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How to avoid clumpy cheesy pasta sauces | Kitchen aide

7 days ago
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How do I prevent the cheese from clumping in my cacio e pepe sauce?Samuel, by email The first thing to note, says Feast’s Italian correspondent Rachel Roddy, is that it’s “so annoying and so common,In fact, a lot of the responsibility lies with recipe writers, because, traditionally, cacio e pepe wasn’t this creamy, emulsified dish that we all make now,It was just cooked spaghetti with cheese on it,”She continues: “People are so good now at using the pasta cooking water, but that means everything is hotter,” And that right there, she says, is the cause of Samuel’s cheese-clumping plight: “When cheese gets too hot, the solids lose their fat and liquid, and turn into these horrid little blobs.

” The line between melted and coagulated is a fine one, too: “It’s probably only a couple of degrees,”Tim Siadatan, co-owner of Trullo and Padella, both in London, and author of Padella: Iconic Pasta at Home, uses parmesan in his pici cacio e pepe because it’s not that easy to melt: “It’s a very hard, dry cheese with a high protein content, and it’s that combination of characteristics that makes it difficult to melt, especially compared with the likes of mozzarella, which is soft, high in moisture and fat, and low in protein,” To avoid those clumps and potential grainy texture, Siadatan first grates the parmesan (or pecorino) finely (“this will enable it to melt”), but doesn’t then leave it anywhere too warm, “otherwise it will start to sweat, stick together and form little balls even before you try to melt it”,To beat the heat, chefs in Rome often throw grated ice into the pan along with the cheese, Roddy says, although she prefers to play it “really safe” by mixing cold water with the cheese and pepper in a cool bowl to a toothpaste-like consistency,The combination of the cold cheese mix and hot spaghetti gives a “pretty reliable, creamy cacio e pepe, because it never gets too hot”.

As in life, it also pays to wait a beat: “You can go from lovely and melty to blobby in a second,” Roddy warns, so she always counts to 10, 20, even 30 before lifting her pasta (plus any residual cooking water) into the sauce: “It will then be just that little bit cooler.”Siadatan’s sauce strategy, meanwhile, involves keeping the pan over a medium-low heat.“If you add all the cheese at once, it will clump before it’s had time to melt, so add a small handful at a time and stir to create a smooth sauce.”But don’t let your cheese fly solo: “To create a velvety sauce, you need liquid, such as water, butter, egg yolks or cream, for the cheese to melt into.” Mateo Zielonka, author of Pasta Pronto, concurs: he grates his cheese into a butter emulsion on a low heat, though if he’s making, say, fettuccine alfredo, he pulls the pan off the heat before adding the parmesan in two batches, “otherwise it goes stringy”.

And if disaster does strike, can you rescue it? “Some say you can by adding more cheese, a bit of cold water and really beating it,” Roddy says, but if that doesn’t do the trick, she’d be inclined simply to embrace failure: “Making a mistake and watching that cheese coagulate is the first step, because then you can see what happens when it’s too hot and when it’s colder,” Well, every day’s a school day,Got a culinary dilemma? Email feast@theguardian,com
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‘Like time-travelling’: readers tell of unexpected joys of V&A East Storehouse

The V&A has launched a new exhibition space, the V&A East Storehouse in Hackney, east London, which houses more than 250,000 objects and offers immersive experiences alongside more than 100 small, curated displays. As well as browsing the exhibits that are on show, visitors have the option to choose up to five via the “order an object” service and have them delivered to a study room for a private viewing. (That’s if they’re movable – if not, you go to them.)We asked visitors for their highlights – here are some of them.Backdrop for the Ballets Russes production of Le Train Bleu, 1924Le Train Bleu, the Picasso backcloth for Ballets Russes, was an amazing surprise

3 days ago
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‘Let’s learn from that history’: opera looks to luddites for how to deal with AI

If you ask artificial intelligence when in history we can learn lessons about the global challenges of AI it does, thankfully, agree with the composer Ben Crick: 200 years ago in the north of England.Crick believes we could all benefit from knowing more about the luddites, the “Industrial Revolution machine-wreckers”, and we need to draw lessons from them to address what is, for some, the biggest existential question of our time.“This sudden and abrupt increase in technology which is affecting the labour market, has already happened here,” Crick said. “It happened in 1812, it happened in places like Bradford and Huddersfield, which were tiny hamlets and then all of a sudden they were massive, sprawling cities.“This question has been asked before – in the north of England

3 days ago
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My cultural awakening: Ratatouille helped me overcome my insomnia

I have never been good at silence. When it’s quiet, my brain fills the gap with racing thoughts. It wasn’t until lockdown, when I was 27, that I was diagnosed with ADHD and autism, but looking back it made sense: the fidgety teenage nights, the late-night TV marathons, the constant need for background noise.As a kid, my insomnia was brutal. When I couldn’t sleep, all I wanted to do was get up and do something, but I shared a room with my sister so I just had to lie there, still and frustrated

4 days ago
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From the BFI London film festival to Taylor Swift: your complete entertainment guide to the week ahead

BFI London film festival8 to 19 October The annual smorgasbord of cinema returns to the UK capital (and beyond, via various regional satellite screenings), offering a selection of the best major international festival premieres, from Cannes to Venice. Catch the latest from Richard Linklater and Lynne Ramsay, as well as Guillermo del Toro’s new Frankenstein.UrchinOut nowHarris Dickinson has been making a name for himself as a homegrown British star on the rise able to hold his own opposite the likes of Zac Efron (The Iron Claw) and Nicole Kidman (Babygirl). But here he steps behind the camera for his directorial debut, about a young hustler (Frank Dillane) struggling to make a life for himself on the streets of London.HimOut nowStarring Marlon Wayans, Tyriq Withers and Julia Fox, this new sports horror from Jordan Peele’s production company … wait, what? “Sports horror”? Yep, that’s the genre, mashing tropes from sports movies and horror together, to give us a story about a would-be American football star who enters a world that isn’t all it seems

4 days ago
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Stephen Colbert: Trump using the shutdown to ‘punish anyone who didn’t vote for him’

Late-night hosts covered the second day of the government shutdown, claiming Trump and his loyalists are using it for nefarious reasons.On The Late Show, Stephen Colbert said there was “no end in sight” to the shutdown and that “Uncle Sam is already selling feet pics” in desperation.Trump has blamed Democrats, and he is “using it as a way to squash things he doesn’t like”, Colbert said, adding that “it’s not a shutdown, it’s a shut-pertunity”.It’s the result of a disagreement over healthcare, with Democrats trying to push for benefits to be reinstated for many Americans under the Affordable Care Act.Republicans “control all three branches of government, but somehow none of this is their fault” and Colbert said Trump was using it to “punish anyone who didn’t vote for him”

4 days ago
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The Guide #211: What the world is watching, from Brazilian telenovelas to superheroes made of red bean paste

A little while ago the Guide looked at the wave of international post-apocalyptic dramas washing up on our shores, bringing tales of climate catastrophe, violent autocracy and alien invasions from as far afield as Argentina, Nigeria and Korea. As well as revealing just how terrified the whole world is of the prospect of institutional collapse, it also – somewhat more positively – underscored what a globally connected industry TV is in 2025. Streaming networks, satellite channels, YouTube and hooky pirate streams can instantly serve up local content from every continent (Antartica excepted, though I’d love to hear if there’s a penguin mob drama from King George Island that I’ve missed).Still, as intermingled as TV is these days, there are still so many programmes that will probably never reach our shores despite being absolutely massive with their domestic audiences. So this week we wanted to shine a light on those shows by asking some of the Guardian’s foreign correspondents and contributors what people are watching in the countries they cover

4 days ago
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Ineos to cut a fifth of Hull jobs, blaming ‘dirt-cheap’ imports from China

about 11 hours ago
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Australia Post releases footage of posties being hit by cars as it urges drivers to ‘keep an eye out’

about 16 hours ago
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‘We want justice’: workers at Amazon warehouses in Saudi Arabia still waiting on financial redress

1 day ago
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‘Obedient, yielding and happy to follow’: the troubling rise of AI girlfriends

1 day ago
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Trevor Lawrence’s trip and score TD leads Jaguars to thrilling late win over Chiefs

about 14 hours ago
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Marnus Labuschagne dropped from Australia ODI squad to face India

about 15 hours ago