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A thin sheet of pumpkin pasta dough draped over a person's hands.
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5 / 6 votes

Pumpkin Pasta Dough

This pumpkin pasta dough from Domenica Marchetti is remarkably stunning to behold—and, just as remarkably, really quite easy to make. We're talking 20 minutes of barely any effort. Impressive? Heck yeah. And wait'll you taste it.
Prep Time15 minutes
Cook Time30 minutes
Total Time45 minutes
Course: Mains
Cuisine: Italian
Servings: 4 servings
Calories: 292

Ingredients

  • 1/3 cup puréed cooked pumpkin or winter squash, such as buttercup or kabocha (or substitute canned pumpkin puree)
  • 2 large (preferably not extra-large) eggs
  • 2 to 2 1/4 cups “00” flour or unbleached all-purpose flour
  • 2 tablespoons semolina flour, plus more for the work surface
  • 3/4 teaspoon fine sea salt
  • Pinch freshly grated nutmeg

Instructions

Make the pumpkin pasta dough

  • In a small bowl, whisk together the pumpkin and 1 of the eggs.
  • In a food processor, briefly pulse 2 cups “00” flour, the semolina flour, salt, and nutmeg.
  • Add the pumpkin mixture and pulse briefly to combine. Add the remaining egg and pulse until the mixture forms crumbs that look like small curds. Pinch together a bit of the mixture and roll it around. It should form a soft ball. If the mixture seems dry, drizzle in a few droplets of water and pulse briefly. If it seems too wet and sticky, add additional flour, 1 tablespoon at a time, and pulse briefly.
  • Add the remaining egg and pulse until the mixture forms crumbs that look like small curds. Pinch together a bit of the mixture and roll it around. It should form a soft ball. If the pasta dough seems dry, drizzle in a few droplets of water and pulse briefly. If the pasta dough seems wet and sticky, add additional flour, 1 tablespoon at a time, and pulse briefly.
    A pile of pumpkin pasta dough on a white and grey marble surface.
  • Turn the mixture onto a clean work surface lightly sprinkled with semolina flour and press it together with your hands to form a rough ball. Knead the dough by using the palm of your hand to push the dough gently but firmly away from you, and then fold it over toward you. Rotate the dough a quarter turn, and repeat the pushing and folding motion.
  • Continue kneading for several minutes, until the dough is smooth. Form it into a ball and wrap it tightly in plastic wrap. Let the dough rest at room temperature for 30 minutes before rolling and forming it into your desired pasta shape.

Shape the pumpkin pasta dough into noodles

  • [Editor’s Note: You could opt to roll the pasta dough by hand using a long wooden rolling pin, although a pasta machine makes for far less work.] Feed the blob of pasta dough through a pasta machine set on the widest setting. As the sheet of pasta dough comes out of the machine, fold it into thirds and then feed it through the rollers again, still on the widest setting. Pass the pasta through this same setting a total of 4 or 5 times. This takes the place of kneading the pasta dough and ensures the resulting pasta is silky smooth.Pass the sheet of pasta dough through the machine again, repeatedly, gradually reducing the settings, one pass at a time, until the pasta achieves the desired thickness. Your sheet of pasta dough will become quite long—if you have trouble keeping the dough from folding onto itself, cut the sheet of dough in half and feed each half through separately. Generally the second-from-last setting is best for tagliatelle and the last setting is best for ravioli and any other shapes that are to be filled. To form lasagne noodles for our pumpkin lasagna recipe, stretch the dough as thin as you comfortably can, no thicker than 1/16 inch.
  • If you lift a sheet with your hand, you should be able to see the shadow of your hand through it. Because lasagne noodles are layered, they need to be very thin. Using a sharp chef’s or similar knife, cut each sheet into rectangles about 4 inches by 5 inches. Click to learn how to form any other pasta shape.
    Rectangles of pumpkin pasta dough

Notes

What To Do With Leftover Pumpkin Purée

If you find yourself with leftover puréed pumpkin (or other winter squash) after making this lovely pumpkin pasta dough, don’t you dare even think about throwing it away. Instead, be sneaky and stir some into your fave mac-n-cheese. It’ll bring an ever so subtle sweetness to your dinner—along with some stealthy potassium and vitamins A and C.

Nutrition

Serving: 1portion | Calories: 292kcal | Carbohydrates: 61g | Protein: 8g | Fat: 1g | Saturated Fat: 1g | Monounsaturated Fat: 1g | Cholesterol: 2mg | Sodium: 439mg | Fiber: 3g | Sugar: 1g