Why people prefer bronze die pasta to 'normal' pasta

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Adam Ragusea

Adam Ragusea

Күн бұрын

Thanks to Fetch Rewards for sponsoring this video! Download the Fetch Rewards app now → fetch.thld.co/... and use the code RAGUSEA to get 5,000 points on your first receipt!
Thanks to Dr. Frank Manthey at North Dakota State University: www.ndsu.edu/a...
2005 book chapter co-authored by Dr. Manthey about pasta manufacturing: www.academia.e...
2008 Italian paper on the effects of different pasta die materials: www.sciencedir...
2007 book chapter that was the source of the above paper's claim about sauce retention: onlinelibrary....

Пікірлер: 1 200
@aragusea
@aragusea Жыл бұрын
Thanks to Fetch Rewards for sponsoring this video! Download the Fetch Rewards app now → fetch.thld.co/ragusea_1222 and use the code RAGUSEA to get 5,000 points on your first receipt!
@pierreparillon8937
@pierreparillon8937 Жыл бұрын
Cool
@NathanTAK
@NathanTAK Жыл бұрын
Why don't comments have FAQs anymore? Do the sponsors not like sharing their pin?
@stephenstilwell1488
@stephenstilwell1488 Жыл бұрын
maybe you should tackle this from a different angle.. since many sauces are built from the starchy pasta water...
@Jeebus86
@Jeebus86 Жыл бұрын
I get that you need sponsors, but telling me to give access to my mailbox to some random company... no thanks
@eugenetswong
@eugenetswong Жыл бұрын
Adam, that ending was a very polite way of telling us that science doesn't show much of a difference, and that we should continue doing us.
@hisfriend2892
@hisfriend2892 Жыл бұрын
From my experience the increase in starch in the cooking liquid that you get from bronze cut pasta is super crucial for getting the right consistency of homemade sauces. But thats entirely anecdotal.
@dabundis
@dabundis Жыл бұрын
I can corroborate that anecdote. After trying out some of my favorite pastas with bronze die cut pasta, the sauces I've made using the cooking water were noticably smoother, especially so if the sauce had parmesan dissolved into it
@Acusumano25
@Acusumano25 Жыл бұрын
i think adam touches on this at ~6:40. he mentions that you get cooking loss in the water but that if you use the pasta water in the sauce, you can achieve a thicker sauce.
@JohannesWiberg
@JohannesWiberg Жыл бұрын
@@dabundis Couldn't this be compensated by throwing a teaspoon of flour in with the pasta water?
@Acusumano25
@Acusumano25 Жыл бұрын
to expound on the "bronze die pasta holds sauce better," it might be the case that people who care about pasta holding its sauce are often the same people that use pasta water in their sauce.
@TheRatchetnclank
@TheRatchetnclank Жыл бұрын
@@JohannesWiberg That would just gum up into a hydrated ball of flour into the water. The better way to compensate would be to cook the teflon pasta in less water so it becomes more starchy and concentrated.
@destructiveblade7446
@destructiveblade7446 Жыл бұрын
This level of pedantic mini-myth testing is exactly the kind of content I subscribe for.
@markholm7050
@markholm7050 Жыл бұрын
When my wife was doing her M.A. program, specifically the part about foreign language pedagogy, she was shocked to discover the high frequency of misquotation of original sources in the papers she was reading. Original sources would say A and the papers citing them would say B, claiming that’s what the original source said. She came away with a strong distrust of researchers in the field of education (people who research educational methods and results). She also concluded that you always need to drill down to original sources.
@monkeygraborange
@monkeygraborange Жыл бұрын
Just try watching the corporate news if you want to experience wild deviations from original material!!
@darkness74185
@darkness74185 Жыл бұрын
@@monkeygraborange the difference is pretty much everyone knows corporate media sucks, but to discover that there's usually some very wild mistakes in professional academic papers is pretty terrifying. Not to mention you can take potentially years researching a topic only to ended up at one of those mistakes (watch some CGP Grey for refrences of that madness)
@pendlera2959
@pendlera2959 Жыл бұрын
@@darkness74185 The most infuriating example of this is the theory that depression and other mental illnesses are the result of a chemical imbalance in the brain. Not only was that recently found to be completely unsupported by scientific studies, but when pressed about their misleading the public, many psychiatrists who had peddled the theory started denying they had ever taught it. Ronald Pies, MD, psychiatrist, of SUNY Upstate Medical and Tufts Universities said, "In short, the ‘chemical imbalance theory’ was never a real theory, nor was it widely propounded by responsible practitioners in the field of psychiatry." (From Nuances, Narratives, and the “Chemical Imbalance” Debate (April 2014, Medscape)) That was over 8 years ago, yet there have been no reeducation campaigns to correct the public's belief in that theory, nor has the field as a whole made any attempt to take responsibility for spreading it. Of course, it's entirely possible that some mental illnesses are caused by chemical imbalances in the brain, but because of so many psychologists', neurologists', and psychiatrists' lack of scientific rigor, all the research is tainted by their bias.
@Jhud69
@Jhud69 Жыл бұрын
Useful when you just want a degree and get it over with, frustrating when you want to do actual research
@markholm7050
@markholm7050 Жыл бұрын
@@Jhud69 It’s also frustrating if you want to apply the results of research in some practical setting. My wife was hoping to learn useful lessons about foreign language teaching that she could use in her classroom.
@pathologicaldoubt
@pathologicaldoubt Жыл бұрын
Love that you caught the cited primary source basically doing the scientific equivalent of; “mother: go ask your father Father: go ask your mother” 😂😂😂
@broadh2o980
@broadh2o980 Жыл бұрын
Happens all the time in academia and good academics vigilantly guard against it by going to the source of information when and wherever possible.
@BornIn1500
@BornIn1500 Жыл бұрын
@@broadh2o980 Also happens in the media all the time. Their "source" is just another shitrag that aligns with them politically. For example, HuffPo cites a CNN article...
@hedgeearthridge6807
@hedgeearthridge6807 Жыл бұрын
I think there's an actual name for that, the Woozel Effect. Named after the time Winnie the Pooh was tracking down a Woozel when it was actually his own footprints that he was following. An example of this is when news articles kept saying the F-35 fighter plane is bad. They all kept quoting each other. And the ultimate source of that notion was Pierre Sprey, who knew nothing about the F-35 and had nothing to do with it's development, and was trash talking it for Russia Today as propaganda. Sources kept sourcing each other in a circle, and the ultimate source was a guy who's only source was that he made it the f___ up.
@_pugito1659
@_pugito1659 Жыл бұрын
"trust the science"
@1uPUIKbDF8Wjv0eq3CtJSn7tkwjJce
@1uPUIKbDF8Wjv0eq3CtJSn7tkwjJce Жыл бұрын
@@hedgeearthridge6807 my favourite example of this is the story about gavrilo princip eating a sandwich
@projectaks4745
@projectaks4745 Жыл бұрын
I like pasta
@Flightnight1000
@Flightnight1000 Жыл бұрын
Me too
@flroxikxdk152
@flroxikxdk152 Жыл бұрын
Me four
@panpiskotka1207
@panpiskotka1207 Жыл бұрын
Me too
@EastofVictoriaPark
@EastofVictoriaPark Жыл бұрын
And I don't care who knows. When I eat pasta my enjoyment shows. There are three things that every chef knows.
@johnsonwu4745
@johnsonwu4745 Жыл бұрын
Me five
@Craig_Hilbig
@Craig_Hilbig Жыл бұрын
Imagine being able to say “I’m a pasta scientist” at a party (with truthfulness lol)
@wavion2
@wavion2 Жыл бұрын
It was either that or a hamburger helper.
@BigboiiTone
@BigboiiTone Жыл бұрын
As an actual pasta maker, this guy is just clowning around. He seems to have a rudimentary understanding of physics.
@SonOfTheChinChin
@SonOfTheChinChin 2 күн бұрын
"if i got noodles inside you, then its gonna be sticky situation"
@frankyi8206
@frankyi8206 Жыл бұрын
The first time I made pasta with bronze die pasta, my entire family noticed the difference without me telling them. It was just a "woah, dad, what did you do different? This tastes amazing!"
@Jorjioo
@Jorjioo Жыл бұрын
And this makes sense. This video is honestly kind of bad at answering the question in it's title. The quality of the ingredients used in the making of the pasta are most likely of a higher quality when being extruded through a bronze die. It's pretty hard to find 2 pastas where everything is equal but the extrusion method. The $1-2 extra for a box of bronze die isn't purely extrusion speed, but also ingredient cost. But in general, if every step of making a pasta dish that uses pasta water from cooking is applied equally to a teflon extruded and a bronze extruded pasta, the latter will give a superior result due to more starch leeching into the water and less water being left behind with the bronze extruded pasta.
@lazymass
@lazymass Жыл бұрын
I dont care what anyone says, bronze die pasta is just simply much better. Might be better ingredients, but it is my go to and always will be, that cheap teflon pasta has no place in my home.
@theholypopechodeii4367
@theholypopechodeii4367 8 күн бұрын
​@@Jorjioo It's almost entirely just ingredients. Where I live, normal pasta is semolina pasta. Almost all bronze die pasta is egg and wheat pasta, so it's just better tasting to most people.
@jocaingles8464
@jocaingles8464 Жыл бұрын
When I watched Alex do his series, I couldn't stop thinking how the notion artisanal pasta holds more sauce could be a myth. Thx for this very educational video
@monochr0m
@monochr0m Жыл бұрын
Alex spouts a lot of unfounded stuff, sadly
@phlexy
@phlexy Жыл бұрын
@@monochr0m Almost every video of his is the same lately. Learn how to make a final dish -> use lower quality/different ingredients to make a few prequal videos/series while pretending you are "learning". Dude had some interesting stuff before but now its just a predictable formula for every video.
@Tobiasliese
@Tobiasliese Жыл бұрын
@@monochr0m I usually like Adam but this test was not even close to being "scientific" The pasta sauce extraction lacked exact precision, also you don't cook your pasta until it's done usually you use the paster water to cook and reduce the sauce. So the higher starch release of that pasta is significant. This topic is way more complicated than a simple and really not precise enough test. Also the sample size here is one. This is good enough for a youtube video, but it's not more of a scientific approach than what Alex did. Also to the flavor tests. A deep molecular analysis of that pasta with a decent sized sample size would me necessary to further look into these claims. It seems that Adam just wanted to frame this as a myth with some pseudo science.
@MsTatakai
@MsTatakai Жыл бұрын
@@Tobiasliese Erm... adam mentioned it ... but he wanted to test the pasta retaining the sauce inside of the pasta and not thicker sauces
@aragusea
@aragusea Жыл бұрын
For the record, I didn't call it a myth! I just assert that it's unproven, and perhaps the mechanism isn't simply that the pasta itself actually holds more sauce. Might have more to do with the sauce itself, if you're using the pasta water.
@nickabu4722
@nickabu4722 Жыл бұрын
I think there’s one more thing to consider and that is the drying phase, which can have a massive impact on the texture and the way the pasta cooks and from what i read before, usually teflon pasta is not only extruded quicker but is also dried faster with higher tempratures.
@Vlaaaah
@Vlaaaah Жыл бұрын
The main selling point for me regarding bronze die extruded pasta is the extra starch in the pasta water, which is a key ingredient in so many Italian pasta dishes. It's a key part of successful "mantecare"! I think it results in creamier (or maybe just more fool-proof) carbonara.
@niaimack
@niaimack Жыл бұрын
You can get the same effect adding durum wheat to the water, no need to splash out for more expensive pasta just for that.
@maxono1465
@maxono1465 Жыл бұрын
Just add starch to the water
@sonicman9910
@sonicman9910 Жыл бұрын
@@niaimack Its more expensive to buy durum wheat plus cheap spaghetti. Plus, the difference between price of bronze cut and silicone cut is negligible
@brendanmay9585
@brendanmay9585 Жыл бұрын
@@sonicman9910 all depends on where you're from. In Germany I can get a whole package of Hartweizengries (durum) for 60 cents which is less than the premium from normal store brand (Teflon), to bronce cut for 1 package (500 grams/ / 1 pound of pasta.
@lordmuhehe4605
@lordmuhehe4605 Жыл бұрын
@@sonicman9910 No it's fucking not. You're using less than a tablespoon of flour on one pot of water.
@tomix7866
@tomix7866 Жыл бұрын
Long live the empire.
@Theeswaglord
@Theeswaglord Жыл бұрын
🤬
@scottvogel8477
@scottvogel8477 Жыл бұрын
The Britt's would call a grill.
@brianthomason5022
@brianthomason5022 Жыл бұрын
All glory to the hypnotoad
@ShinMegamiToast
@ShinMegamiToast Жыл бұрын
Long live the empire! 🥸
@ballweevil1590
@ballweevil1590 Жыл бұрын
@@Theeswaglord who do you think you're cursing at huh?
@sophiophile
@sophiophile Жыл бұрын
I think the factor that might make the claim of more sauce somewhat closer to true *might* (just a supposition, also might not) have something to do with a perception of stronger flavour due to the rough surface retaining the sauce better specifically when in contact with our wet tongue- while the smoother pasta allows it to dissipate+dissolve away quicker. The best way I could describe my guess succinctly would be as the half-life of soluble flavourant dissipation on the tongue, rather than the penetration into the pasta surface like you tested at the end. I don't think absorption into the pasta will make a big difference, since we don't generally chew pasta to mush/paste before we swallow it. Or it's just folk wisdom/attachment to 'classic method'/marketing.
@aragusea
@aragusea Жыл бұрын
I think this is a great hypothesis.
@AmatuerHourCoding
@AmatuerHourCoding Жыл бұрын
Just made a comment about exactly this! Nice to see someone else beat me to it. The dyed-pasta cross section is what lead me to think this. The perceived depth of the surface is much greater on the bronze-cut. More pockets and such that makes the flavor more available to our taste buds
@evelynbaron66
@evelynbaron66 Жыл бұрын
poetically put!!
@iwantnod
@iwantnod Жыл бұрын
Exactly, rougher surface means more contact surface for taste buds. Same as with powdered sugar tasting sweeter.
@jasonm2081
@jasonm2081 Жыл бұрын
This would be interesting to do a blind taste test on. I really don't notice any taste difference myself ...but the mouth feel is noticable. The baking aspect is quite different and I think the Bronze die noodles hold up much better in baked dishes and slow cooker dishes.
@paulblichmann2791
@paulblichmann2791 Жыл бұрын
The bronze kind hodles better. The cheap kind has to be eaten immediately and IMO inedible reheated.
@chezmoi42
@chezmoi42 Жыл бұрын
@@paulblichmann2791 I agree with that, I really notice it in soups, like minestrone, where it is often reheated, sometimes more than once. Tiny conchiglie or farfalline are excellent.
@prawtism
@prawtism Жыл бұрын
Some people can't even tell the difference between a cookie that has been taken from a freshly opened package vs a cookie that has been on the table for hours and has absorbed moisture.
@chezmoi42
@chezmoi42 Жыл бұрын
@@prawtism I can, and to be honest, I prefer they age a bit after opening - they release more flavor. YMMV.
@Casiange
@Casiange Жыл бұрын
Need to call mister Chlebowski
@PGproductionsHD
@PGproductionsHD Жыл бұрын
You have a way of explaining things very clear and leaving nothing ambiguous, I appreciate this a lot
@normalhuman9260
@normalhuman9260 Жыл бұрын
I agree,hes a bit too much of a foods food kinda guy for my taste,but he does great at explaining things clearly.
@PGproductionsHD
@PGproductionsHD Жыл бұрын
@@normalhuman9260 Well it’s a food channel afterall
@normalhuman9260
@normalhuman9260 Жыл бұрын
@@PGproductionsHD I know that,but meat is food,everything else is what you feed to food.
@TheModdedwarfare3
@TheModdedwarfare3 Жыл бұрын
@@normalhuman9260 cringe. People have different tastes and you need more than just meat in your diet to be your healthiest.
@Tinky1rs
@Tinky1rs Жыл бұрын
@@normalhuman9260 Dunno man, most people aren't carnivores.
@justinbarton247
@justinbarton247 Жыл бұрын
I grew up watching "good eats" and it's wonderful to see someone filling that niche now. Love the content, can't believe I didn't find you sooner.
@Ivrin3
@Ivrin3 Жыл бұрын
I always scream "die, pasta!", when I chuck it into boiling water.
@aaronstanley6914
@aaronstanley6914 Жыл бұрын
Personally I Personally perfer "cook God damn you, cook." (I ALWAYS forget to get the water boiling and am forced to stire the paste constantly before it clumps
@RandomDude-dc8dd
@RandomDude-dc8dd Жыл бұрын
"Eject the impasta"
@lyingcorrectly
@lyingcorrectly Жыл бұрын
5:12 DO NOT give any apps permission to scan your email inbox. Anyone with access to your email inbox automatically has access to every single website where you use that email account and that lets you reset your password via email. If the app provider gets hacked, or has a malicious employee, all of your logins are compromised. This may be convenient but is an absolute security nightmare. If you must do this, set up a separate email account, forward your receipts there (maybe set up an inbox rule in your main account to automate that), and let the app scan them there.
@JuliaC-sp5qk
@JuliaC-sp5qk Жыл бұрын
yeah this whole Fetch thing seems like a super shady data harvesting company. I get that youtubers need to make money but c'mon...
@diegoparrillo8517
@diegoparrillo8517 Жыл бұрын
Personal experience as an Italian, pasta water appears to be more rich in starch when using bronze die pasta. Maybe you could have done an experiment analyzing the "thickening power" of the pasta water, which is not at all a secondary product of cooking but a main ingredient for any disg
@micah4801
@micah4801 Жыл бұрын
There's also the property of the pasta to remain at an al dente texture. The bronze-die pasta (e.g., Monograno Felicetti, De Cecco) can hold their al dente texture long enough for the cook to reduce sauce more or during the time it takes to make it to the table. The Barilla's and others smooth store brands of the world go soft QUICKLY. But maybe this has to do with the specific wheat, and/or the drying process of the extruded pasta. And, as you mentioned, the rough ones have a better mouthfeel.
@idontwantahandlethough
@idontwantahandlethough Жыл бұрын
Huh, I bet you're right on all those other factors probably influencing it too. I wonder which ones matter most? I'd think the wheat would matter quite a bit (and there's probably a pretty big diff between store brand/barilla and some nice stuff in terms of starting material quality)
@honestguy7764
@honestguy7764 Жыл бұрын
Dont forget Garoffalo, our familys favourite
@huangec
@huangec Жыл бұрын
I've been using De Cecco for some 30 years now. Barilla is crap in comparison, the pasta literally disintegrates on you if you miss draining it by a minute. I also buy La Molisana, Voiello, Rummo, and Del Verde when I can't find De Cecco, but I'd rather starve than to resort to Barilla.
@lucretius8050
@lucretius8050 Жыл бұрын
I heard the reverse that due to the texture, it cooks through faster as shown with the higher water absorption and cloudier water. Also due to the nature of the weaker integrity i've also heard to not cook with a rolling boil and just use a simmer.
@100beps
@100beps Жыл бұрын
In my experience, because it's generally closer to an artisanal product, bronze die pasta is also dried more slowly and perhaps has slightly different grain? Whatever it is, and texture aside, on average the flavour tends to be better imo
@amb600cd0
@amb600cd0 Жыл бұрын
or just placebo because of that "artisanal" marketing. if it feels like a better product you might impose that on the eating experience. both are possible and it probably would vary from brand to brand
@theholypopechodeii4367
@theholypopechodeii4367 8 күн бұрын
Probably. In my country bronze die pasta is wheat and egg, regular pasta is semolina and water.
@ericpalacios920
@ericpalacios920 Жыл бұрын
In my experience, you can't really make recipes like cacio e pepe with the smooth stuff. Even if you reduce the pasta water on its own and finish cooking the pasta in a small amount of that reduced water, the amount of starch you get out of it is pretty low. It's just a lot harder to get a good emulsion without the extra starch from the bronze die noodles.
@julieblair7472
@julieblair7472 Жыл бұрын
i dont know if I would notice a texture difference on spaghetti or linguine, but the difference on the chubby grooved shapes is undeniable. i learned years ago before i knew about the bronze die business that even among cheaper brands the rough dull looking pasta was better.
@Epicdps
@Epicdps Жыл бұрын
Gotta get me an organoleptic eperience shirt!
@ActionPhilip
@ActionPhilip Жыл бұрын
Really interesting video. Some potential food for thought is that even if the bronze die pasta is only a few percent better in a few different categories, that can stack up to a quite noticeable difference. Then again, higher quality brands also tend to use bronze dies. The difference in wheat quality could also be contributing to the difference.
@wordofswords5386
@wordofswords5386 Жыл бұрын
nah. its just hipster shit.
@Rc3651
@Rc3651 3 күн бұрын
The amount of respect I have for Dr. Manthey! I love how his room looks used, this man is putting in *work*. I had no idea we had pasta researchers, that's amazing! Imagine what innovations their research could lead to. Next time I see scif-fi I wanna see Future Pasta
@ritwikgupta1558
@ritwikgupta1558 Жыл бұрын
Nice vid! Never knew there was a claim on bronze cut pasta "holding" sauce better, I always assumed people meant that due to the extra starch in the pasta water, the sauce comes out thicker, as Adam mentioned might be the reason for this
@josephdemarchi2128
@josephdemarchi2128 Жыл бұрын
I made the same assumption. That the sauce it self is better. In my own cooking I have found this to be true but that is far from a scientific study. I could see the rough edges making some sort of very very small difference like how Adam tested it but obviously that test would need to be done a significantly more times and under way more conditions to pick up a statical difference of 3 grams.
@bocahdongo7769
@bocahdongo7769 Жыл бұрын
If you into pasta hellhole, you'll immediately find this
@craigashworth3493
@craigashworth3493 Жыл бұрын
30% increase for Teflon pasta vs 33% increase for Bronze cut isn’t a 3% difference, it’s a 10% difference. Possibly more if you were saucing more heavily. Add the thicker sauce from greater starch content in bronze cooking water and I think you’re definitely achieving a noticeable taste/feel gain. Before you even get to mouth feel. Here in NZ basic supermarket bronze cut is only a little more than Teflon - I think it’s hands-down worth it ❤
@olivermalcolm7076
@olivermalcolm7076 Жыл бұрын
Hey bro I’m a kiwi foodie too! What dried pasta have you’d found the best in our national chains? It’s hard to find stuff a rougher surface
@CtHtThomas
@CtHtThomas Жыл бұрын
It would only make sense to say that 30% vs 33% is a 10% difference if the numbers 30 and 33 were the percentages of the sauce in the pan that made it onto the plate, or some fraction-of-sauce like that. Since the numbers 30 and 33 are percent *increases*, they should really be treated like 1.30 and 1.33 (the factor by which the weight increased due to sauce), which is a 2.3% increase. In any case, in the full context of the experiment, it's a difference of 3 grams of sauce (ish) so we can tell that it's a very very small difference
@craigashworth3493
@craigashworth3493 Жыл бұрын
@@CtHtThomas oh yes you’re right, thanks!
@craigashworth3493
@craigashworth3493 Жыл бұрын
@@olivermalcolm7076 I get La Molisana from Countdown -it’s pretty delish!
@craigashworth3493
@craigashworth3493 Жыл бұрын
@@CtHtThomas hey no hang on, it is 10% increase in sauce. Both of the increases are compared to weight of pasta only. So yeah it’s a small % difference of the whole plate, but it’s 10% difference in sauce, which is bringing the flavour
@alonzobrown7141
@alonzobrown7141 Жыл бұрын
Great vid once again Adam! Very Informative! :)
@maxgriggs2202
@maxgriggs2202 Жыл бұрын
Great video. The reason I started using bronze die pasta over regular was due to the more starchy cooking water you can use. I've noticed it's a lot easier to make a nice emulsified sauce using the bronze die pasta water compared to the regular.
@phanboyiv
@phanboyiv Жыл бұрын
Good to know! I prefer the texture of the bronze die stuff and it definitely produces a starchier pasta water, which is critical for simpler pasta dishes that rely on starchy pasta water for emulsification.
@Bigbahlsen
@Bigbahlsen Жыл бұрын
I actually missed Frank Manthey, I've been digging these pasta videos, watching them several times to secure their knowledge, so thank you guys.
@N1120A
@N1120A Жыл бұрын
This was great. I'd have liked to see an experiment done with a pasta that relies on pasta water to be part of the sauce, like spaghetti al nerano, because that's more of a test to see how sauce is "held."
@Batista7105
@Batista7105 Жыл бұрын
Adam, you are a beacon of light on KZbin. I wish you and your family a very happy and safe Holiday season.
@normalhuman9260
@normalhuman9260 Жыл бұрын
Hear hear
@TheRealPOTUSDavidByrd
@TheRealPOTUSDavidByrd Жыл бұрын
37g of retained sauce is ~9% more than 34g. I think that focusing on the 3% difference in total final weight is misrepresenting the otherwise very well obtained result. Great video as always. Fun fact: as a general guide it usually takes about a 10% change between two similar things for a person to notice the difference Disclaimer: Spaghetti is my least favorite pasta. I have no horse in this race.
@godalseif
@godalseif Жыл бұрын
You don't understand how much I genuinely appreciate your suggestion to always check primary sources. So many people just blindly believe what they are told by other people who also didn't read the source. One of my heros Dr Richard Feynman has countless tales about him and his colleagues arguing about literally everything and scrutinizing each other's findings. There is no such thing as scientific consensus according to any real scientist
@taoailu1100
@taoailu1100 Жыл бұрын
8:43 "organoleptic eperience" Love the video!
@concray
@concray Жыл бұрын
that part of trying it with colored water was just *chefs kiss* wouldn't have thought to do it like that
@mason2me
@mason2me Жыл бұрын
Doctor Frank! one of my very favorite reoccurring characters in Ragusean lore.
@paulblichmann2791
@paulblichmann2791 Жыл бұрын
🌾🌾🌾🌾👨‍🏫🔬📜🌾🌾🌾🌾
@Nikki0417
@Nikki0417 Жыл бұрын
I've said this before, but one of my favorite parts of the Monday videos is seeing the different food professors and experts in these super specific areas of food.
@franklintangelo3456
@franklintangelo3456 Жыл бұрын
I think copper is tasty
@JimboMarsh
@JimboMarsh Жыл бұрын
I prefer silver personally.
@TylerSmith-kt8rk
@TylerSmith-kt8rk Жыл бұрын
I'll take the arsenic die
@kamcorder3585
@kamcorder3585 Жыл бұрын
Copper thinks you're tasty too
@TheIrishAlchemist205
@TheIrishAlchemist205 Жыл бұрын
I love how you can always usually manage to get proper primary sources interviewed Adam, it adds so much to an already interesting topic for me. Now in thinking about getting this guy and the PTFE prof from a few weeks ago together to learn about those combined effects. Thanks for the (always) great video(s)!
@MostafaElSakari
@MostafaElSakari Жыл бұрын
“Always usually”
@munjee2
@munjee2 Жыл бұрын
I personally think the whole bronze thing is a red herring (probably a better term for this): it's the old slower drying process that goes hand in hand with the brass dies that in my personal experience gives the better results, not just the rougher surface, the pasta absorbs much more water, making the remaining water a lot more starch-ier
@paolopasquale
@paolopasquale Жыл бұрын
Yeah exactly, this is something I was thinking about too. Additionally, even the quality of semolina could be better with bronze die pasta. So it’s probably hard to exactly pin point to what makes the pasta good. Though bronze die on the package is an easy way to see if it’s ‘good’ quality pasta.
@Dr.Kornelius
@Dr.Kornelius 11 ай бұрын
The reason I choose bronze cut: if the manufacturer is willing to sacrifice the production rate by avoiding teflon. they will be less likely to cut corners in other production processes that affect pasta quality
@plukerpluck
@plukerpluck Жыл бұрын
Such a good point about those primary sources. I spot this all the time. Citations that are completely worthless because they make a claim the original doesn't even come close to making. It's honestly infuriating.
@odwrksboxedtrash3730
@odwrksboxedtrash3730 Жыл бұрын
Bronze died? How's he gonna make pasta now?
@GR8APE69
@GR8APE69 Жыл бұрын
I love your armchair food science experiments. They remind me a lot of Alton Brown and his "Good Eats" show, which was always my favorite cooking show growing up. There's so much science in cooking, and knowing the underlying science can really help you become a better cook. Thanks for the great videos, Adam! Cheers! 🍻
@maxvetter1336
@maxvetter1336 Жыл бұрын
“Organoleptic eperience” - Old Man Ragusea’s shirt, 2022
@sombreroanonimo8866
@sombreroanonimo8866 Жыл бұрын
thank you Alex for giving me the enthusiasm to watch this video!
@danielrand7407
@danielrand7407 Жыл бұрын
For me the benefit of bronze die pasta has been the increased starch release in the pasta water which makes for great sauces, not sauce adhesion. I think that explains the benefit you saw when baking the pasta uncooked, as all that starch was released into the end product rather than strained away.
@darrellleong4780
@darrellleong4780 10 ай бұрын
That laddle of pasta water added to the sauce always takes it to a whole new level, and nothing triumphs the starchy water from boiling fresh pasta.
@VinsteroTheGreat
@VinsteroTheGreat Жыл бұрын
The good ol fashioned way of roughening your pasta is sandpaper
@Maxvolume123
@Maxvolume123 Жыл бұрын
As a current North Dakota State University student, thanks for including one of our own in your video. Been a fan of your videos for years, Adam. Keep up the high quality content!
@vibce
@vibce Жыл бұрын
This video goes against what I have been taught my entire life, and as such I shall simply ignore it
@twerkingfish4029
@twerkingfish4029 Жыл бұрын
I realized I just watched an entire video going on about a class of food I don’t even like. But maybe you’re just that good at making something interesting to learn about.
@misocomplex
@misocomplex Жыл бұрын
Adam, can you please make a video about the potential health benefits of using an air fryer versus pan frying? I'm trying to use less oil in cooking, but when using less oil my food comes out burnt and awful. The chicken is dry, and I am sad. I've been thinking about getting an air fryer to reduce the amount of oil I consume and still have well cooked food, although I'm having difficulty finding information online about this for my particular needs. Most of what I see online are comparisons in deep frying food, something that I don't do at all.
@monkeygraborange
@monkeygraborange Жыл бұрын
Brian Lagerstrom just made an interesting video on this exact topic last week called “Was I wrong about Air Fryers.”
@misocomplex
@misocomplex Жыл бұрын
@@monkeygraborange Thank you!
@monkeygraborange
@monkeygraborange Жыл бұрын
@@misocomplex 👍
@quiteadept
@quiteadept Жыл бұрын
So Adam seems to be proud of his viewers for doing the research to find a primary source that shows a mistake he may have made. Well I think I've found a big one. At 8:42 Adam spells the word "experience" as "eperience" on the t-shirt idea bit. I had a hunch that this might not be correct so I drove to the library to find a primary source. Sure enough I found a dictionary by three researchers, Noah Webster and the brotherly duo of George and Charles Merriam, which provided some pretty damning evidence. Right there on page 217 I found what I was looking for. The word is spelled "experience" and has been since at least 1841. I'll take my top comment spot now, thank you and you're welcome.
@TheNoerdy
@TheNoerdy Жыл бұрын
Adam, what else can we make a die with? Doesn’t have to be at a large scale; what tastes the best?
@velazquezarmouries
@velazquezarmouries Жыл бұрын
Steel reinforced ceramic probably
@ElijsDima
@ElijsDima Жыл бұрын
Lasers.
@PixVox
@PixVox Жыл бұрын
owls eat pasta ?
@VinsteroTheGreat
@VinsteroTheGreat Жыл бұрын
Those plastic play-do ones give the best result
@larrylitmanen9877
@larrylitmanen9877 11 ай бұрын
I tried Barilla Al Bronzo and honestly, i never expected to like it that much, the texture is so much better. Just seems like a much better product. I recently had blue box Barilla and boy there's a HUGE difference, you can never go back to the titanium smooth pasta.
@CoolAsFreya
@CoolAsFreya Жыл бұрын
I would love a follow-up video testing the difference between using Teflon die vs bronze die pasta cooking water, as most of my pasta sauces include at least a bit of the cooking water to help the sauce adhere better! Does the starchier water from the bronze die pasta actually make the sauce adhere more?
@RiamsWorld
@RiamsWorld Жыл бұрын
It'd be valuable to compare that to other variables that affect the starchiness of the water, such as the volume of water you cook it in(such as in a pan), or if you reuse the pasta water for multiple batches as a restaurant would. In which case a restaurant would be unaffected by the die(by the time it's cooking your batch, it's probably maximized the amount of starch it can hold), and you can get cheaper results by changing the technique(cooking in a pan) rather than paying for more expensive pasta(if the mouthfeel of the pasta itself what's worth the difference)
@kotarouriderblack6118
@kotarouriderblack6118 Жыл бұрын
I never heard about bronze dyed pasta but Adam still makes me curious about it
@b.a.d.boybaits678
@b.a.d.boybaits678 Жыл бұрын
Beautiful job on not a pasta pun😂
@NoMusiciansInMusicAnymore
@NoMusiciansInMusicAnymore Жыл бұрын
It makes sense, this is why you just salt your pasta water and don't add oil as I have seen many people do, it also makes sense that as the surface is a small part of the pasta, the difference would also be slight
@AlexKojfman
@AlexKojfman Жыл бұрын
KING! Thanks for snoping this situation. Another great video!
@NuncNuncNuncNunc
@NuncNuncNuncNunc Жыл бұрын
I'm just going to admire Prof. Manthey's classic Steelcase office.
@jeremyc4786
@jeremyc4786 Жыл бұрын
Oof, that whiplash when I'm so used to clicking on a pasta video and it's not Alex. Awesome to see you covering it too.
@starportscull
@starportscull Жыл бұрын
The science is intriguing. The sample sizes are too small. "Breaking Away" Easter eggs in a video about italian food are priceless!
@N05K177
@N05K177 Жыл бұрын
This channel mood gave me some kind of a déjà vu feel..but I couldn't get my finger on it. Now it dawned on me: This is the Cody's Lab of kitchen!
@tylermeh210
@tylermeh210 Жыл бұрын
It’s 530 am and I was glued to this entire video knowing full well I don’t like pasta. Great vid.
@captaincannabis3321
@captaincannabis3321 Жыл бұрын
10:23 "Just dont tell anyone that it carries more sauce, though it just may carry more weevils..."
@yourguysheppy
@yourguysheppy Жыл бұрын
Love seeing what I imagine is a small fraction of the research that goes into these videos. You're doing Alton Brown proud by coupling cooking with science!
@raystinger6261
@raystinger6261 Жыл бұрын
If you like the texture of bronze die pasta, one alternative to it is whole wheat pasta. It also has a rough texture. I generally dislike whole wheat products, I think their taste and texture is awful, but whole wheat pasta, for some reason, has the same taste as regular pasta (imo) and a better texture.
@EmZevSS
@EmZevSS 14 күн бұрын
7:12 this is what I always thought the main benefit of bronze die pasta, having more starch on the surface that makes for more concentrated starchy pasta water to use in sauces that will thicken up better, thus making it hold more on the pasta. Since I use pasta water in almost every pasta sauce, I've found the Teflon die makes noticeably thinner and more watery sauces which is a big enough difference for me
@tomatosoup44
@tomatosoup44 Жыл бұрын
Bronze die pasta has a better mouthfeel imo. And it releases more starch, which is good for aglio e olio or carbonara (or any sauce in which you incorporate some of the pasta water)
@thomassowinski6765
@thomassowinski6765 Жыл бұрын
My personal experience on this is that the difference is more noticeable in "creamy sauces" such as cacio e pepe, alfredo, carbonara and less noticeable in "watery sauces" such as tomato variations, aglio e olio, pesto and so on.
@santaklaus11
@santaklaus11 Жыл бұрын
I f***ing love this channel. Never knew I cared about this - but I do.
@JETZcorp
@JETZcorp Жыл бұрын
From my experience, the two spaghettis from the store I like the best are the most expensive bronze-cut one, and the cheapest no-name one. I do feel like the expensive one puts more starch in the water, and since I stir in a healthy amount of butter with my spaghetti, that makes it come out less greasy and more creamy. The cheap kind ALSO puts more starch in the water than the "normal" brand-name stuff, and it puffs up extra big which gives it more surface area and makes more food per pound of pasta. The expensive stuff has better flavor, which makes sense, but the texture of the cheapo stuff was surprisingly nice. One other thing I'll say is, the other day I made spaghetti for some other people for the first time in forever. I've been off on my own playing with my recipe for a while now. When I served it to some people who were used to jarred sauce, faces were melted. One of them even pointed out, "the noodles even taste amazing, what did you do?" Cheap pasta, half a cup of pasta water, and BUTTER. Lol
@heqaib
@heqaib Жыл бұрын
Thanks for clarification on Bronze die pasta.
@michaelshneor2291
@michaelshneor2291 Жыл бұрын
the lighting in this video is soooo good
@1969kodiakbear
@1969kodiakbear Жыл бұрын
People. This is so cool. Broca's area, or the Broca area is a region in the frontal lobe of the dominant hemisphere, usually the left, of the brain with functions linked to speech production. 2/8/2021 and I lived again. Broca's aphasia (non-fluent aphasia) Mike Caputo, Year 1 Stroke Recovery, Up Up Up - Aphasia with attitude, Broca's Aphasia, Right-side Weakness, Mark's 22 years-old Stroke: Broca's Aphasia.
@dcd1359
@dcd1359 Жыл бұрын
I really hope that shirt isn't a joke. That would be the first piece of KZbinr merch I would buy
@Donkeyiser
@Donkeyiser Жыл бұрын
Next test, sauces made with: 1.) Pasta water from bronze die 2.) Pasta water from teflon die 3.) Pasta water from teflon with added starch Compare each sauce with the same type of pasta. Can I buy cheap pasta and add some extra starch to thicken the water?
@saad_ghannam
@saad_ghannam Жыл бұрын
At this point I'm convinced Adam makes these highly scientific to improve his future PhD application.
@severgun
@severgun Жыл бұрын
Main point in using starchy water for souce. Not about holding raw souce on surface or penetration. All traditional pasta souces use pasta water for thickening. You drain it all. Yes you can add extra starch to souce manually and get same result with teflon die pasta.
@bodis1000
@bodis1000 Жыл бұрын
imo what makes bronze die pasta better is the superior pasta water for dishes that need it like aglio e olio, carbonara etc
@tunatuna8877
@tunatuna8877 Жыл бұрын
It's the roughness that holds starches which then help with the emulsification of the sauce. If you have a premade sauce, I would agree the pasta wouldn't make much difference. IMO the less ingredients used for a sauce (Alfredo, gricia, cacio, carbonara) the more critical the starch is, and is why I always go for a good starchy pasta.
@DerSerafin
@DerSerafin 11 күн бұрын
For me (a German that likes to cook Italian food as authentic as i can) the starch in the Pasta-water is reason enough as i use some of it when i finish cooking the pasta in the sauce. The starch helps giving the sauce itself a better texture. So for me it´s bronze any day.
@moxxy3565
@moxxy3565 Жыл бұрын
Rao's pasta and pasta sauce is definitely better than anything else I've ever bought from a store in the US
@jarydgallant1348
@jarydgallant1348 Жыл бұрын
If you make the T-shirt, you have to keep the typo from the video ("eperience") in honor of acknowledging we all make mistakes.
@ExpandDong420
@ExpandDong420 Жыл бұрын
The "organileptic" tee should include the typo, for posterity
@TheRealDeal_81
@TheRealDeal_81 Жыл бұрын
Great video Adam! I've actually run similar tests in the past myself and couldn't tell a huge difference in the amount of sauce retained. That being said though, I do prefer the texture and mouth feel of bronze cut pasta; it has a much more satisfying chew to it 😃
@jordanmccallum1234
@jordanmccallum1234 Жыл бұрын
Beyond the clear benefits of having starchier cooking water when you're using it, it's also possible that people feel that "bronze is better" because a lot of higher quality pasta tends to also be bronze cut, and we're attributing a complicated difference in material & process selection to "it's the bronze die" because that's what we can see.
@mattholwood
@mattholwood Жыл бұрын
One thing to consider, bronze die pasta is usually of much higher quality - leading to a much better end product. The teflon die pasta (as least in New Zealand) closely resembles plastic and nothing sticks to it.
@DrinknStitch
@DrinknStitch Жыл бұрын
I know some chemists & scientists who work for Dow Chemical Co. They told me to avoid all Teflon. I try to, but I occasionally buy the cheaper pasta. If I have a side by side choice, I prefer the bronze. I shop at a grocery salvage & all pasta is the same price. I like the bronze die cuts because the pasta water is starchier, yes for using in my sauces.
@gigaherz_
@gigaherz_ Жыл бұрын
I had the same observation. Rough pasta does not itself make the sauce cling better. But for certain dishes it feels somewhat nicer. But considering I pay around 3-5x more? I choose to reserve the use of fancy pasta for fancy dishes I want to present to others. If I'm not cooking for guests, I'm likely to just buy the cheap stuff.
@bordershader
@bordershader Жыл бұрын
Everyone be like "well maybe this, ah but that" and I'm just like WHUT bronze die cut pasta?? I NEEEED this in my life. Never even heard of it till now.
@paulblichmann2791
@paulblichmann2791 Жыл бұрын
Shut up and take my money! 💰🍝💰🍝💰🍝💰🍝
@solevazquezmaria
@solevazquezmaria Жыл бұрын
Super interesting, in my country, we have a huge Italian community, but I have never heard about bronze cut until recently and there is only one commercially available national brand that offers it, I will do a side-by-side experiment of my own!
@0000-r2b
@0000-r2b Жыл бұрын
I worked at an italian restaurant for a few years. The heat thing is no joke. After doing a run of pasta in the extruder you would have to use a towel to replace the die.
@bainik
@bainik Жыл бұрын
What were the actual results for the repeated experiment? "both in the low 30s" doesn't really mean much. 33% vs 30% in the first trial is a small absolute difference (and is thus more likely a result of random variation), but it's also 10% more sauce on the rough pasta compared to the smooth pasta which seems likely to be a significant change in taste.
@MrFennmeista
@MrFennmeista Жыл бұрын
"You're an articulate fellow. What's your profession?!" "pastology😏"
@adamJKpunk
@adamJKpunk Жыл бұрын
I love that Adam has said fuck it and just switched to the metric system!
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