Love the spinach dip at restaurants like TGIFriday's and the Olive Garden? Make it at home with these easy-to-follow copycat recipes.
Lemon Dill Pasta
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- #28854

ingredients
2 lemons
1 2/3 cup all-purpose flour
1 cup semolina (pasta flour)
1/2 teaspoon salt
1 1/2 tablespoon dried dill
4 eggs, lightly beaten
1 1/2 teaspoon olive oil
directions
This recipe makes a really great pasta to make seafood ravioli.
Remove zest from the lemons and finely chop. Squeeze the juice from the lemons.
Combine flour, semolina, salt and dill on a large cutting board or work surface. Form a well in the center of the flour and add the eggs, oil, lemon juice and lemon zest. Begin mixing with your fingers (of one hand), using the other hand to push flour from the outer edge of the flour well into the eggs.
Continue mixing with one hand, using the other hand to support the outer edge of the flour well to prevent the batter from flowing out the side. Continue mixing by hand until mixture becomes a firm paste.
Roll into a ball and knead, with the heel of your hand, for 5-10 minutes or until dough is smooth and feels silky. Transfer to a bowl, cover with plastic and refrigerate for at least 1 hour.
Remove from the refrigerator and allow to rest at room temperature for 15-20 minutes before rolling out and cutting. To finish pasta by hand, use a rolling pin to roll pasta into a thin sheet (1/16 inch thick).
Dust sheet lightly with flour and then roll up (like a cigar). Slice into desired thickness. Unroll each strip, shaking pasta to unravel.
To finish pasta using a machine, cut dough into 4 pieces, (keep 3 of the pieces wrapped in plastic until ready to use). Set machine rollers so they are opened to the widest setting. Flatten portion of dough, dust lightly with flour and pass through the rollers.
Lay the rolled dough on a floured surface and fold in thirds to make 3 layers. Flatten again, lightly dust with more flour and pass through the machine 5-6 more times, decreasing the setting of the rollers each time, until desired thickness is reached.
Cut as described above, or cut dough using the machine attachment following manufactures directions.
added by
Linda2TX
nutrition data
Nutritional data has not been calculated yet.It may look like a sad little package shoved in the back of your freezer, but frozen spinach actually has a lot of culinary uses (and some may surprise you).
Pumpkins aren't just for pies or Halloween decorations. These large, orange gourds - while naturally sweet - also work well in savory dishes. They pair well with poultry and pork (and especially bacon) and their creamy-when-cooked texture blends easily into soups.

reviews & comments
February 21, 2005
I found this recipe to be easy to make following the directions given. The only changes I would make would be to cut back on the dill. I would use 1 Tbsp dill and would add more lemon juice to the dough,but I enjoy the taste of lemon! It was a very nice and silky dough to work with.