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Pasta
Pasta is not just spaghetti!
There are lots of different shaped pastas.
People have eaten pasta for hundreds of years.
There are different kinds of pasta around the world.
History
There are
different stories about the beginnings of pasta. A popular story is that the explorer Marco Polo
was introduced to pasta during his travels in China, and that
he brought the recipe back to Italy in 1292. In the Middle Ages
pasta was eaten by the Arabs who ruled Sicily at the time. It
is also believed that the ancient Romans in the 1st century AD
ate pasta and that ancient Greeks ate a version of lasagne. Whatever
the real story is, pasta is certainly an ancient food. There
are variations of pasta in the western world and in Asian countries.
Originally pasta
was eaten freshly made, but it was discovered that it could be dried and
stored, which was useful for long sea voyages. However, pasta
did not become an important part of a meal in Italy until the
16th century. It was a luxury item because the special durum
wheat needed had to be imported from Sicily or Puglia, which
made it expensive. Until the 18th century, poorer people in Italy
ate mainly vegetables. At this time the concept of large farms
took hold, which led to more widespread cultivation of durum
wheat. This, combined with the development of a kneading machine
and press, meant there could be factory production of pasta.
At last pasta became part of the daily diet in Italy, and even
poor people could afford it.
Around 1770,
macaroni became popular in England, so much so that the word
macaroni was used to describe anything really good ('That's
macaroni!'). The English at that time had colonies in America,
and so macaroni made its way there.
Today, pasta manufacture is very advanced,
and machines were invented for all parts of the process. The
two basic ingredients are flour and water. The best pasta is
made from durum wheat, specially grown for pasta. Pasta is popular
all over the world, but it is still the Italians who love pasta
most. For nearly 400 years they kept the recipe secret, and developed
over 300 shapes and a huge number of recipes. There is even a
museum of pasta: the Museo Storico Degli Spaghetti in Pontedassio,
Italy.
Here are
links to some websites about pasta!
This one is a
table of contents: click on different chapter headings to find
information : http://members.tripod.com/~FrancoRossi/english/toc.htm
Nutritional value of pasta http://www.fastapasta.com.au/Nutrition.html
Making pasta pastahttp://www.encyclopedia.com/html/p1/pasta.asp
Pasta shapes:
Go here to listen to a song
about pasta!
http://www.songs-for-kids.com/sound%20files/beach/pasta_sh.wav
Acknowledge
this source in your bibliography like this:
Pasta
(2004).
[Online], Available:www.kidcyber.com.au
Back to Food
Sydenham & Thomas, [online] www.kidcyber.com.au
Updated [April 2008] ©kidcyber
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