>people who put oil in the pasta water
>people who cook the pasta past al dente
>people who rinse the pasta under the tap
>>7470030
I put oil in the pasta water and cook it past al dente but i dont rinse it under the tap i just put liquid butter in it and mix around
>>7470038
Why not just toss it with some oil after it's cooked?
>>7470030
Aren't u edgy
>>7470030
>people who bait the bait
oil in the water is just to prevent the water from bubbling over in case you don't have a stock pot to cook pasta on hand
>>7470076
wooden spoons achieve the same thing
>>7470076
Why on earth would the oil stop the water boiling over? That's completely and totally wrong.
And if it does boil over, you now have a fire hazard since you have now splashed a flammable liquid (the oil) near the burner on your stovetop.
>>7470076
Actually people think the oil prevents the pasta from sticking together, which is totally false. Oil in the water is just a waste of oil
>>7470244
It does stop the pasta sticking, retard.
howis oil influencing the pasta in any way if it's swimming above it?
>people who eat pasta
>>7470258
stirring it in the first minutes and giving it enough water is enough, jesus christ why you guys know nothing at all about pasta
>>7470260
Well, if you remove your pasta from the pot by scooping it out with a ladle or similar, then you'd be moving the pasta through the oil layer as it came out of the water.
Otherwise it wouldn't do a damn thing. If you dump your pasta into a colander or sieve to drain it, then the oil would pass through it first before the pasta even got there.
I never put oil in my water, and my pasta can NOT be cooked past al dente. I do, however, rinse my pasta to cool it, because I generally cook enough pasta to last me 2-3 days. I just simply reheat it in boiling water. It's like using a Baine marie
>>7470276
this is the only accepted reason to rinse pasta: to be consumed later. like in pasta salads
>>7470030
>people who don't use Knorr Stock Pots instead of Salt and Pepper cause it just tastes better.