Hand-cut alkaline noodles

Hand-cut alkaline noodles

These thick alkaline noodles are great for making dandan noodles but will also work well in noodle soups and many other hot and cold preparations. While not specifically designed for it, this dough could be also be used to make Japanese-style ramen noodles. The noodles would just need to be rolled thinner.

The alkaline component of these noodles is sodium carbonate. Sodium carbonate can be made easily using regular baking soda (which is sodium bicarbonate). The baking soda is spread in a thin layer on a baking sheet and baked in a 300 Fahrenheit oven for 1.5 hours. It’s that easy.

I suggest rolling the sheets of pasta using a pasta roller and cutting the noodles with a knife. Cutting the noodles by hand allows you to roll the sheets of pasta a little thicker. The cutter attachments on most pasta rollers are not designed for thick pasta sheets and will force the noodles to be too thin. The rustic texture of hand-cut noodles is also quite appealing.

I like to make sure the sheets of pasta are nice and “squared up” before cutting the noodles. This allows me to stack four sheets of pasta, fold them over, and cut many noodles at once. I understand this might be a little tricky. Don’t worry. If you have trouble getting the sheets perfectly squared and stacked, just cut the noodles one sheet at a time. This may take a little longer but they will still taste great.

folded sheets
Stacked and folded noodle sheets about to be cut. Having a nice, dry noodle dough and flouring the sheets well will prevent the noodles from sticking to each other when you slice them.

Use to make:

Hand-cut Alkaline Noodles

Hand-cut alkaline noodles

Ian Benites
Thick, chewy noodles that work very well for a variety of dishes.
Prep Time 2 hours 45 minutes
making sodium bicarbonate 1 hour 30 minutes
Servings 2 servings (roughly 400 grams total)

Equipment

  • rolling pin
  • pasta roller
  • chefs knife, preferably over 9 inches long

Ingredients
  

Sodium Carbonate

  • 1/4 cup baking soda makes more sodium carbonate than you need for this recipe, save extra for later use

Noodles

  • 130 grams luke-warm water
  • 300 grams bread flour
  • 1/2 tsp. prepared sodium carbonate
  • extra flour, for dusting the pasta sheets

Instructions
 

To make the sodium carbonate

  • Spread the baking soda on a baking sheet and bake in a 300 Fahrenheit oven for 1.5 hours. The baking soda is now sodium carbonate. Allow sodium carbonate to cool and store in an airtight container.

To make the noodles

  • In a mixing bowl, dissolve 1/2 tsp prepared sodium carbonate in the water.
    adding sodium bicarbonate
  • Add the bread flour and start to mix the dough by hand. The dough will be very shaggy and take a good bit of effort to form into a dough ball.
    making dough
  • Once all the dry flour has absorbed into dough, turn the ball onto a flat, unfloured surface and knead for approximately 10 minutes. This dough will be very stiff and dry, that is a good thing. Do not be tempted to add more water unless absolutely necessary. A dry dough will yield a noodle that has a much better chew. Notice how this dough never formed a perfectly smooth ball after kneading. This is preferable.
    kneading dough
  • Wrap the dough in plastic wrap and let rest for 2 hours at room temperature or overnight in the fridge.
    resting
  • Remove dough from plastic wrap and use a rolling pin to flatten the dough ball to a thickness that will pass through the widest setting of your pasta machine.
    thin out
  • Pass the dough through the widest setting of your machine.
    first roll
  • Pass this sheet through the next two thickness settings on your machine.
    thinner now
  • Fold edges and ends inwards in order to "square up" the sheet of pasta.
    cleaning up
  • Set the pasta machine back to its widest setting, pass the "squared up" sheet through once and then fold in half lengthwise.
    fold in half
  • Starting at the widest setting again, pass this sheet through the machine, one step at a time through thinner and thinner settings, until the sheet is about 2 mm thick (a bit thicker than a quarter dollar coin).
    rolled out dough
  • Cut this sheet into roughly 4 equal sections. The long axis of these sheets will be the length of your noodles.
    cut sheets
  • Apply a very generous dusting of flour to both sides of each sheet and stack them up. You need to add enough flour so the noodles will not fuse together as you cut them.
    stacked
  • Fold this stack in half lengthwise. This last fold is made so you can easily cut the whole length of the noodle in one motion (unless you happen to have a VERY long knife).
    folded sheets
  • Turn the stack of noodles so that the fold is facing away from you and cut the noodles in one straight down motion. Try to make the cuts approximately the same thickness as the noodle sheets.
    cutting noodles
  • After cutting all the noodles, go through and separate the noodles with your fingers. If some noodles stick together, pull them apart. Add another dusting of flour to your pile of noodles and toss everything in order to coat all the noodles in a bit of flour. This will keep the noodles from sticking together as they sit.
    separating
  • Separate the noodles into 2 equal piles (roughly 200 grams each) and place on a lightly floured plate. wrap in plastic wrap and store in the fridge for up to 24 hours.


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