• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
Gluten-Free Baking logo
  • Home
  • Recipes
  • About
    • About Me
    • Contact
    • My Cookbooks
    • Work with Me
  • Nav Social Menu

    • Facebook
    • Instagram
menu icon
go to homepage
search icon
Homepage link
  • Home
  • About
  • Recipes
  • Contact
×
Home » How To

How to Cook Gluten-Free Pasta

Jul 23, 2015 · 3 Comments

Cooked gluten-free pasta in a strainer.
pictured: gluten-free Ronzoni pasta. (Pasta pictured in post is Tinkyada.)

Yesterday I posted a picture on Facebook of my pasta dinner. One of my friends asked about how I cooked the pasta. Since she was the second person to ask me in a week, I felt a post was in order.

Here’s how to perfectly cook gluten-free pasta every time:

Use a large pot!

You’ll need about 6 quarts of water for 1 pound of gluten-free pasta. Gluten-free pasta would love nothing better than to stick together. A large pot with lots of water gives the pasta enough room to boil and not stick.

Salting water for gluten-free pasta.

Use LOTS of salt.

There is an old Italian cooking adage about how pasta water should be as salty as the sea. Isn’t that a lovely? If you’ve ever gotten a mouthful of seawater, you know how salty it is! Adding salt to the cooking liquid helps to boost the flavor of pasta. On its own, gluten-free pasta is pretty boring. Salting the water really makes a difference to its flavor profile. You’ll want to use about 1 to 1 1/2 Tablespoons of salt per pound of pasta. I bring my water to a boil, add the salt, return it to a boil, and then I add the pasta. Which brings me to…

Cook your pasta in boiling water!

I know. I know. On the back of bag it states that you can “cook” your pasta in a covered pot of hot water. Hrmp! If you want a pot of sticky, yucky pasta you can do it. If, however, you want lovely, silky pasta, you need to cook it in boiling water. Be sure your water is a boil when you add the pasta and returns to a bubbling boil while the pasta cooks.

Don’t add oil!

There is this cooking myth that adding oil will prevent your pasta from sticking together. Not true! (To prevent pasta from sticking, see #5). Oil in pasta water floats to the top of the pot. When you drain the pasta, it will stick to your lovely cooked noodles. And you know what this means? It means the sauce won’t stick to it! You’ll end up with noodles that can’t hold sauce and, when chilled, will take on a weird crunchy texture. Ew! So no oil in the cooking water! Thank you!

Stirring cooking gluten-free pasta in a pot of water.

 Stir!

Gluten-free pasta will stick to itself if you don’t prevent it. How to prevent this from happening? Stir it! As soon as you drop the pasta into the boiling water, begin to stir it. Keep doing this for about 30 seconds. Then, continue to stir occasionally while it cooks. The first 3-5 minutes are the most important for stirring. This when your pasta is stickiest.

Taste.

The cooking time printed on the back of the bag never, ever seems to be right. After about 6 minutes, check your pasta. Some pastas cook in under ten minutes, other take about 12. For gluten-free pasta, you want it to be cooked thoroughly but not mushy. When you bite into the pasta, look at it. If there is a dark spot in the center it is not done. The texture and color should be the same all the way through.

Check it.

When overcooked, gluten-free pasta becomes mushy. After the initial tasting, check it every minute. This will ensure that you don’t overcook it.

A white ladle removes a cup of pasta water from pot.

Reserve some cooking liquid.

Right before you drain the pasta, ladle out about 1 cup of the cooking liquid. Gluten-free pasta really soaks up sauce. To loosen your sauce, add a bit of the cooking liquid to your pasta when you add the sauce. In fact, you want enough sauce and liquid so that it looks like too much. This will prevent your pasta from becoming dry.

Draining gluten-free pasta in a colander.

Drain

Use a large strainer to drain your pasta. Don’t rinse the pasta in cold water. All that does is cool down the pasta. You don’t want cold pasta.

Cooked gluten-free pasta in a pot.

Return Pasta to the Pot

After draining, return the pasta to the pot to add the sauce. Trying to sauce the pasta in the serving bowl is messy. Topping pasta on individual plates leaves some pasta dry.

Gluten-free pasta with tomato sauce in pot.

Sauce

Add your favorite sauce. If you make homemade sauce, awesome. If you buy pre-made sauce, awesome! Just be sure it’s gluten-free. And read labels each time. Ingredients change.

Reserve a little of the sauce to top each plate. This also makes it easy to adjust the amount of sauce. Some folks like a little. Some a lot.

Gluten-free pasta in pot with tomato sauce.

Stir

Give it a good stir. You want to coat each noodle with sauce.

Serve!

Pasta is best served right after it’s made. Gluten-free pasta doesn’t taste great cold. Nor does it make a good pasta salad. If you have leftovers, reheat before you eat.

And most important of all…

Enjoy!

 

 

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Kirsten says

    December 31, 2019 at 7:31 pm

    Hi! After I drain the excess boiling water, should it be rinsed in warm water or not rinse at all? I usually keep the noodles and sauce separate in a container. I don’t mix sauce and noodles together in a strainer.

    Reply
    • Elizabeth says

      December 31, 2019 at 7:59 pm

      No need to rinse. If you aren’t tossing it together with sauce, I’d toss it with some olive oil or melted butter to keep it from sticking.

      Reply

Trackbacks

  1. Gluten-Free Pasta with Fresh Tomatoes and Basil - Gluten-Free Baking says:
    07/13/2016 at 10:42 pm

    […] and let it sit for 15 minutes before I bring the water to a boil for the pasta. (Here’s how to cook gluten-free pasta.) This timing means my tomatoes macerate for about 45 minutes, which I find to be just right. As […]

    Reply

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Recipe Rating




Primary Sidebar

Get Recipes Delivered to Your Inbox! (Free Weekly Newsletter!)




Elizabeth Barbone

I'm Elizabeth. Welcome to GlutenFreeBaking.com --- a judgment-free baking space. Here you'll find easy recipes, product reviews, and other good stuff that makes gluten-free living easy and a lot more fun!

Read More About Elizabeth →

  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Pinterest

Foods You Miss the Most

  • Stack of gluten-free pancakes on a plate with butter and syrup.
    The Best Gluten-Free Pancakes
  • Gluten-free chocolate chip cookies on a cooling rack.
    Gluten-Free Chocolate Chip Cookies
  • Loaf of Baked Gluten-Free Sandwich Bread on Red Cutting Board.
    How to Make the Best Gluten-Free Sandwich Bread: An Easy Recipe for Everyone!
  • Gluten-free flour tortillas on plate.
    How to Make the Best Gluten-Free Flour Tortillas

Footer

↑ back to top

Terms

  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Accessibility Statement

Follow Us

  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Pinterest

About

  • Contact
  • About

Copyright © 2024 Gluten-Free Baking