T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
574.1 | Salmon Tortellini With Vegetables | HOTAIR::SIMON | Hugs Welcome Anytime! | Thu Mar 02 1989 15:19 | 27 |
| The following recipe was in today's Albuquerque Journal and
sounded great. I'm posting it here for 3 reasons:
1. It sounds great
2. I'll know where to find it when I lose the article
3. I'm hoping some of you will try it and provide feedback
Salmon Tortellini With Vegetables
1 can (15 1/2 ounces) salmon
2 cups (8 ounces) cut fresh green beans
3/4 cup juliene carrots
1 tablespoon each vegetable oil and butter or
margarine
1 firm, medium tomato, seeded and cut into strips
1/4 cup dry white wine
1 teaspoon each dried basil and oregano, crushed
1 package (9 ounces) cheese tortellini, cooked
1/4 cup grated Parmesan cheese
salt and freshly ground pepper to taste
Drain salmon, reserving 2 tablespoons liquid; break into bitesize
pieces. Saute' beans and carrots in oil about 5 to 7 minutes or until
crisp-tender. Add tomato, wine, salmon liquid, basil and oregano.
Cook until hot. Add the salmon, cooked tortellini, cheese, salt and
pepper; toss carefully. serves 4.
|
574.2 | Tortellini Machine | RANGER::LARUE | An easy day for a lady. | Mon Nov 26 1990 07:48 | 9 |
| I am looking for a pasta machine that rolls and cuts pasta in the
little squares needed to make tortellini. If I understand this beast
correctly, it rolls the pasta like a regular machine but narrower and
has a blade for cutting off the squares. It might also have plates
that permit making of spaghetti etc. I live in the Greater Maynard
Area but I'd drive a long way (or send for) to get this machine.
Anyone ever seen something like this?
Dondi
|
574.3 | Haven't Seen What You're Looking For | BRABAM::PHILPOTT | Col I F 'Tsingtao Dhum' Philpott | Mon Nov 26 1990 08:25 | 10 |
| I've seen rollers for making sheets and strips but the only thing I've seen
for making squares is a device that is in effect an inverted cookie cutter
It consists of a rectangular tray with raised "lips" to delineate the squares -
you roll a sheet with the roller machine then place it on the tray. If you want
filling you put a spoonful in each square then add a second sheet. Now you run
the heavy roller that comes with the device over the top and it neatly cuts out
about 36 squares at a time...
/. Ian .\
|
574.4 | Maybe the rollers are what I need | RANGER::LARUE | An easy day for a lady. | Mon Nov 26 1990 08:47 | 9 |
| I think I've seen those too, but I thought they were for making
ravioli. This thing I'm looking for has a crank and a series of
rollers. Almost looks like those things that hold packing tape for the
shipping department to seal cartons. Maybe the rollers for strips that
you've seen are what I want. This is for my Italian mother-in-law who
makes the best tortellini in the world but is getting tired of hand
rolling and cutting all those little pieces of pasta!
Dondi
|
574.5 | never seen one... | RANGER::PESENTI | Only messages can be dragged | Mon Nov 26 1990 15:35 | 9 |
| I've never seen an attachment that cuts sheets to size, and I'm an
attachment buff! I expect that this is because few people are willing
to invest the effort to do something like tortellini by hand. Perhaps
a standard atlas crank machine would help. It could do the rolling,
and then the trimming to size would be relatively easy, done with a
knife.
Heck! I'll bring my altas (and motor) and do the rolling and cutting,
if she'll do the stuffing and folding!
|
574.6 | Kitchen Etc. has them | SQM::WARRINER | I feel better than James Brown | Mon Nov 26 1990 17:33 | 11 |
| Try Kitchen Etc. in Nashua NH. I saw an attachment for (I think) the
hand crank Atlas pasta maker. Assuming you have your two flat sheets
of dough, you feed them in from opposite sides - there is a roller for
each sheet. I don't know where or how you introduce the filling, but
once you do, the machine takes care of the rest. Inside, there is a
flat side and the other side which allows room for the filling and
has those squiggly cut outs. It goes for something like 30 bucks.
-d
|
574.7 | Atlas | RANGER::PESENTI | Only messages can be dragged | Fri Nov 30 1990 11:44 | 14 |
| I got my atlas so long ago, I don't remember where. I have seen them
in lots of places, though. It is a common brand. That Kitchen Place
used to carry them when they were in Amherst. They probably still do.
Jordan Marsh probably has them, too. Mine makes wide flat noodles
about 5-6" across. I've seen machines that do 8" wide. Mine came
with an attachment that cuts 1/2" wide or 1/16" (approx) wide pasta for
about $25 (before 1985). The motor came separately from PASTA-EZ, for
about $35. It's great, since it eliminates the need to clamp the
machine to the edge of the table, and eliminates the need for a third
hand to do the cranking.
By the way, using a food processor to make the dough, I go from start
to finish in about 30 minutes with the motor, compared to about an hour
and change before I had the motor!
|
574.8 | use pizza cutter | TALLIS::FRANCOLINI | | Tue Feb 19 1991 15:16 | 7 |
| My family always called them Cappaletties, "Little Hats". I use the
hand operated machine and make long (3-4 ft) strips about 1 1/2" wide.
I lay them on the table in rows (like the stripes on the flag )
then take a pizza cutter and quickly cut the strips into
1 1/2" X 1 1/2" squares. This process is so much quicker than using
a knife or cookie cutter.
|