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Pasta & Noodles

It's Time To Up Your Instant Ramen Game

Upgrade your instant ramen with help from Chef Bill Kim of UrbanBelly in Chicago.

The Key to Making Great Ramen at Home Is in the Stock

Great noodles and mind-bending toppings don't hurt, but it's a complex broth that really makes a bowl of ramen sing.

Spinach Gnocchi

A fun alternative to classic potato gnocchi.

Romantic Movie Menus: Chungking Express

The film's unconventional love stories make for an evening of noodles, pineapple, surreptitious cleaning, and massage

Blow Your Chinese Delivery Spot Out Of The Water With This Upgraded Lo Mein

One simple noodle swap out and you'll achieve greatness with this delivery staple at home.

How to Make the Creamiest, Dreamiest, Cheesiest Mac and Cheese Ever

We mine the Epicurious archives to develop the ultimate comfort-food classic.

Detox Pho with Beef, Mushrooms, and Kale

This fragrant and fresh Vietnamese classic is made even healthier with the addition of kale and wild mushrooms.

Quick Pork Pho

Achieve the deep, comforting flavors of slow-cooked pho in an hour with a few clever shortcuts.

Sesame Rice Noodles with Shrimp

Crisp julienned vegetables add crunchy texture to wheat-free pasta. To prep them fast, try the Oxo Julienne Peeler ($10, Oxo.com).

Vietnamese Chicken Noodle Soup

Tanis insists on making broth for this restorative and iconic soup (pho ga) from scratch and warns against overcooking the noodles: "They should be pretty firm and snappy, not flabby."

Braised Spiced Pork with Cao Lau Noodles

The synthesis of fresh and longcooked textures; rich, sweet, and herbal flavors; and juicy and crunchy garnishes. Serve with extra herbs, chiles, and lime so everyone can customize his own bowl.

Parisian Gnocchi

Gnocchis à la Parisienne This dish is considered humble fare, and one you would never see in a restaurant. Hence it's largely unknown to folks outside of France. Paule Caillat gave me her family recipe, to which I made a few changes (authorized, of course). The dumplings are made of pâte à choux dough, similar to that used for profiteroles. They're partially cooked by poaching them first, then baking, where they'll puff up gloriously before settling down, waiting to be scooped up from under a blanket of browned cheese. This is a pretty rich dish; serve it with a simple green salad.

Noodle Salad With Chicken and Chile-Scallion Oil

This spicy, crunchy, and refreshing noodle salad will make any weeknight better, and is a great way to use up leftover roast chicken.

Ricotta Gnocchi with Asparagus, Peas, and Morels

Chef Nemo Bolin at Cook & Brown Public House in Providence, RI, turned us on to the technique for this streamlined, no-knead gnocchi dough.

Easy Pad Thai

I'm probably not supposed to play favorites, but this recipe is definitely my favorite. Pad thai is the epitome of simple ingredients creating dazzling flavor. It's fresh, light, exotic, and faster than any takeout (unless, of course, you happen to live above a restaurant that delivers). Fresh lime is key to creating the unique flavor, but one lime should be enough for a single or even double batch of this noodle dish. Fish sauce, which you can find in the Asian section of most major grocery stores or at Asian markets, gives this pasta a more authentic flavor, but if you can't find any, skip it; this dish will still rock your world.

Thai Beef Stew With Rice Noodles

Spoon gingery, slow-cooked beef and vegetables over wide rice noodles for a warming, soul-satisfying dinner.

Perfect Instant Ramen

You can have almost no money and still have enough to live off this stuff for weeks, months, years. Eat enough and you'll start to look for ways to make it different: add a little more sauce, a little less sauce, cook the noodles less, cook them more, add more water, less water, add an egg, scramble the egg, etc. Me, I've become a freak when it comes to my instant ramen. Don't fuck wit it, don't fuck wit me, let me do my thing. This is how I do my own thing.

Spicy Pork and Mustard Green Soup

It might look like a lot when the greens are raw, but add them all anyway. They'll quickly wilt down to a silky texture.

Shrimp Pad Thai for Two

This version of pad thai, developed by cookbook author and teacher Nancie McDermott, is for those who may not have a wok at home. Instead, the recipe calls for a 12-inch heavy skillet. Note that the skillet can hold only enough ingredients for two people (of course, if you have a wok, you should use it). McDermott's pad thai recipe to serve four , which does require a wok, is reason enough to invest in one (look for a 14-inch carbon-steel model with a flat bottom). 
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