I grew up with a mother who could cook. Not just for survival but as an art. But, for some reason, I did not inherit that trait. I can make an egg dish to keep myself alive and I believe I can sometimes follow a recipe, but forget about making pasta from scratch. That was until chef Fabricio Daros came into our lives.
My mom was on the hunt for a course that would be as easy as it was fun. Using the “spoonful of sugar” method to get me in the kitchen — anything to get my cooking gene to wake up. Nothing sounded more perfect than the L’OCA’s Hand-Made Pasta: From Grain to Plate course. Who doesn’t like pasta?
When we walked into the glass room at the Sherwood Park location — where most of the classes are held — we expected to jump right into crafting. But Daros had a different plan for setting the mood before we got started.
Placed in front of us was a charcuterie board, featuring — among other delicacies — a wedge of double-cream brie, tender cured prosciutto, sweet fruit preserves, and toasted baguette, all paired beautifully with champagne. (All products easily found on the aisles of L’OCA).
As we enjoyed our appetizers, he took the time to introduce himself. He talked about his background and explained his teaching process, making every step sound so elevated.
This ended up feeling almost like a private lesson. Only four of us showed up out of 15 spots (I’m blaming the weather). With such a small group, everything felt more personal, especially when he spoke to my mom and me in Spanish throughout the whole class. And as if two languages weren’t enough, he also speaks Italian.
As much as I wanted to keep relaxing and drinking the complimentary bubbly, the learning had to start.
Getting Hands On
Daros gave us the option of two recipes: the Semolina Pasta Dough or the Egg Pasta Dough Recipe. My mom and I chose to do one each.
If you know your pastas, this might be obvious, but for the rest of us semolina pasta is about as straightforward as it gets: semolina flour, water, salt and olive oil. For the egg pasta recipe, you need egg yolks, egg whites, flour, olive oil and salt. No water, surprisingly. (Well, it was surprising to me but I guess I was wrong.)