It is a machine that produces pasta in different shapes. I have a small one ( about size and shape of a car battery) - It is hand crank operated and can produce about 80 different pasta shapes and extrusions. - You put lump of dough in one end and get beautiful shapes at other end.
Yes, as long as you use a clean, flour-free machine.
The pasta dough is made, then rolled through a pasta machine, which rolls it out to about 1mm thick. The pasta is then cut into shape.
Hi there when using a pasta machine you first get your mixture. Roll it out with a rolling pin than hold it on one hand and feed it through the pasta machine whilst turning the handle. Repeat this process 2-3 times and on the final cut put your pattern in to cut the pasta to your shape and size.
Cleaning an Atlas pasta machine is not an easy task. One needs a screwdriver, an adjustable wrench, a wooden skewer, mud clay, rubbing alcohol, wax paper and cotton swabs to clean the pasta machine. There is a YouTube online video which could help with this process.
Contact the store where you bought it, or contact the manufacturer.
The Palermo Earthenware pasta bowl is microwave safe and is machine washable, as well.
It is said, that Thomas Jefferson brought macaroni back with him from a trip to Italy and even re-invented the pasta machine to make it easier to use. However, other sources stated that the first pasta machine was patented in New York in 1906.
You could try Ebay or a hardware store.
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Donna Rathmell German has written: 'The New Pasta Machine Cookbook' 'The pasta machine cookbook' -- subject(s): Pasta machines, Cookery (Pasta), Cooking (Pasta) 'The Big Book of Bread Machine Recipes' 'Favorite Pastas and Sauces (Nitty Gritty Cookbooks)' 'The Bread Machine Cookbook IV' 'Waffles' -- subject(s): Pancakes, waffles 'The New Book of Waffles and Pizzelles (Nitty Gritty Cookbooks - Bread Machine-Related)' 'The bread machine cookbook' -- subject(s): Bread, Automatic bread machines 'The sandwich maker cookbook' -- subject(s): Sandwich makers (Appliances), Sandwiches, Bread, Automatic bread machines
Mine makes about 20 different kinds
No; "macaroni" is probably derived from a Latin root (we get "macerate" from the same root), it isn't someone's name. Macaroni (the pasta) is probably an Arabic invention.