pasta thickness right. But I'm going to go ahead and give this recipe a 1 because it was our first ever time making ravioli with this press we registered for AND it went so well once we figured out what we were doing. Very rewarding.
Disaster Index: 1/10
Now, roll out the dough to an appropriate thinness. We used a pasta roller we inherited and put the past through on successively smaller gauge pasta sizes. Eventually, we put the pasta sheet on a (lightly oiled) ravioli press. We then added the filling, topped with another sheet of pasta, and pressed out the ravioli. Now, if you don't have all this fancy equipment, you can theoretically do it by hand... you can figure it out. This pasta dough is actually fairly forgiving.
Anyway, when you've pressed out the ravioli, you drop them in the boiling water (keeping the pot covered after you get them in). Cook for about 3-6 minutes, depending on the thickness of the ravioli in question. Then toss with whatever sauce you made (I made a kind of white wine / sage sauce that was OK) and serve.
Thoughts: The pasta dough we used here was nigh perfect. We've had trouble with pasta doughs being too dry in the past, or too brittle, too glutenous, etc. but this one was very malleable, incredibly stretchy, and very VERY forgiving. If I were interested in making pasta in the future, this is the recipe I would use. As far as the ravioli goes, I think it would have been better with goat cheese filling (the original recipe MAY have called for goat cheese). Next time, Claire and I have decided, we will put the filling in a food processor rather than using a cutting board (weird). And a higher cheese to other stuff ratio would also be good. Also it took us a while to get the pasta thickness right. But I'm going to go ahead and give this recipe a 1 because it was our first ever time making ravioli with this press we registered for AND it went so well once we figured out what we were doing. Very rewarding.
Disaster Index: 1/10
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