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Pastalaya in the Jambalaya caluculator
Posted on 10/6/14 at 10:00 am
Posted on 10/6/14 at 10:00 am
Paging Stadium Rat.
I am looking to cook about 50 medium servings (100 total cups) of the pastalaya. Used the calculator before so I know how it works. Just want to make sure my calculation is correct on the lbs of pasta since that is separate. Says use 10 qt of water which @ 1.25 qt/lb of pasta would be 8lbs. Is that right?
I am looking to cook about 50 medium servings (100 total cups) of the pastalaya. Used the calculator before so I know how it works. Just want to make sure my calculation is correct on the lbs of pasta since that is separate. Says use 10 qt of water which @ 1.25 qt/lb of pasta would be 8lbs. Is that right?
Posted on 10/6/14 at 11:23 am to More beer please
I did Pastalaya for the Miss State game and used 4 quarts of liquid to 3 1/2 pounds of pasta (using that ratio). Came out perfectly. Looks good to me but I am not Stadium Rat
Just trust the Jamb Calculator
Just trust the Jamb Calculator
Posted on 10/6/14 at 11:55 am to More beer please
I've never made it personally. Better wait for pochjp to chime in. The range of ratios I've heard on here is anywhere from a quart per pound up to a quart and a half per pound of pasta.
I would think it depends on the type of pasta, how soft you like your pasta and how much you keep the pot covered..
I would think it depends on the type of pasta, how soft you like your pasta and how much you keep the pot covered..
This post was edited on 10/6/14 at 11:59 am
Posted on 10/6/14 at 12:00 pm to More beer please
If you add a little to much, let the h2o cook out a bit longer.
Posted on 10/6/14 at 12:13 pm to Stadium Rat
I use 3 cups of stock and 1 x 12 oz can of diced tomatoes for every pound of pasta whether I'm cooking 1 lb or 30 lbs and have never had any issues. For every 6 servings I use 1 lb pasta, 3 cups stock, 1 can tomatoes, 3 lbs meat, 1.5 lb onion as my base measurements. I obviously also add garlic, celery, green peppers and seasoning depending on how much I make. You can go up from there depending on servings needed.
This post was edited on 10/6/14 at 12:18 pm
Posted on 10/6/14 at 12:53 pm to More beer please
Pastalaya is very forgiving and it is almost impossible to screw up.
I cooked 42 lbs of pasta Saturday and only used 10 gallons of water and it turned out great.
I cooked 42 lbs of pasta Saturday and only used 10 gallons of water and it turned out great.
Posted on 10/6/14 at 1:26 pm to doubletap
I guess thats true I just didnt want to have to cook out too much water and have it be mushy after
Posted on 10/6/14 at 1:46 pm to More beer please
I turn the fire off when there is still a good bit of water left in the pot. I like pastalaya more on the wet side.
Posted on 10/6/14 at 3:08 pm to More beer please
quote:
I am looking to cook about 50 medium servings (100 total cups) of the pastalaya. Used the calculator before so I know how it works. Just want to make sure my calculation is correct on the lbs of pasta since that is separate. Says use 10 qt of water which @ 1.25 qt/lb of pasta would be 8lbs. Is that right?
Spot on.

Posted on 10/6/14 at 6:03 pm to pochejp
Just found this from Cooking Light:
Linguine, Spaghetti, or Vermicelli:
16 ounces dry = 8 to 9 cups cooked
Macaroni, Penne, or Rotini:
8 ounces dry = 4 1/2 cups cooked
Fine or Medium Egg Noodles:
8 ounces dry = 4 to 5 cups cooked
Bottom line
A pound of dry pasta yields about 8.5 cups cooked pasta
A pound of raw rice yields about 7.5 cups cooked.
So if you use the JC for pastalaya calculations, it's going to underestimate the volume by 1 cup per pound of pasta. That's a 13% difference in volume.
ETA: Now that I think about it, there may not be that much difference in volume. The cooked pasta is probably going to have more air in the measuring cup than rice will have. The smaller the stuff you're measuring the less air you'll be measuring. I may have to do some experimenting and add a couple of pastalaya pages.
Linguine, Spaghetti, or Vermicelli:
16 ounces dry = 8 to 9 cups cooked
Macaroni, Penne, or Rotini:
8 ounces dry = 4 1/2 cups cooked
Fine or Medium Egg Noodles:
8 ounces dry = 4 to 5 cups cooked
Bottom line
A pound of dry pasta yields about 8.5 cups cooked pasta
A pound of raw rice yields about 7.5 cups cooked.
So if you use the JC for pastalaya calculations, it's going to underestimate the volume by 1 cup per pound of pasta. That's a 13% difference in volume.
ETA: Now that I think about it, there may not be that much difference in volume. The cooked pasta is probably going to have more air in the measuring cup than rice will have. The smaller the stuff you're measuring the less air you'll be measuring. I may have to do some experimenting and add a couple of pastalaya pages.
This post was edited on 10/6/14 at 6:27 pm
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