Fresh Pasta Is a Skill, Not a Recipe

Making fresh pasta by hand is less about following a recipe precisely and more about developing a feel for the dough. Humidity, flour type, egg size, and temperature all affect the outcome. The good news: once you understand what the dough should look and feel like at each stage, you can adjust on the fly — just like generations of Italian cooks before you.

The Two Main Doughs

There are two foundational fresh pasta doughs, and they are not interchangeable:

  • Pasta all'uovo (egg pasta): Made with 00 flour and whole eggs. Standard ratio: 100g flour per egg. Used for tagliatelle, pappardelle, lasagne, and stuffed pastas. Rich, golden, slightly yielding.
  • Pasta di semola (semolina pasta): Made with durum wheat semolina and water. Used for orecchiette, trofie, cavatelli, and Pugliese-style shapes. Firmer, chewier, more rustic.

This guide focuses on egg pasta, the most versatile starting point.

Ingredients for Two People

  • 200g Italian 00 flour (fine, soft wheat flour)
  • 2 large eggs, at room temperature
  • A pinch of fine salt (optional)

The Hand Method, Step by Step

  1. Make a well. Pile the flour on a clean work surface and create a wide well in the centre. Crack the eggs into the well.
  2. Beat the eggs gently with a fork, slowly incorporating flour from the inner edges of the well. Work from the inside out, keeping the outer walls intact until the mixture thickens.
  3. Begin kneading. Once the dough is rough and shaggy, abandon the fork and use the heel of your hand. Push the dough away, fold it back, turn 90°, and repeat. This should take 8–10 minutes of firm, rhythmic work.
  4. Check the texture. The dough is ready when it is smooth, satiny, and springs back slowly when poked. If it tears, it needs more kneading. If it sticks, add a small amount of flour — but be conservative.
  5. Rest. Wrap the dough tightly in cling film and leave it at room temperature for at least 30 minutes. This allows the gluten to relax, making rolling much easier.
  6. Roll. On a lightly floured surface, use a long rolling pin and work from the centre outward, rotating the dough quarter-turns. Roll to roughly 2–3mm for tagliatelle, 1–2mm for stuffed pasta.

Cutting by Hand

For tagliatelle: dust the rolled sheet with semolina, fold it loosely into a flat roll (like a letter), and cut across into strips about 6–7mm wide. Unfurl immediately and dust with more semolina to prevent sticking. Nest into loose portions.

For pappardelle: cut wider strips, roughly 2–2.5cm.

For lasagne: cut into rectangles roughly 10cm x 15cm.

Cooking Fresh Pasta

Fresh pasta cooks in a fraction of the time dried pasta requires. In well-salted boiling water, tagliatelle takes just 2–3 minutes. Watch for the moment the pasta rises to the surface and has a slight give when bitten — that is al dente for fresh pasta. Finish it in the pan with your sauce over gentle heat, adding a splash of pasta water to bind everything together.

Common Troubleshooting

ProblemLikely CauseSolution
Dough tears when rollingUnder-kneaded or under-restedKnead more; rest longer
Dough too stickyEggs too large or humid conditionsAdd flour sparingly, dust surface
Pasta tough after cookingOver-kneaded or rolled too thickRest dough fully; roll thinner
Pasta sticks togetherInsufficient semolina dustingDust generously and keep loose