Probably bowties AKA fucking farfalle. Difficult to grasp, harder to keep a hold of, don't retain sauce. Who thought this would be a good idea? probably some british designer
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Either sloppy and overcooked on the outside, or raw in the center. Choose only one option.
About to insult all of Italy - Spaghetti.
Inconvenient to eat and doesn't hold the sauce well.
All you spaghetti haters in this post need to get bronze die cut pasta. Modern machines produce pasta that's too smooth so sauce doesn't stick. The old school extruders/cutters leave a tiny surface texture that allows sauce to cling on!
Look at mr bourgeoisie over here with his artisan food.
The judges would have accepted Dietalini, Bowtie-eater, Gnot Poor, Pastafarian or Many Penne.
Ah, yes, understanding where capitalism has produced a worse quality, minimally viable product that makes people a little sad but not enough to effect profit margins enough to change, is clearly due to class divide and not the estrangement of the general population from the products of their labor.
Also that's Ms. Bourgeoisie to you
Italians would say it's a skill issue 😛 In truth is likely wrong sauce or too liquid perhaps not the right consistency.
Give me all the inconvenient food. I at least want to be entertained when I eat. If I wanted the most efficient way to eat I'd just drink Soylent 24/7.
I like linguine. It gives the sauce traction.
Spaghetti is perfect for carbonara, most other sauces not so much.
Angel hair is probably my most disliked. It just tastes terrible and gets overcooked so easily. I also dislike ditalini but not nearly as much since that usually only goes in like minestrone soup and it might just be that I'm not a fan of minestrone.
For the best pasta shapes, look no further than Buccatini (the objectively better spaghetti), cellentani (idk it's just fun), and gemelli (perfect texture for lightly sauced dishes).
I used to hate farfalle, but I'm okay with that one now. We've made our peace. It's another example of a pasta shape that I only had in one particular dish that I didn't care for and I formed a negative association as a result.
As much as I love lasagna, the noodles are the worst part of preparing the dish. They're awkwardly large and heavy (for a noodle), and God help you if you overcook them even a bit as they will disintegrate under their own weight.
Am I missing something? You don't have to precook lasagna noodles, you put them straight in the lasagna and they cook in the sauce.
depends heavily on the recipe. Due to my "enthusiasm" for pasta in general I prefer to make a much smaller portion, which is very easy to do with a lasagna in a mug, the only real downside is that the noodles need to be pliable first.
Overcook? Never had that problem so you boil them before hand or do sth. Weird like that?
Hollow spaghetti. Impossible to suck it, because it has a vent hole.
Ah, bucatini, the devilse pasta. Nothing like accidentally aspirating on your pasta sauce.
Honestly, farfalle. The middle is always too hard and the sides too floppy.
Notably missing from all the answers here is dinosaur pasta since everyone likes them.
Conchiglioni/Conchiglie, the ones roughly formed like a mussel. They tend to stick inside each other during cooking.
Spaghetti are sadly not rough enough for the sauces to stick to them.
Just looked up ‘orzo’ , all I have to say is bros and broettes that is clearly rice case closed
I had to look it up too. We actually call that shape of pasta "risoni" in Australia. And the meal you make with it is also called "risoni".
I love that stuff. Definitely better than rice.
Hard to say because different pastas are made for different uses, and might not work as well if used for other things.
But if I had to pick one I'd say Angel hair. It's just too thin and it makes me uncomfortable.
ITT: people who apparently struggle to eat pasta
I'd have to say shells, particularly the "shells & cheese" size. I always have quite a few shells stick together and end up undercooked, and I don't really encounter that challenge with other shapes.
I actually like orzo a lot, but I've always had it in dishes where it behaves like (and is possibly mixed with) rice. I think it adds a nice (creamy?) balance to some other carby things, such as a veggies. Trader Joe's sells one that really like that has orzo mixed with spinach, sundried tomatoes, and feta(?) cheese.
i use shells a lot, even for bowls of just pasta and sauce (vs a plate of sauce over spaghetti noodles). it's just easier to scoop 'em up with a spoon.
use plenty of water and stir the pot frequently. i only have a problem with them sticking together while cooking if i neglect to do those two things.
they're great in pasta salads or mac & cheese when you're using peas in whatever you're making. some of the peas work themselves into the shells. it's like they were made for each other.
I forget the name, but the one that's kind like penne rigate, but a much wider diameter tube, with ends cut straight instead of angled. That one literally always falls apart and turns to kinda mushy strips when I've tried to cook it or had it cooked by someone else.
Buccatini. Still good, but its basically spaghetti with a weirder texture.
Angel hair. Undercooked, undercooked, overcooked.
angel hair (Capelli D'Angelo) is fresh pasta to be had with a broth, so it shouldn't may too much possible to have it undercooked or matter too much if it's slightly overcooked.
~~I love orzo how dare you~~
Honestly I'm a huge pasta lover so it's difficult for me to say. Probably farfalle whenever I eat it raw. The middle parts are always a pain to eat because of the shape.
I'm ashamed (as an Italian) to discover only now thanks to this post that "orzo" can be a pasta format and not just another cereal (it also means "barley"). I always heard the term "risoni" for it but "orzo" apparently is used as well. And I agree, it sucks.
In case you did not know there is a cylindric variant too called "tempestina" which is even more awful (mainly used for soups, or for small children). It's uncommon to see grown adults eat them but, unfortunately, they exist.
And now I am hungry.
I mean, what's the point of pipe rigate? Most of them are too small to eat a single one at a time by stabbing them and they are the perfect shape to wiggle free from any attempt to hold more than one on a fork. I've seen them slide right off of a large spoon. I'm pretty sure if you could make molecules in that shape you'd invent some perfectly frictionless hydrophobic material that would revolutionize several industries.