Tagliatelle: Difference between revisions

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'''Tagliatelle''' is a well-known form of [[pasta]] that originated in the [[Emilia-Romagna]] region of northern [[Italy]], where it is particularly known as being the classic accompaniment to [[Bolognese sauce]].  Typically hand-cut when made at home, a single piece is a long, flat ribbon indistiguishable from fettuccine except for its slightly greater width.
'''Tagliatelle''' is a well-known form of [[pasta]] that originated in the [[Emilia-Romagna]] region of northern [[Italy]], where it is particularly known as being the classic accompaniment to [[Bolognese sauce]].  Typically hand-cut when made at home, a single piece is a long, flat ribbon indistiguishable from fettuccine except for its slightly greater width. The noted food-writer Marcella Hazan says that Emilia-Romagna "enjoys uncontested recognition" as the birthplace of Italy's "finest" homemade pasta,<ref>Hazan, page 26</ref> although the world-renowned spaghetti is not one of the local specialties.


==References==
==References==

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Tagliatelle is a well-known form of pasta that originated in the Emilia-Romagna region of northern Italy, where it is particularly known as being the classic accompaniment to Bolognese sauce. Typically hand-cut when made at home, a single piece is a long, flat ribbon indistiguishable from fettuccine except for its slightly greater width. The noted food-writer Marcella Hazan says that Emilia-Romagna "enjoys uncontested recognition" as the birthplace of Italy's "finest" homemade pasta,[1] although the world-renowned spaghetti is not one of the local specialties.

References

  1. Hazan, page 26

Sources

  • Essentials of Classic Italian Cooking, by Marcella Hazan, Alfred A. Knopf, New York, 1992, ISBN 0-394-58404-X

See also