Definitions

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  • noun An elongated form of hand-rolled pasta

Etymologies

from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License

From Italian strozzapreti

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Examples

Comments

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  • In my opinion one of the best pasta names ever - means "priest-strangler".

    October 17, 2007

  • strozzapreti = strozzapretti Pronunciation: stroh-tzuh-PRAY-tee

    Notes: The name means "priest strangler" in Italian, and it refers to a pasta shape that resembles a rolled towel. Substitutes: gemelli OR penne OR casareccie OR fusilli

    from: http://www.foodsubs.com/PastaShapes.html

    October 19, 2007

  • Actually, gemelli, penne, and fusilli (to just take the three I'm familiar with) look nothing like the strozzapreti I'm famililar with, and the three are very different from each other as well. Or did you mean "substitute" in the sense of "these are good served with a similar sauce"?

    Because the shape of the pasta is often dependent on the rest of the dish. You wouldn't, for example, serve cappellini with a heavy bolognese sauce (you could, but the two are not particularly well matched). Similarly, you wouldn't make large shells unless you were going to stuff them with cheese or something.

    Sorry if I've misinterpreted your comment!

    Also, I've not seen it with two T's in "preti." Did you find that in an Italian dictionary? Just curious!

    October 20, 2007

  • ah, sorry - should have footnoted my comment @chained_bear - that was a quote from the Cook's Thesaurus.

    October 22, 2007

  • Ohhhh. That explains it. Thanks for posting that usage!

    October 22, 2007

  • This type of pasta comes from the Bologna region - famously "red" (communist) and anti-clerical. I don't think they use the same name in the Vatican.

    December 24, 2007

  • Also traditional in Umbria though I sense Emilia-Romagna has prior claims from what I've read.

    December 24, 2007