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What? You've removed 4-6 minutes from the "longest part" (which is likely eaten up by setting up the soak, draining it, and washing the soaking container) and your technique still requires timing the pasta.


Dump noodles in bowl. Fill bowl with water. Walk away indefinitely. I don't care how much time that takes, because it's neither timed nor attended, unlike boiling pasta.

("Washing the soaking container?")

There's no real "timing" the pasta during cooking. "Heat noodles through". Done.

You should try it.


> There's no real "timing" the pasta during cooking. "Heat noodles through". Done.

You've still got to cook them if they're pre-soaked, and avoid both undercooking them and having tough noodles and overcooking them into a starchy sludge.

Either way, you'll either be going off a timer or by checking every few minutes for doneness. I don't find pressing a single button on my phone and saying "11 minute timer" to be so onerous that I'd look into soaking noodles hours in advance just to have to check them to make sure they're al dente anyways.


I will try using this technique next time I make carbonara.

Carbonara is simple: cook bacon, reserve grease, pour in hot pasta + cheese + milk + egg.

If I'm on the ball, I can cook and crumble the bacon a day in advance, but then the full pasta boil is easily the longest part of the process.

If I have the bacon already prepped and can reduce the "bring-to-boil + wait ten minutes", it's actually a very nice time savings for me when having a dinner party.


If you have a hot liquid to cook the pasta in, you don't need to bring-to-boil; you can heat rehydrated noodles through in oil, butter, bacon fat, or whatever.


Ok, that's interesting: I hadn't recognized that you could use the pre-soaked pasta directly in fat (without further boiling in water/broth/whatever). I'm now more intrigued; thanks!


Milk or cream were not in the original carbonara recipe.


BTW Carbonara is named after minced black pepper which should make it look like carbon - YMMV though. Oh, and don't forget to add grated pecorino cheese!




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