Get Surfshark VPN at https://Surfshark.deals/lagerstrom – Enter promo code LAGERSTROM for 83% off and 3 extra months for free! Fettuccine alfredo is one of the most beloved Italian American pastas, but the heavy, gluey version that many of us have come to know can be so much better. Today I’ll show you a luxurious upgraded 2-ingredient alfredo (specifically pappardelle alfredo) that’s just as craveable as the gluey gut-bomb you’ve come to know and love.

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RECIPE (makes 4 portions of pasta dough. Note: sauce recipe below is only for 2 portions)
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FRESH PASTA (Or if using dried, I recommend a dried bronze die cut pasta)
▪280g or 2 1/4cAP flour
▪2 large eggs + 4 yolks
▪25-30g or 1 3/4Tbsp water

Thanks to @SipandFeast for the idea to use pappardelle for this recipe.

Create a well with the flour. Combine whites, yolks, and water and stir to combine. Dump into the flour well. Use a fork to slowly incorporate a small amount of flour in with the egg/water mixture. The idea is to not break the well…but i always do so don’t worry about it if the dam breaks. Just work it by hand for about 8-15 min or until dough becomes glossy and smooth. Add a little water along the way if needed to achieve texture shown in video.

Wrap dough, refrigerate, and allow to rest and hydrate for about 20min.

Cut dough into 2 even pieces. Wrap 1 piece in a damp paper towel while you work with piece 1. See video @2:40 for instructions on how to roll and cut pasta.

Boil pasta for about 3.5 min or until al dente in well salted water. Toss to be sure it doesn’t stick together.


SAUCE (recipe below makes 2 portions. Double amounts shown is using 4 portions of pasta)
▪125-175g or ½-3/4c + pasta water
▪75g or 5-6Tbsp nice tasting unsalted butter (i’m using kerrygold)
▪75g or 1/2c grated parmesan (good quality, be sure the only ingredient is parmesan)

Heat saute pan over low heat. Once pasta is cooked, transfer from water into saute pan (along with any pasta water that comes with it). Add in 125g/1/2c pasta water. Toss. Add 75g/5Tbsp butter. Swirl to emulsified. Add in most of the 75g/1/2c of grated parm. Stir to combine. Remove from heat. If needed, add another 1/4c pasta water, stir. Add the rest of the parm and another pad of butter. What you’re doing here is trying to achieve a nice creamy, opaque sauce that’s not too thin, not too thick. That will require some adjusting depending on what you’re working with.

To serve, top with additional grated parm and fresh cracked black pepper.

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CHAPTERS
0:00 Intro
:20 Mixing fresh pasta
2:26: Rolling, cutting, & boiling the pasta
6:36 Setting up to make alfredo pan sauce
6:52 Surfing the web with Surfshark
8:03 Making the sauce and plating up
10:47 Let’s eat this thing

#alfredo #fettuccenialfredo #alfredosauce

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20 Comments

  1. Hey Brian – thank you for all the amazing recipes and your unique way of sharing them. Just a quick one – when you say "RECIPE (makes 4 portions of pasta dough. Note: sauce recipe below is only for 2 portions)": How many grams of pasta is one portion?

  2. I made, almost, this exact dish, a while ago, after watching a video on Vincenzo's Plate. He said that a true Italian Alfredo sauce was two ingredients…butter and cheese, and, like you, recommended using quality products…a tasty, high fat butter (grass fed) and Parmigiana Reggiano, or Pecorino Romano, that you grated.
    When I used it, I used the fettucine cutter that came with my hand-crank pasta machine. It was absolutely delicious. Your video has made me crave it, again, and want to try it with a wider, hand cut noodle.

  3. I can’t eat my Alfredo any other way since I tried it this way. I have never done the fresh pasta, though, definitely need to look into that.

  4. Finally made this tonight. I never liked making it the other way and always felt like it was off. This was… AMAZING. Beyond simple. Rich, yet we didn't feel disgusting after eating it. 10/10 will be making this on the regular. (I made chicken to go with it to feel like a complete meal.) *Chef's kiss

  5. It’s just butter and Parmesan cheese. There is absolutely no flavor here. I don’t care how aged the cheese is.

  6. This is the only alfredo I make, now. Occasionally I'll throw maybe half a clove of grated garlic into the butter, if I want to get schmancy. (Or slice it super-thin and toast it with a little olive oil as you're warming up the pan; leave it in for sweet, toasty garlic chips, or pluck it out before starting the butter melt if you just want the flavor.) My grandma was from Calabria, so she'd throw in a pinch of pepper flakes to change it up. Basically the same dish, but an entirely different flavor!

  7. Hey I just came across your videos and I love them!

    Please acknowledge that this is the traditional Italian (Roman) Alfredo recipe!

    Thanks 🙏

  8. You are indeed right about the difference between fresh, bronze cut and regular pasta. It's much like the difference between a Ferrari, Fiero and a Fiat. Just because they have four wheels and red paint, doesn't make them the same.

  9. Sorry but this recipe is not the way fettuccine Alfredo is done, you need to watch videos of how the real Italian chefs are doing it and learn. Good luck in your learning journey 🤭🤭🤭

  10. I've been making this dish wrong for 20 years then. I learned to make it from scratch because my kids used to enjoy it so much and the recipe is really simple to follow. There are so many of them on the internet. Just google search "Fettuccine Alfredo sauce". Okay, so the next time I make it for myself, being an empty nester now, I'll try it this way and so how I like it. With the strength of flavor of that parm I know it's gonna be kick-ass.

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