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Pasta Stories

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Sauced Up: A guide to using alcohol in pasta dishes.

Sauced Up: A guide to using alcohol in pasta dishes.

February 16, 2026

When it comes to alcohol and pasta, most conversations revolve around pairing alcoholic beverages with finished dishes. But alcohol plays a vital role in the cooking process, too. 

Yes, alcoholic beverages can add flavor and aroma. But beyond that, the ethanol in alcohol can transform other ingredients. So, let’s explore how wine, beer, brandy, and more can help us out at the stove.

Platter of pasta with tomatoes and herbs on a textured surfaceBrandy

Made from fruit wine that’s distilled and sometimes aged, brandies have a high alcohol content. They may offer sweet, smoky, earthy notes to dishes, and often work well against salty and tart finishing ingredients. Because of their potency, classic applications include using brandy to deglaze onions and mushrooms for steak sauces, caramelizing crusts, or deglazing pans for chicken or veal piccata. Try our Porcini Trumpet Tallarin Saltado recipe, which uses Peruvian pisco to enhance tomatoes, mushrooms, oyster sauce, and ginger for a truly transportive flavor experience.

Wine

Wine tenderizes meat, keeps proteins moist, and dissolves in both oil and water-soluble compounds. So it’s often used to deglaze pans, make finishing sauces, and bind cheese sauces. A general rule of thumb? Only cook with wine you’d gladly drink and stick with dry whites and reds—sweetness and oakiness concentrate during the cooking process, throwing off other flavors. Otherwise, use wine where you would water or stock. Our recipes for Cavatelli with Mini Meatballs and Zucca with Creamy Prosecco and Mushroom Sauce can help you get started. 

 

Pasta dish with pretzels and green onions on a blue plate, with a glass of beer and napkin in the background.Beer

Like wine, beer can pierce through fat to brine meat or emulsify soups and sauces. Stay away from overtly hoppy beers. Otherwise, cooking with beer is less about adding flavor and more about taking advantage of its weight and intensity. Light/medium ales and wheat beers add effervescence to pasta dishes with shrimp, shellfish, and pillowy cheeses. Porters, lagers, and stouts work well with loud ingredients like tomatoes, sausages, mustard, and sharp cheeses, some of which you’ll find in our lager-infused Quattrotini and Beer Cheese recipe.

Spirits 

Light distilled spirits contain mostly water and ethanol, which deepen and transport aromas of other ingredients while adding subtle flavors. Those ethanols also help keep emulsified sauces from breaking so that they stay shiny and creamy. That’s why Pasta Alla Vodka is such a classic—clean vodka enhances the sweetness of tomatoes and creates a luscious cream sauce. Floral gin produces a particularly aromatic bouquet with basil and rosemary. Or try our Einkorn Ziti recipe, where slightly sweet soju balances out salty, briny ingredients.

Pasta dish with green herbs in a pink bowl on a marble surface

Whisky

While their high alcohol content means you can use them as you would other spirits, whiskies often have a greater depth of flavor, layering notes of smoke, pepper, oak, caramel, chocolate, and more. They work well in dishes that are equally loud and smoky, especially when finished with acid from lemon, pineapple, or grapefruit.  A splash or two will enhance the earthy flavors of our rye and whole wheat pasta or the smoke of bacon, prosciutto, or sausage. Try your favorite bourbon in our Bourbon Carbonara Trumpet recipe, where maple bacon and bourbon come together in smoky sweetness.

Beyond The Bar 101

The primary benefit of using alcohol in savory cooking? It cuts through fat, binds ingredients, and enhances their flavors. So when you go to scrape the sticky bits from the bottom of a sauté pan, reach for a bottle instead of broth. The next time, reach for a different bottle. And repeat.

Pasta dish with bacon and cheese on a black plate, placed on a blue towel.

 

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Cook Something You Love: Recipes Made for Sharing.

Cook Something You Love: Recipes Made for Sharing.

February 03, 2026

February invites us to slow down and gather around the table. It is a time for lingering dinners, cozy brunches, and meals that feel a little more thoughtful. Valentine’s Day is part of it, of course, but so is celebrating friends, family, and anyone you love cooking for, including yourself.

At Sfoglini, we believe pasta is one of the easiest ways to show care. One pot on the stove, one platter in the center of the table, and a meal that encourages conversation and second helpings. These seven recipes are made for sharing, whether you are planning a romantic dinner, a casual get together, or a relaxed weekend brunch.

Swiss Chard Bigoli Pie

This savory pie is perfect for a Valentine’s weekend brunch or a cozy afternoon meal. Swiss chard and Bigoli come together in a dish that slices beautifully and invites everyone to dig in.

Why it is perfect for sharing: Easy to portion, easy to pass, and perfect for lingering around the table.

Cook something you love: Make this recipe →

Reginetti Lasagna

This take on lasagna swaps traditional sheets for elegant Reginetti ribbons that layer beautifully with sauce and cheese. It bakes up bubbling and golden, ready to be set in the center of the table and sliced generously.

Why it is perfect for sharing: Lasagna is meant to be shared, and the ruffled edges of Reginetti make every portion feel special.

Cook something you love: Make this recipe →

Saffron Malloreddus alla Campidanese

Saffron kissed Malloreddus paired with a savory sausage sauce creates a dish that feels celebratory without being fussy. Warm spices, rich aroma, and beautiful color make it a standout for February meals.

Why it is perfect for sharing: Deeply comforting flavors that invite lingering at the table and second servings.

Cook something you love: Make this recipe →

Jalapeño Popper Mac and Cheese

Creamy, cheesy, and just spicy enough, this playful take on mac and cheese brings comfort with a little attitude. It is familiar, fun, and always a crowd pleaser.

Why it is perfect for sharing: A dish everyone gravitates toward, perfect for casual gatherings and relaxed nights in.

Cook something you love: Make this recipe →

Calabrian Chili Cascatelli with Marcella’s Marinara

A classic marinara gets a gentle kick from Calabrian chili, brought to life by Cascatelli’s playful curves and sauce loving curves. It is bold, comforting, and familiar in the best way, with just enough heat to keep things interesting.

Why it is perfect for sharing: A big platter, a generous ladle of sauce, and a shape that holds onto every bite make this ideal for passing around the table.

Cook something you love: Make this recipe →

Chicken Cacciatore with Einkorn Ziti

Tender chicken simmered in a tomato rich sauce meets hearty Einkorn Ziti in this rustic classic. It is nourishing, satisfying, and full of comforting, familiar flavors.

Why it is perfect for sharing: A one bowl meal that feels generous and grounding, ideal for slow dinners together.

Cook something you love: Make this recipe →

Quattrotini with Sausage Ragu

Quattrotini’s sculpted shape captures every bit of rich sausage ragu, delivering a satisfying bite every time. This is a hearty, cozy dish that feels just right for a shared meal.

Why it is perfect for sharing: Built for sauce lovers and family style serving, it rewards every scoop.

Cook something you love: Make this recipe →

This February, let pasta be your love language!

Cooking is one of the simplest ways to show love, including love for yourself. It does not have to be complicated or perfect. It just has to come from a place of care. This month, cook something you truly love, whether it is for a full table or just for you, and share the love one plate, one table, at a time.

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Pictures of Sfoglini pasta in bowls of soups and stews with text "Winter Comfort, One Bowl at a Time"

Winter Comfort, One Bowl at a Time

January 16, 2026

Few dishes sing of winter quite like a steaming bowl of soup, especially when the pasta itself is built to hold up in a simmering pot. Sfoglini shapes are bronze-cut and slow-dried, giving them the structure and texture needed for soups and stews, where pasta should stay pleasantly al dente, never mushy, and capture broth in every bite.

Unlike delicate pastas that soften too quickly, Sfoglini’s thoughtfully designed pasta shapes are made to cook slowly and evenly, maintaining their integrity even as they soak up flavor. Each curve, ridge, and hollow serves a purpose, holding onto rich, savory broth, scooping up beans and vegetables, and delivering a balanced bite from the first spoonful to the last.

From curved shapes that cradle broths to ridged grooves that gather beans and greens, Sfoglini pasta turns simple soup into something deeply satisfying. When the weather turns cold, these are the kinds of bowls we reach for, hearty, flexible recipes that simmer gently on the stove and warm you from the inside out.

Cavatelli alla Minestrone Verti

Cavatelli alla Minestrone Verdi

This bowl is all about balance: tender pasta, silky beans, and a medley of green vegetables that feel fresh even on the coldest days. Cavatelli’s slightly curved shape is ideal here—it catches bits of vegetables and beans while holding its own in a brothy soup without turning soft.

This version of minestrone verdi leans into hearty winter greens, specifically kale and spinach, which soften beautifully into the broth while still keeping their character. What really brings the whole pot together is the finish: a generous spoonful of pesto, stirred in just before serving. It adds richness, herbal depth, and a hit of brightness that lifts the soup beyond the expected.

The result is a bowl that’s deeply nourishing but never heavy—perfect for weeknight dinners, make-ahead lunches, or any night you want something comforting yet vibrant. Serve with crusty bread and grated cheese, or enjoy it just as it is.

Cook this one next. Get the recipe ➡️

Classic Chicken Soup with Whole Grain Reginetti

This is comfort cooking at its most intuitive—a soup built on technique rather than strict rules. Whole Grain Reginetti brings heartiness and structure to the bowl, holding up beautifully in a long-simmered broth while offering a nutty depth that makes the soup feel especially satisfying.

The foundation starts with winter aromatics like leeks, onions, and garlic, gently sautéed to coax out sweetness. From there, the pot is open to interpretation: Italian sausage, smoked ham, or shredded chicken add richness; leafy greens, squash, or potatoes bring body and balance. Beans, tomatoes, and stock round everything out, creating a soup that’s both nourishing and endlessly adaptable.

It’s the kind of recipe that invites you to cook by feel—using what you have, tasting as you go, and ending with a bowl that feels personal every time.

Build your own bowl. Get the recipe ➡️

 

Classic Chicken Soup with Whole Grain ReginettiMore Bowls Worth Simmering

If Cavatelli alla Minestrone Verdi sparks your craving for spoonable comfort, these recipes are perfect companions for the season:

 

Lasagna Stew with Whipped Ricotta

This dish delivers everything you love about lasagna in a more relaxed, spoonable form. Our regal ribbons of Reginetti simmer directly in a tomato-rich broth layered with familiar Italian flavors, creating a stew that’s bold, comforting, and deeply satisfying.

The finishing touch is whipped ricotta, added just before serving. As it melts into the hot stew, it creates pockets of creaminess that echo the richness of a baked lasagna—without the layering or oven time. It’s a cozy, one-pot answer to lasagna cravings and a perfect choice for weekend cooking or casual entertaining.

Turn lasagna into a stew . Get the recipe ➡️

Sfoglini Lasagna Stew with Whipped Ricotta

Turkey Noodle Soup with Fennel and Lemon

This soup takes familiar comfort and brightens it with thoughtful, aromatic touches. Hearty whole grain noodles and leftover turkey form the heart of the dish, while fennel adds gentle sweetness and complexity as it softens into the broth.

A finish of fresh lemon brings lift and clarity, balancing the richness and keeping the bowl feeling light yet satisfying. It’s especially welcome after heavy meals or holiday cooking—a restorative soup that still delivers warmth, depth, and comfort with every bite.

Warm up with this bowl. Get the recipe ➡️ 

Turkey Noodle Soup with Fennel and Lemon

Saffron Malloreddus with White Beans, Preserved Lemon, and Greens

This fragrant, golden-hued dish sits somewhere between soup and stew, offering richness without heaviness. Malloreddus pasta provides a sturdy, toothsome base, while white beans add creaminess and staying power.

Saffron infuses the broth with warmth and subtle floral notes, and preserved lemon cuts through with a gentle, savory acidity that keeps the dish lively. Finished with greens that wilt softly into the pot, this is a pantry-driven winter recipe that feels both comforting and quietly elegant.

Try this pantry favorite. Get the recipe ➡️ 

Pasta e Fagioli

Few dishes capture rustic comfort quite like this classic pairing of pasta and beans. Cavatelli’s curved shape is perfect for scooping up creamy beans and broth, ensuring every spoonful feels substantial and warming.

Slow-simmered and deeply savory, this dish relies on simple ingredients and patient cooking to build flavor. The beans soften and enrich the broth, while the pasta provides a satisfying chew that turns a humble pot into a full, comforting meal. It’s the kind of soup-stew hybrid that feels timeless—ideal for cold evenings when you want something unfussy but deeply rewarding.

Simmer something cozy. Get the recipe ➡️

Pasta e Fagioli

The Season for Simmering

Winter is the season for letting a pot bubble on the stove, transforming simple ingredients into something deeply comforting. Whether you start with one of these recipes or follow the inspiration to create your own cozy bowl, each is designed to make cold days feel warmer—and dinner feel truly rewarding.

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Whole Grain Pasta Recipes to Cook in 2026

Whole Grain Pasta Recipes to Cook in 2026

January 05, 2026

If your plans for 2026 include adding more whole grains and vegetables to your table, you are in the right place. Whole grain pasta is an easy, satisfying way to build meals that feel nourishing without giving up comfort or flavor. These recipes lean into hearty shapes, bold sauces, and plenty of vegetables, making them perfect for weeknights, meal prep, or cozy weekends in the kitchen.

A Better Way to Do Whole Grains

So what makes Sfoglini's whole grain pasta different? Our Organic Whole Grain Collection is made from a thoughtful blend of premium semolina flour and stone-milled whole grain flours. This balance is key. The whole grains, including hard red wheat and ancient grains like einkorn, bring fiber, nutrients, and rich nutty flavor. The semolina, milled from the heart of durum wheat, ensures the pasta keeps its shape and delivers that essential al dente bite.

Each shape is bronze-cut and slow-dried at low temperatures for over nine hours. The result is pasta with excellent texture, deep flavor, and a surface that truly hugs sauce. It is a smart, easy upgrade to everyday meals without sacrificing the flavors you love.

Now, on to the recipes.

Whole Grain Radiator Cauliflower Cacio e Pepe

Whole Grain Radiators with Cauliflower Cacio e Pepe

This vegetable-forward take on a Roman classic proves that comfort food and whole grains go hand in hand. Roasted cauliflower adds nutty depth and texture, while Whole Grain Radiators grab onto every bit of the peppery, cheesy sauce. It is simple, satisfying, and a great reminder that vegetables can absolutely be the star of the plate. 

Get the Recipe →

Whole Grain Reginetti with Italian Sausage and Peppers

Sweet peppers, savory sausage, and ruffled Reginetti make this dish a weeknight staple with a whole grain boost. The sturdy ribbons hold up beautifully to bold flavors, while the peppers bring color and freshness to every bite. It is a balanced, hearty meal that feels classic and comforting.

Get the Recipe →

Whole Grain Reginetti with Italian Sausage and Peppers

Vegetarian Banh Mi Whole Grain Trumpets

This recipe brings bright vegetables and bold flavors together in a way that feels fresh and exciting. Pickled veggies, herbs, and a punchy sauce fill Whole Grain Trumpets, creating a plant-forward dish that is anything but boring. It is a great option when you want to add more vegetables without sacrificing big flavor.

Get the Recipe →

Chicken Cacciatore with Einkorn Ziti

Einkorn pasta brings a slightly nutty flavor to this comforting classic. Simmered tomatoes, peppers, and herbs create a sauce that feels rustic and warming, perfect for slower nights and big bowls. It is a reminder that whole grains fit just as easily into traditional, cozy dishes.

Get the Recipe →

Chicken Cacciatore with Einkorn Ziti

Rye Trumpets with Eggplant Parmesan Sauce

If you are looking to add more vegetables while trying something a little different, this one delivers. Tender eggplant is simmered into a rich, savory sauce that pairs beautifully with the earthy flavor of Rye Trumpets. It is deeply satisfying and a great example of how whole grain pasta can elevate vegetable-forward cooking.

Get the Recipe →

Rye Trumpet with Eggplant Parmesan Sauce

A Delicious Way to Start 2026

Adding more grains and vegetables does not have to mean reinventing how you cook. With the right balance of whole grains and semolina, these pastas deliver flavor, texture, and comfort in every bite. Whether you are cooking for yourself, your family, or friends around the table, these recipes make it easy to start 2026 feeling good and eating well.

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Five Holiday Pasta Dishes from Around the World

Five Holiday Pasta Dishes from Around the World

November 25, 2025

The holidays are a time when tradition takes center stage—recipes passed down through generations, dishes that signal celebration, and flavors that feel like home. Many of these festive favorites involve pasta, though most of us return year after year to the versions we know best.

But this season, as we gather around the table and raise a glass to good company, it’s worth looking beyond the familiar. Around the world, pasta plays a starring role in holiday feasts in ways that are creative, comforting, and downright inspiring. If you’re ready to rethink your menu—or just add something unexpected to the spread—here are five pasta dishes rich in culture, history, and unforgettable flavor.

Frutti di Mare – Italy / Italian American Tradition

In the early 1900s, Italian Americans longing for the flavors of home created what we now know as The Feast of Seven Fishes. A vibrant display of seafood-centered dishes, the Christmas Eve table is traditionally filled with either seven distinct courses or multiple fish prepared seven ways—a nod to the Catholic custom of abstaining from meat on Christmas Eve.

One of the feast’s most beloved dishes is frutti di mare, a pasta swirled with a briny, tomato-based sauce and overflowing with the chef’s choice of seafood—white fish, clams, shrimp, scallops, mussels, and more. Whether made with bigoli, bucatini, linguine, or whatever pasta is on hand, it’s a showstopper that brings the ocean’s bounty to the holiday table.

Want to host your own Feast of Seven Fishes? Explore our menu guide and recipe ideas >

Frutti di MareLasagne da Fornel – Northern Italy

When most of us picture lasagna, we imagine a hearty, red-sauced, cheese-laden bake. But in Northern Italy, the season begins with lasagne da fornel, a sweet-and-savory Christmas Eve specialty with roots in the region’s Germanic neighbors.

This delicate dish starts with raisins and figs simmered in white wine until plump and fragrant. They’re folded together with grated apples, ground walnuts, and melted butter—an aromatic mixture layered between sheets of pasta. A sprinkle of semi di papavero (poppy seeds) on top creates a nod to traditional strudel, delivering a comforting, unexpected lasagna that bridges cultures and celebrates winter’s flavors.

Lokshen Kugel – Jewish Ashkenazi Tradition

Lokshen (noodle) kugel traces its history back to Jewish travelers who carried pasta from Italy to Franco-Germany in the 14th century. Early versions were savory, steamed noodle puddings enriched with cottage cheese, sour cream, Parmesan, onions, and garlic.

Everything changed in the early 1800s, when Polish Jews began refining beet sugar—the kugel transformed from savory to sweet. Today’s holiday and Sabbath tables often feature the dessert-like version: creamy noodles baked with sugar, raisins, cinnamon, and nuts.

Sweet, comforting, and celebratory, it’s a beloved counterpoint to salty Hanukkah latkes and hearty winter dishes.

Try our take on this classic with the Reginetti Kugel recipe >

Maccheroni con le Noci – Central Italy (Umbria)

Chocolate and pasta may sound unconventional today, but Italians have blended the two since the 16th century, when Columbus’s voyages brought cacao to Europe. Early savory recipes combined cocoa pasta with mushrooms, anchovies, and sharp cheeses for an umami-rich dish.

But during the Christmas season, Umbrian cooks take a sweeter approach with maccheroni con le noci. Cooked pasta—such as linguine or reginetti—is mixed with chopped walnuts, sugar, cinnamon, cookie or bread crumbs, cocoa powder, and a splash of anise liqueur. Pressed into a loaf or pie pan, then served warm or chilled, it’s a rustic, comforting dessert that feels tailor-made for cold winter nights.

Longevity Noodles

Longevity Noodles – Chinese Lunar New Year

During Chinese Lunar New Year celebrations, longevity noodles symbolize the wish for a long, healthy life. These extra-long strands—often made with wheat flour—must remain unbroken from the pot to the plate to preserve their lucky meaning.

Once cooked with care, the noodles are tossed in a simple but deeply flavorful dressing: soy sauce, black vinegar or sesame oil, garlic, and finished with green onions and sesame seeds.

The challenge? Eat them without biting through the strands. The reward: even more good fortune for the year ahead.


If you’re looking to add a global flourish to your holiday menu—or simply want to bring new stories to the table—these dishes offer a delicious way to celebrate tradition, culture, and the many ways pasta brings people together.

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A Pasta-Lover’s Guide to the Feast of Seven Fishes

A Pasta-Lover’s Guide to the Feast of Seven Fishes

November 21, 2025

Celebrate Christmas Eve the Italian American way—with seafood, tradition, and unforgettable pasta.

Every December, Italian American households across the country gather for one of the most iconic holiday meals: The Feast of Seven Fishes. Its origins trace back to Italian immigrants of the early 1900s who longed for the flavors of home. In Italy, Catholics traditionally abstained from eating meat on Christmas Eve, turning instead to the bounty of the sea. When those families arrived in America, they faithfully carried the custom with them—expanding and adapting it into the lavish seafood celebration we know today.

Some families serve seven distinct seafood dishes, each meant to honor the number’s religious symbolism. Others take a more modern route: preparing one or two types of fish in seven different ways. Either way, the table brims with abundance—clams, shrimp, scallops, lobster, and white fish—often served in generous bowls of frutti di mare tossed with pasta like bigoli, bucatini, or one of Sfoglini’s signature short shapes.

It’s a feast rooted in devotion, nostalgia, and culinary craftsmanship. And whether your tradition is centuries old or brand-new, pairing premium bronze-cut pasta with stunning seafood dishes is a beautiful way to honor it.

Below, discover four standout recipes that bring the Feast of Seven Fishes to life—each one elegant, approachable, and full of holiday magic.

✨ Saffron Vesuvio with Crab and Herbs

A celebration of color and aroma, this recipe transforms Sfoglini’s Saffron Vesuvio into a golden, aromatic centerpiece. Delicate crab mingles with fresh herbs and the warm notes of saffron, creating a dish that feels both festive and luxurious. Perfect as a first course—or as a show-stopping star on your seafood spread

Get the Recipe> Saffron Vesuvio with Crab and Herbs

✨ Crab Fra Diavolo with Calabrian Chili Pasta

For those who want fiery flavor and bold holiday energy, this dish delivers. Sweet crab meets a tomato-rich Fra Diavolo sauce, clinging beautifully to Sfoglini Calabrian Chili Lumache or Calabrian Chili Cascatelli. It’s festive, vibrant, and exactly the kind of pasta that wakes up the table.

Get the Recipe> Crab Fra Diavolo with Calabrian Chili Pasta

✨ Shrimp Scampi with Whole Grain Reginetti

Light, bright, and irresistibly garlicky, this Shrimp Scampi is a gorgeous option for balancing out a seafood-heavy feast. Whole Grain Reginetti brings a nutty depth and hearty bite, while lemon, butter, and white wine create a sauce that sings. A perfect addition to any seven-fish menu.

Get the Recipe> Shrimp Scampi with Whole Grain Reginetti

✨ Reginetti with Spicy Lobster Sauce

For those who want a dish that leans into richness, heat, and pure holiday indulgence, this Spicy Lobster Sauce is the one. Velvety tomato, sweet lobster meat, and a gentle kick of chile coat every regal ribbons of bronze-cut Reginetti. It’s the kind of pasta that turns Christmas Eve into an event.

Get the Recipe> Reginetti with Spicy Lobster Sauce

How to Build Your Feast: From Full Spread to Simple Celebration

Whether you're hosting a bustling, multi-course gathering or keeping things intimate this year, the Feast of Seven Fishes is beautifully flexible. At its heart, it’s about honoring tradition, savoring seafood, and creating a sense of abundance—no matter how many dishes are on the table.

Below are two inspired ways to structure your Christmas Eve meal: a classic, coursed-out feast and a pared-down version that captures the essence with just one pasta and a small bite.

🍽 The Full Seven-Course Spread

For those who want to embrace the full ritual, a well-paced menu helps the meal unfold like a story—from light and briny to rich and celebratory.

1. Antipasto / Light Bite
 Start with something chilled or simply prepared to open the palate.
• Marinated anchovies
• Smoked salmon crostini
• Lemon–garlic shrimp

2. Seafood Salad
A refreshing interlude featuring the clean flavors of the sea.
• Insalata di mare with octopus and squid
• Citrus-poached scallops with fennel

3. Brothy Course
Warm, aromatic, and perfect for winter.
• Clam or mussel brodetto
 • Saffron seafood zuppa - add Saffron Malloreddus for an extra depth of flavor

4. Fried Course
Crispy, festive, crowd-pleasing.
• Fritto misto
• Baccalà fritters

5. Pasta Course #1
A delicate transition into richer flavors.
• Saffron Vesuvio with Crab and Herbs

6. Pasta Course #2
Bolder, saucier, and truly celebratory.
• Reginetti with Spicy Lobster Sauce
• Or Crab Fra Diavolo with Calabrian Chili Pasta 

7. Main Seafood Dish
The finale that anchors the meal.
• Whole roasted branzino
• Salt-baked white fish

Finish with panettone, espresso, or a splash of limoncello to complete the tradition.

🍝 A Pared-Down Feast (For Smaller Tables)

If a full seven-course procession feels like too much this year, you can still enjoy the spirit of the tradition with a simpler format. A single standout pasta paired with a small seafood appetizer delivers all the flavor and symbolism—without the hours of prep.

Option 1: Bright + Elegant
• Appetizer: Lemon–garlic sautéed shrimp
• Main: Saffron Vesuvio with Crab and Herbs

Option 2: Spicy + Festive
• Appetizer: Shrimp cocktail with Calabrian chili sauce
• Main: Reginetti with Spicy Lobster Sauce
• Or: Crab Fra Diavolo with Calabrian Chili Pasta

Option 3: Light + Comforting
• Appetizer: Crispy calamari or burrata with citrus
• Main: Shrimp Scampi with Whole Grain Reginetti

A pared-down feast is perfect for yourself, small group, busy families, or anyone who wants the warmth of the tradition without the marathon of cooking. With one thoughtfully chosen pasta and a simple seaside starter, your table still sings with the spirit of Christmas Eve.


Bringing the Feast Home

Whether you prepare all seven dishes or choose just one unforgettable showpiece, the Feast of Seven Fishes is ultimately about togetherness—gathering around the table, sharing stories, and savoring the flavors that connect generations.

With exceptional pasta, thoughtfully sourced seafood, and a touch of holiday spirit, your Christmas Eve celebration becomes more than a meal—it becomes a memory.

Buon Natale, and happy feasting. 🍝🐟✨

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Collage of Italian food and Sfoglini pasta with text 'Entertaining, THE ITALIAN WAY!' and 'Sfoglini Pasta' branding.

Entertain the Italian Way This Holiday Season

November 13, 2025

Delicious food, lively conversation, and plenty of laughter — that’s the Italian way to celebrate the holidays. This year, embrace a relaxed, joy-filled approach to entertaining with recipes and tips that bring warmth and togetherness to your table.

Set the Scene for Togetherness

Create a cozy, welcoming ambiance. Mix and match your favorite tableware, light a few candles, and serve dinner family-style so guests can laugh, share stories, and enjoy second helpings.

Pour a festive cocktail or mulled wine as everyone gathers — a simple way to set a cheerful, celebratory mood while keeping the atmosphere relaxed.

Keep the Menu Simple — and Special

Italian hosts rely on trusted recipes made with high-quality ingredients and traditional techniques to guarantee deliciousness without stress.

The Perfect Antipasto Platter

Antipasto platters are reliable crowd-pleasers, and the most satisfying ones combine several snackable ingredients. Make high-quality cheeses and cured meats the star. Then add bread, olives, bowls of olive oil and pesto, cured artichokes, roasted peppers, whatever nuts you have on hand, random crackers, and even chips to the spread. Have fun!

Try our Sun-Dried Tomato Pesto — tangy tomatoes and almonds make a vibrant spread that works for pasta, bruschetta, or as a dip for vegetables. Let guests help themselves while you finish the main dishes. Or create festive skewers with a hearty pasta (such as Quattrotini) cooked and seasoned with bright olive oil, then stacked with meat, cheese, and olives.

Focus on Family-Style Dishes

Family-style dining is the heart of Italian hospitality. Choose dishes that are easy to pass, encourage conversation, and keep the energy lively. Pasta is perfect for this — it’s hearty, comforting, and can be prepared ahead of time.

Here are a few that work particularly well for family-style gatherings:

  • Whole Grain Reginetti with Italian Sausage and Peppers — a rustic crowd-pleaser that’s hearty, colorful, and ready in under an hour Get the recipe >

  • Cascatelli al Forno — bubbling, golden, and ideal for a warm, holiday table Get the recipe >

  • Zucca Bolognese — richly layered with meat, wine, and tomatoes; a show-stopping dish that fills the kitchen with irresistible aromas Get the recipe >

  • Saffron Malloreddus alla Campidanese — saffron-infused pasta meets slow-simmered pork ragu for a comforting, festive bite Get the recipe >

  • Reginetti Lasagna — layers of rich béchamel, fragrant tomato sauce, two cheeses, and pasta ribbons baked to bubbly perfection Get the recipe >

Finish with Festive Sweets

Part of the family-style fun is digging into desserts like tiramisu, a sweet kugel dusted with cinnamon, fruit tarts, or cookie trays rather than fancily plated ones. Offer guests a little pungent limoncello or bitter amaro to drink alongside or in their coffee — the perfect toast to friendship and the season.

Attending Instead of Hosting? Don’t Forget the Hostess Gift

Bring a little Sfoglini to every celebration. A few of our bronze-cut pastas paired with a jar of sauce or a bottle of olive oil makes a thoughtful gift that feels personal and purposeful. Or go all out with a Sfoglini Pasta Club Subscription — a quarterly delivery of artisanal pastas and curated recipes. It’s a gift that celebrates hospitality all year long.

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The Pasta Lover’s Guide to Brunch

The Pasta Lover’s Guide to Brunch

July 21, 2025

Who says brunch has to mean eggs and toast? We believe it’s the perfect time to serve something fresh, flavorful, and a little unexpected. That’s where pasta comes in! It’s versatile, comforting, and easy to prepare for gatherings or slow mornings.

From golden baked dishes to light and crisp salads, these seven recipes prove that pasta can be the star of your brunch. Whether you're hosting friends or easing into a quiet weekend, these seven pasta recipes go beyond eggs and toast.

Sfoglini Swiss Chard Bigoli Pie

Swiss Chard Bigoli Pie

Leafy greens, gruyere cheese, and bigoli baked into a savory showstopper. Serve warm or at room temperature with a side salad and a glass of bubbly.
👉 Get the recipe ›

Bourbon Carbonara Whole Grain Trumpets

Carbonara gets a brunch-worthy upgrade with smoky bourbon and hearty whole grain trumpets. Perfect for late-morning comfort.
👉 Get the recipe ›

Sfoglini Pasta Recipe: Bourbon Carbonara Whole Grain Trumpets

Cobb Pasta Salad

Loaded with bacon, blue cheese, tomatoes, and tender pasta, this is a brunch salad that eats like a meal.
👉 Get the recipe ›

Zucca with Creamy Prosecco and Mushroom Sauce

Earthy mushrooms and a splash of prosecco make this light yet rich dish a beautiful mid-morning main.
👉 Get the recipe ›

Sfoglini Pasta Recipe: Zucca with Creamy Prosecco and Mushroom Sauce

Vodka Carbonara Quattrotini alla Nerano

Creamy and just a little fancy. This mash-up of 3 sauces (vodka sauce, carbonara, and Nerano) is made for impressing your brunch crowd.
👉 Get the recipe ›

Cascatelli al Forno

Bubbling with rich, melty cheese and topped with a golden, crispy crust, this dish is made for sharing. Especially delightful alongside a spicy Bloody Mary.

 👉 Get the recipe ›

Sfoglini Pasta Recipe: Cascatelli al Forno

Reginetti Kugel

A sweet-savory twist on a brunch classic, this kugel pairs ruffled semolina pasta with a sweet custard and dusting of cinnamon.
👉 Get the recipe ›

Sfoglini Pasta Recipe: Reginetti Kugel

Set the Table for Something Unexpected

Brunch can be whatever you make it, and with Sfoglini, it’s anything but boring. Whether you’re craving something crisp and fresh or rich and oven-baked, these pasta dishes bring a little extra magic to your weekend table.

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From la sfoglina to Sfoglini

From la sfoglina to Sfoglini

July 02, 2025

Imagine early morning light dawning on a small farmhouse in Rome many centuries ago. 

Already hard at work, the family matron oversees the building of fires, the collecting of water and eggs, and the baking of bread. As the sun crosses the sky, she makes sure essential goods are purchased, holiday meals are planned, animals are cared for, and clothes are progressively sewn and mended. 

This adzora—“she who presides over the government of the home”—is responsible for upholding cherished traditions and customs. Through her hard and humble work, they will pass from one generation to the next. And as she learned from those before her, she will teach her daughters and granddaughters to become la sfoglina—an expert at blending water and flour into pasta dough, then kneading it to silky elasticity before rolling, twisting, or turning it into a specific shape. 

Sfoglina teaching next generation pasta making. Making pasta by hand. Italian Farmhouse

You may not naturally draw a direct line from Italy’s pasta-making grannies to the American-made pasta, but thirteen years ago, our founder Scott Ketchum found great inspiration in their unwavering commitment to tradition, skill, and quality.

“We started Sfoglini to stay true to the techniques we've learned from our Italian friends, producing at a larger scale but creating the most authentic product possible,” remembers Ketchum.

While our products have grown and our brand has refreshed, we’ve remained faithful to the core principles of the collective sfoglini. We use imported organic Italian grains and locally grown whole grains to provide superior taste and nutritional value. Extruding dough through bronze dies produces a coarser pasta texture ideal for soaking sauce. Slow-drying preserves ingredient flavor and nutrients, guaranteeing optimum satiation in every bite. 

Sfoglini mixed dried pasta. Bronze die. Wheat feild.

Historically, sfoglini hand-shaped the bells, pumpkins, or orecchie di prete (priest's ears) they desired for a particular recipe. But then pasta became commercialized, and standardization replaced variety. “In our original concept, teaching people about pasta shapes and making was important,” Ketchum remembers. “We felt we could do that from an American side—adopt this idea of the sfolgini, bring it into our product, and share this knowledge with our audiences.”

Our best-selling Trumpets, for instance, offer pockets perfect for transporting simple marinaras and fluffy ridges that cling to chunkier sauces. (Try our Eggplant Parmesan Sauce recipe.) Our Zucca’s tiny cups nestle everything from a hearty bolognese to vibrant peas and bacon. And the flavor packed Saffron Malloreddus cradle generous amount of our recipe for alla Campidanese. “I see light bulbs go off in eyes and minds,” Ketchum says of when the connection hits home. “You're using your ingredients and understanding all that pasta can do.”

For the Italian family, la sfoglina also passed down cherished recipes. So browse the  recipe collection for inspiration to feed your loved ones with the same skill and care that went into every sfoglina family meal—and box of Sfoglini pasta.

"With Sfoglini, it's not just a meal—it's an experience," Ketchum says. “That's what I hope people take away from a dinner served with Sfoglini pasta.”

Sfoglini pasta recipes

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Pasta Salad, Perfected!

Pasta Salad, Perfected!

May 30, 2025

With unique shapes & vibrant seasonal recipes, Sfoglini pasta makes every salad shine. Pasta salad isn’t just a picnic side dish. It’s a summer essential. Whether you’re packing a work lunch, prepping for a cookout, or craving a cold dinner on a hot night, pasta salad hits the sweet spot between refreshing and satisfying. And with the right pasta, it becomes a dish worth celebrating.

Why Sfoglini Pasta is Perfect for Pasta Salad

What sets a great pasta salad apart? Texture. Flavor. And a pasta that holds its own. Sfoglini pasta is bronze-cut and slow-dried, giving it a rougher surface that grips dressings and sauces like a dream. Our carefully crafted shapes, from playful Radiators to rustic Einkorn Ziti, don’t just soak up flavor, they enhance it. Plus, our organic grains, unique blends, and small-batch process bring flavor that makes every bite better.

Whether you want something creamy, herby, or sweet and savory, these recipes prove there’s a Sfoglini pasta salad for every mood.

🥜 Radiators with Sesame Peanut Sauce

Get the Recipe →

Looking for a cool, satisfying salad with bold flavor? This Asian-inspired pasta salad features our signature Radiators, dressed in a creamy sesame-peanut sauce with a kick of ginger, garlic, and Gochujang. Crisp cucumbers and scallion bring texture, while the Radiators hold onto every bit of that rich, nutty sauce.

Why it works: Radiators are pasta salad powerhouses with ridges engineered for holding onto every drop of dressing. Hello, maximum flavor in every bite. Try it with our Semolina or Whole Grain Radiators.

 

🥓 Cobb Pasta Salad

Get the Recipe →

Think of this as a mash up of the best parts of a Cobb salad and your favorite deli pasta salad. With crispy bacon, avocado, blue cheese, cherry tomatoes, and a tangy vinaigrette, this bowl is packed with flavor and color. Add grilled chicken for a protein-packed meal prep superstar.

Why it works: Sfoglini pasta adds chew and substance to balance out all the creamy, crunchy, and salty goodness. Choose a hearty shape such as Zucca, Quattrotini, or Cascatelli.

 

🍑 Peach Caprese Pasta Salad with Einkorn Ziti

Get the Recipe →

Juicy peaches, heirloom tomatoes, fresh mozzarella, and basil meet Sfoglini Einkorn Ziti in this summery stunner. A little sweet, a little savory, and completely refreshing, this salad is all about balance. Serve it as a light lunch or an elegant side with grilled meats or seafood.

Why it works: Einkorn Ziti brings a nutty, whole grain flavor and a classic shape that pairs beautifully with stone fruit and creamy cheese.

 

🌿 Pesto Pasta Salad

Get the Recipe →

Fresh basil pesto, cherry tomatoes, mozzarella, and your favorite Sfoglini pasta shape - it doesn’t get more summery than this. This salad comes together quickly and travels well, making it a potluck favorite or a simple dinner with a glass of chilled wine.

Why it works: Sfoglini pasta doesn't get soggy. Our shapes stay al dente even when dressed ahead of time, so you can make this salad a day in advance. When we say choose your favorite pasta shape, we mean it - this recipe is so versatile, it works with any of our short cut pasta shapes.


Pasta Salad Shape Guide

The right shape makes the salad. Sfoglini’s textured cuts are designed to hold dressings, mix-ins, and flavor in every bite. Use this guide to match your pasta with your salad style:

Cascatelli & Quattrotini
Great for: Chunky, mix-in-heavy salads
These ruffled shapes bring serious forkability. Their curves and ridges catch everything from diced veggies and beans to creamy dressings and crumbled cheeses.

Trumpets & Vesuvio
Great for: Big flavors and dramatic presentation
With deep folds and curled edges, these show-stopping shapes hold onto bold ingredients like olives, capers, roasted peppers, or tangy vinaigrettes.

Radiators & Cavatelli
Great for: Clingy, rich dressings
These textured shapes are made for creamy or nut-based sauces like tahini, ranch, or sesame peanut. Every groove grips flavor, so nothing slides off.

Einkorn Ziti & Whole Grain Reginetti
Great for: Grain-forward, hearty salads
These whole grain pastas add a nutty, toasty depth and work beautifully with sweet-savory pairings - think grilled veggies, vinaigrettes, and rich cheeses.

Tips for Pasta Salad Success

  • Cook pasta just to al dente. It will soften slightly as it soaks up the dressing, so avoid overcooking.

  • Toss pasta with a bit of dressing while it’s still warm. This helps the pasta absorb even more flavor from the start.

  • Let it chill. Pasta salads are best after 30 minutes to a few hours in the fridge. This lets all the flavors mingle and soak into the pasta, creating a more cohesive, flavorful dish.

  • Use bold mix-ins. Think crunchy vegetables, tangy pickles, grilled meats, and strong cheeses to keep every bite exciting.

  • Don’t forget the salt and acid. A generous pinch of salt and a splash of lemon juice or vinegar can bring the whole bowl to life.

  • Choose pasta shapes with texture. Ridges, ruffles, folds, and curves help hold dressing and add bite.

Ready to get mixing? Stock up on your favorite Sfoglini shapes and let pasta salad season begin! Shop Pasta Now →

 

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Italian Vacation on a Plate

Italian Vacation on a Plate

May 30, 2025

If you come from an Italian family or have traveled to il Bel Paese (the beautiful country) even once, you’ve experienced Italy’s intimate blend of culture, landscape, and cuisine. If you haven’t yet stepped foot on Italian soil, consider this your Italian vacation…on a plate!

Here, we’ll explore seven of Italy’s enticing regions, from the emerald shores of Sardinia to the rustic ruins of Puglia, feasting all the senses along the way.

TRENTINO-ALTO ADIGE

Our first stop brings us to Italy’s northern border, where towering mountains dominate in views of such majesty that this crown region is often called the “sunny side of the Alps.” Annexed to Italy after WWI, German, Austrian, Italian, and local cultures blend with comfort offerings like pizza and pasta, strudel and spaetzle. We’ll drink crisp white wines made from grapes trained to thrive up the steep slopes. Alto Adige’s Germanic name is South Tyrol. Taste this history in our recipe for South Tyrolean Rye Trumpets with Spinach and Ham. 

VENETO

In the southeast, we come into Veneto, where the Alps’ Dolomite peaks and endless Prosecco-producing vineyards flank the north. Landing in Venice on the Adriatic Sea, we can stroll lazily across 400 bridges or float down 150 canals to our dining destination. Seafood is our priority here, and we feast on cicchetti (small plates or appetizers) or go all in on a zuppa di pesce (fish stew). Try our Bigoli or Bucatini in your favorite seafood pasta recipe, paired with a crisp glass of Prosecco, of course!

SARDINIA

Italy’s second-largest island, Sardinia is set amongst the pristine Mediterranean waters and boasts crumbling seaside ruins, fairytale-like grottos, hidden beaches, and colorful coastal towns. Here, we’ll find thin, crispy carasau flatbread served with sharp pecorino cheese, countless seafood dishes, and acidic white Vermentino. On special occasions, locals make the little curls of Malloreddus pasta you can try in our aromatic take on a local pork dish.

Sfoglini Pasta Recipe: Saffron Malloreddus alla Campidanese

PUGLIA 

If Italy looks like a boot, we’re south to its heel where Baroque cities, crumbling castles, centuries-old vineyards, and breathtaking sandy beaches offer a feast for the eyes. The dry, hot climate is ideal for growing tomatoes, olives, and wheat. So, while in the “breadbasket of Italy,” our meals feature bread, pasta, and fresh ingredients. To eat like an Apullian stateside, make the fresh stracciatella in our Apulian Whole Grain Radiators alla Tranese recipe, then eat it with everything.

LAZIO

The central region is infamous for olive oil and the country’s capital city—Rome! After gaping at the Vatican and Colosseum, we’ll stroll the city’s many bustling markets in the hunt for local meats, produce, and cheeses. Then, we’ll find a little trattoria serving the Rigatoni alla Gricia you can make at home with our recipe—one of Rome’s four classic dishes, it requires only a few ingredients to create pasta perfection.

Sfoglini Pasta Recipe: Rigatoni alla Gricia

CAMPANIA

Nestled on the Mediterranean, many Italians of the early 20th-century diaspora came from Campania and established Italian-American cuisine. Back in the mother country, we’ll find familiar arancini (deep-fried stuffed rice balls), pasta e fagioli (pasta soup), spaghetti al pomodoro (spaghetti with tomato sauce), and decadent pastries. No trip to the capital city of Naples would be complete without pizza, prized for its simple preparation and quality ingredients—an approach mirrored in our recipe for Neapolitan Reginetti con Ricotta en Bianco.

TUSCANY

No trip would be complete without a final stay in Tuscany, home to the Italian Renaissance and Chianti Valley. Essential ingredients like bread, pine nuts, kale, olive oil, and beans combine in lighter dishes that let local, land-based ingredients shine. Our recipe for Tuscan Trumpets with Kale and Cannellini Beans features a particularly beloved Tuscan pasta shape, plus a few ingredients that come together for a meal as fast and satisfying as a Tuscan sunset. 

Sfoglini Pasta Recipe: Tuscan Trumpets with Kale and Cannellini Beans

How many regions are there?

About the size of Florida and Georgia combined, Italy is composed of 20 designated regions that contain over 100 provinces or metropolis cities. Five provinces are autonomous—their special stature means a level of local governance protects the cultural and linguistic differences of their minority populations. 

With so much diversity packed into a small country, every region offers a new flavor, a new story, and a new way to connect with Italian tradition. Whether you’re recreating a dish from Sardinia or a rustic comfort meal from Trentino-Alto Adige, Sfoglini pasta brings the spirit of Italy to your table—one bite at a time. Buon appetito!

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Summer Pasta Pairings: Shapes That Shine All Season.

Summer Pasta Pairings: Shapes That Shine All Season.

May 23, 2025

When it comes to summer cooking, it's all about ease, freshness, and bringing bold flavors to the table - without heating up the kitchen. That’s where these six standout pasta shapes come in. Each one is crafted for maximum warm-weather enjoyment. Whether you're picnicking at the park, grilling in the backyard, or tossing a salad with garden-fresh veggies, these unique shapes are your perfect pasta partners.

 

🌽 Radiators = Picnic-Ready Ridges

With chunky ridges and a sturdy build, Radiators were made for make-ahead moments. Their crevices catch every drop of dressing, making them the MVP of cold pasta salads. Sturdy enough to hold up after a few hours on the go, they're practically made for make-ahead meals.

Recipe Idea: Mexican Street Corn Radiator Salad - Char corn on the grill, then toss with Radiators, cotija cheese, chopped cilantro, and a creamy dressing of mayo, lime, and chili powder. Sprinkle with Tajín and serve chilled for a bold, tangy twist on a summer classic.

 

🔥 NEW Calabrian Chili Lumache = Griller’s Go-To Shells

With a shell-like shape and slightly spicy bite, Calabrian Chili Lumache are designed to scoop up all the goodness from fire-roasted sauces and charred summer vegetables. These curvy pasta pockets are bold enough to match your backyard BBQ energy.

Recipe Idea: Calabrian Chili Lumache with Grilled Sausage & Peppers - Grill Italian sausage, sweet bell peppers, and red onions. Then chop and toss with Calabrian Chili Lumache and a glug of olive oil for a smoky, spicy pasta that sings.

 

🍅 Vesuvio = Summer Sauce-Catchers

Inspired by the iconic volcano, Vesuvio’s spiraled shape is a natural for thick, chunky sauces—and a summer tomato sauce is its ideal match. Think rustic pomodoro with all the sunshine in each spoonful.

Recipe Idea: Burst Cherry Tomato Vesuvio with Pesto Ricotta - Simmer cherry tomatoes with garlic, basil, and olive oil until they collapse into sauce. Toss with Vesuvio and finish with dollops of ricotta mixed with pesto.

 

🍑 Reginetti = Garden-Gathering Ruffles

With frilly edges and a wide surface, Reginetti captures every bit of peak season produce and delicate sauces. This one was made for your garden (or farmers’ market) haul and creating show stopping summer platters.

Recipe Idea: Grilled Peach, Prosciutto & Burrata Reginetti - Toss Reginetti with olive oil and slices of grilled peach. Add torn prosciutto, dollops of burrata, and freshly picked herbs. A sweet, savory, and silky celebration of summer on every fork.

🌊 NEW Bigoli = Seafood-Loving Strands

Thicker than spaghetti with a slightly rough surface, Bigoli was traditionally paired with anchovies and sardines, but its toothsome bite is just right for any seafood-forward dish. It’s a pasta that loves brine, butter, and the sea.

Recipe Idea: Garlicky Clam & White Wine Bigoli - Sauté garlic and chili flakes in butter, add clams and white wine and steam. Then toss in Bigoli and chopped parsley. Serve with lemon wedges and crusty bread.

 

🌿 Trumpets = Veggie-Hugging Flutes

With open, fluted ends, Trumpets are ideal for tucking in chopped veggies, melty cheese, or even a bit of browned butter. Their playful shape makes them a dinner party favorite, but they’re just as good in a simple skillet supper.

Recipe Idea: Summer Squash & Brown Butter Trumpets - Brown some butter, toss in thinly sliced summer squash, and cook until tender and caramelized. Stir in Trumpets, fresh thyme, and grated pecorino for a five-ingredient dish with big flavor.

 

Bring the Season to the Table

These shapes aren’t just fun to look at—they’re designed to bring out the best in your summer ingredients. Whether you’re leaning into smoky grilled flavors, fresh herbs, or beachy seafood, there’s a pasta on this list ready to make it shine.

Let your summer pasta adventures begin! Shop Pasta Now →

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