JANUARY 2020 HEALTHY FOOD GUIDE 71
NUTRITION
PASTATYPE
RAW
WEIGHT*
(g)
KCAL PROTEIN(g) FAT(g) CARBS(g) FIBRE (g)
Fresh egg
(white)^90258 10.4 2.6^473
Fresh egg
(wholegrain)^90278 13.9^442 9.5
Dried
(white)^70241 8.7^148 1.7
Dried
(wholegrain)^702399 1.8^437
Dried 50/50
(white/wholegrain)^70240 7.8 1.3^475
*Dried uncooked pasta weighs slightly less than fresh,
but the quantities on your plate will be roughly the same.
PAPPARDELLE
suits heavy
mushroom and
stroganoff-style
sauces
Choose
the best
sauce for
the shape
Certain sauces
and pasta
pairings
naturally work
well together.
Here are my
favourite
combos...
BUCATINI
is great with a
thicker ragu
CANNELLONI
is often stuffed
or rolled
around a
filling before
being baked
FARFALLE
is an excellent
choice for
cold salads
FUSILLI
suits coarse
sauces with
chunks of
meat or fish
LASAGNE
works best
layered with a
vegetable or
meat-based
sauce
TAGLIATELLE
is a traditional
choice for
bolognese
sauce or fresh
basil pesto
SPAGHETTI
suits loose
sauces such as
tomato or a
light vongole
CONCHIGLIE
go well with
heavier sauces
made with
chopped
tomatoes or
anchovies
- they’re also
good for pasta
bakes
RIGATONI
is perfect for a
tomato and
mozzarella
pasta bake or
served with
a chunky
vegetable
sauce
RAVIOLI
is folded over
a filling to
make little
parcels
PENNE
works best
with thicker
tomato or
vegetable
sauces that
stick to the
LINGUINI
goes with
seafood
sauces or light
bolognese
Is it necessary to salt
the cooking water?
There’s no technical
reason to salt your
water – it just increases
the boiling temperature
(so it takes longer to get
your pot to boil and the
pasta cooks at a slightly
higher temperature).
Traditional recipes use
36g salt per 5.7 litres
water to cook 450g
dried pasta simply for
taste, adding around
0.5g salt per serving.