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A spaghetti getter is utilized for facilitating effortless twirling of pasta within a pot of boiling water and also helps prevent the pasta from slipping off the spoon while serving. [2] The holes in the spoon assists while draining excess water and keeping the hands dry. The holes in the design enables efficient portioning. [3]
Place half the spaghetti in an even layer in a 13-by-9-inch baking dish. Using a rubber spatula, spread the cheese mixture evenly over the pasta. Add the remaining spaghetti in an even layer.
By filling the hole with uncooked noodles, you now have the perfect single serving of spaghetti. I may have been doing pasta all wrong — or, let's be honest, exactly right — my entire adult life.
The classic Roman dish composed of silky eggs, Sardinian sheep's milk cheese, and al dente spaghetti is comfort food + good for the soul + Italian bliss all wrapped around your fork tines. Get the ...
The product, promoted in commercials with Jimmie Rodgers singing the jingle, "The neat, round spaghetti you can eat with a spoon: Uh-oh, SpaghettiOs," became a major success. Goerke attributed the product's enduring popularity with mothers and children to the fact that "it was 'spoonable' and didn't make a mess."
The spaghetti sandwich is a food in Japanese cuisine. [7] In Tokyo, the sandwich is prepared using a meat sauce, a sliced French roll or white bread, and has been described as a "Tokyo novelty." [8] Some underground concession areas near subway stations in Tokyo sell the spaghetti sandwich, and it has been described as a "handy commuter snack."
Photo: Getty. The hole in the center of the ladle is actually used to measure out a single serving of pasta. It works best with spaghetti and linguine.
Canned spaghetti—short lengths in tomato sauce—was available long before rings were introduced. [5] Ring-shaped canned pasta was introduced in 1965 by the Campbell Soup Company under the Franco-American brand, by marketing manager Donald Goerke, nicknamed "the Daddy-O of SpaghettiOs", [6] as a pasta dish that could be eaten without mess.