Does pasta continue cooking after being drained if left in the pot?

Does pasta continue cooking after being drained if left in the pot? - Uncooked Pasta in a Pot with Boiling Water

After a pasta is boiled to a desired texture, my friend and I agreed that, if we leave it in the water without adding heat, it would cook longer. We could not agree on what would happen if we drain the water but leave the pasta in the hot pot whether the cooking process would continue.

Is it a good idea to leave pasta in the hot pot to keep it hot while preparing other parts of the meal?

Does the pasta texture change significantly when exposed to low heat without water to absorb?



Best Answer

Many people consider the "extra" steps overkill, but the classic method is to boil the pasta to al dente, not fully done, then quench it in cold water as you would with blanched vegetables to stop the cooking process and wash off any excess starch. Then add the pasta back to sauce or other heating parts for the dish and let it heat back up to temperature. This gets to the desired temp without over-cooking and much less clumping more easily.

Using the hot pan, which I have done before, without the quenching will typically result in either not enough heat retained, or some areas over cooked, others allowed to cool, and sticky, starchy pasta all possible to likely. I have done the finish heating when doing as simple of a "sauce" as a small amount of reserved starch water with salt, pepper and herbs and a touch of olive oil. Just enough to keep the pasta lubricated and moving in a hot pan as it heats and evenly distributes the spices. You get your warm pasta without it being overcooked or uneven, sticky and clumped.




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