Hand-Rolled Pici Pasta (2024)

Pici is one of the most charming pasta shapes. It is a quirky favorite requiring a short list of simple ingredients hand-rolled into long, slightly irregular strands. Pici love forever.

jump arrow

Jump to Recipe

Hand-Rolled Pici Pasta (8)

Pici is a Tuscan form of spaghetti-style pasta typically made from flour and water. Arguably one of the most charming shapes in the pasta kingdom, it is shaped by hand and is quirky, irregular and purposefully imperfect. Three of my favorite qualities in both people and cooking. If you’re intimidated by the thought of making fresh pasta, it’s a great shape to start with.

Hand-Rolled Pici Pasta (9)
How it works. To make pici you combine flour(s), warm water and salt, mix it in tough a dough, and knead it into a smooth ball of pasta dough over the course of a few minutes. Let the dough rest for 45 minutes or so, lob off a hunk of it and then section that into little strips of dough to be rolled into long strands using your hands. There are process photos below to demonstrate the shaping process. But, if you can make a skinny snake shape with Play-Doh, you can make pici.
Hand-Rolled Pici Pasta (10)

Pici: Let’s talk Flour Types

You can find pici made with semolina flour, 00 flour, all-purpose flour or a blend of all of these. Over the years I’ve made it with all of the above, experimenting with different ratios, typically coming back to the recipe I’ll share today. It combines equal *weights* of semolina flour and either “00” (or all-purpose flour). This dough is a pleasure to work with. Rolling it out is a breeze. You end up with delightful strands of hearty, tender, slurp-able, sunny-shaded yellow pasta noodles.
Hand-Rolled Pici Pasta (11)
Pici made with 00 flour results in a much softer, looser, tender pasta dough (pictured below). The noodles picture below were made using 350g “00” and 175g warm, salted water. They are pale in color, lacking the yellow of the semolina flour. They can be a bit fussier to roll out. If you go this route, keep extra flour at the ready to counter any stickiness. Alternately, use spritzes from a spray bottle of water if you need to add moisture to your dough a bit at a time.
Hand-Rolled Pici Pasta (12)
Generally speaking, my advice? Once you get a feel for the dough play around with the ratio of flours. More semolina is going to give you more heartiness and structure. More 00 or unbleached all-purpose flour will deliver a softer, more refined dough. I like a good amount of semolina in my pici dough, especially if the weather is cooler and I’m pairing it with a hearty sauce. The ratio I use most often, and the one reflected in the recipe below is equal *weights* of the following: semolina flour, 00 or all-purpose flour, and salted water. And I just want to emphasize that we're talking equal weight, not volume.
Hand-Rolled Pici Pasta (13)

Pici is traditionally made without egg, but many people make it with egg dough too. For reference, 93 year old Giuseppina Spiganti’s pici is featured in Pasta Grannies. She uses 00 flour and one egg in her pici dough. Missy Robbins references an egg dough for the pici in Pasta, also made with 00 flour. Paul Bertolli makes pici eggless in Cooking By Hand. And Jodi Williams and Rita Sodi use a blend of 00 and semolina flour with no egg in Via Carota. The pici I encountered in Siena was most often made from flour and water only. I most often go the no-egg route for pici. But, there are definitely times when I have some straight-forward pasta dough on hand, made with egg, and decide to shape some pici. Guess what? It’s all wonderful.

How To Make Pici: Step by Step in Photos

The great thing about pici is you don't need any special equipment to make it. It's a fantastic family activity - everyone loves to hand-roll this pasta. Precision isn't what it's about - the charm of pici is that they are perfectly imperfect. The one thing I would be mindful of is this. Err on the side of thinner versus thick pici. They will swell a bit when cooking, and when they are too thick the texture is off and timing can be tricky when cooking. Also, broadly attempt to make them the same-ish thickness. Don't obsess over it, but you want them to cook in the same amount of time.
Hand-Rolled Pici Pasta (14)
Above: pici dough rolled out about 1/4-inch thick and cut into strips.
Hand-Rolled Pici Pasta (15)
Use hands to roll pici. Start in the center and work outward.
Hand-Rolled Pici Pasta (16)
If your dough is being cranky, i.e. not wanting to stretch, set that noodle aside for a few minutes to rest while you move on to another. Come back to it.
Hand-Rolled Pici Pasta (17)
How long? I tend to make my pici on the longer side. My intention is to be able to arrange them across my largest baking sheets (dust well with flour to prevent sticking), but more often than not they hang over.
Hand-Rolled Pici Pasta (18)
If you're not going to cook the pici right away, coax any overhanging noodles back onto the pan, cover with plastic wrap, and refrigerate for up to one day. You can dust pici well with flour, and arrange into nests, but arranging pici like this is a safer bet if you're concerned about your pasta nest clumping together when you go to cook.
Hand-Rolled Pici Pasta (19)

Pici: Sauce Pairings

I love pici with this mushroom ragu. Especially in the winter and fall. You see it served traditionally with meaty ragu-style sauces and mushrooms. I don’t do the meat side of things, but lean in hard on the mushrooms. In summer, I’ll lighten things up a bit with whatever looks great and in-season at the farmers’ market. Here are a few recent pici sauce pairings we’ve enjoyed. I’ll add more over time. Some, not at all traditional, but super tasty nonetheless!
Hand-Rolled Pici Pasta (20)

  • Pici with Oven-Roasted Cherry Tomatoes and Breadcrumbs (pictured above): Toss halved cherry tomatoes in some olive oil and roast in a 375F oven until blistered. Rip some good sourdough into tiny shreds, toss with some garlic and olive oil, and bake until crisp as well (while you’re doing the tomatoes) - crush these with something heavy, and make them your breadcrumbs. Gently saute 4-5 cloves of chopped garlic in 3 tablespoons of olive oil over medium low heat in your largest skillet. Just to soften, not to brown. Remove from heat and stir in some crushed red pepper flakes, good black pepper, and zest of one lemon. Cook the pici until tender and add to skillet along with a ladle full of pasta water and some freshly grated pecorino or Parmesan cheese. Stir until well coated and then turn out onto a platter. Top with roasted tomatoes, breadcrumbs, and whatever herbs you have - in this case I snipped some chives from the garden.
  • Pici with Chopped Mushrooms and So Much Garlic: Sauté sliced mushrooms in a skillet over high heat in some olive oil + butter and salt. Once deeply browned stir in 5 cloves of chopped garlic and remove from heat after 20 seconds or so. Remove just the peel from a (Meyer) lemon and slice into thin slivers, add this to the hot pan with tons of freshly ground black pepper, and a handful of freshly grated Pecorino cheese. Add pici to skillet along with a ladle of pasta water, stir well until pici is coated and serve topped with chives.

Hand-Rolled Pici Pasta (21)

More Pasta Recipes

  • Homemade Pasta
  • Pappardelle
  • Cavatelli
  • Beet Fettuccine
  • Pasta with Crushed Creamy Walnut Sauce
  • Stuffed Shells
  • Mushroom Lasagna
  • morepasta recipes

Favorite Pasta Sauces

  • Pesto
  • Five Minute Tomato Sauce
  • Mushroom Ragù

Other Favorite Italian Recipes

  • Gnocchi
  • Bruschetta
  • Fregola Sarda

101 Cookbooks Membership

Premium Ad-Free membership includes:
-Ad-free content
-Print-friendly recipes
-Spice / Herb / Flower / Zest recipe collection PDF
-Weeknight Express recipe collection PDF
-Surprise bonuses throughout the year

Sign up here!

browse more:

Pasta Recipes

Hand-Rolled Pici Pasta

Join to PRINT

5 from 1 vote

There are photos of the pici-making process up above if you need a reference. This is the recipe and flour ratio I use for making pici, but you can also make all sorts of variations by adding spices, or swapping in another liquid for the water - for example, a concentrated carrot juice, beet juice, etc. Have fun experimenting! For accuracy, I also recommend weighing ingredients here.

Ingredients

  • 175gsemolina flour
  • 175g00 flour or unbleached all-purpose flour
  • 175warm water
  • 1 1/2teaspoonsfine grain sea salt
  • 1teaspoonextra virgin olive oil

Instructions

  1. Stir the flours together in a bowl to combine. Dissolve the salt in the warm water. Add the salt water to the flours along with the olive oil. Use your hand to mix it all together and bring together into a ball. You might think things are a bit dry, keep mixing and squeezing. It should all come together.

  2. Turn the pasta dough out onto a countertop and use one hand to vigorously knead the dough for 6-7 minutes. The dough should end up smooth and supple. Shape into a ball, wrap tightly with plastic wrap and allow to rest for an hour. If you’re not going to use the dough at that point, refrigerate for up to a day.

  3. When you’re ready to shape noodles, unwrap the dough and cut in half. Rewrap the half you aren’t using. Roll the other half out on a lightly floured counter to 1/4-inch thick. Cut into strips roughly 1/2-inch wide. If this is confusing, refer to the photos in the post up above. Take a piece of the dough and roll out using your hands as if you were making a Play-Doh snake. Add a bit more pressure to elongate the strand and keep going until the pici is thinner than a pencil, and generally even throughout the length. Aim for “skinny pencil” aiming for thinner strands versus thicker. The pici will pudge up a bit as they rest and swell as they cook. Repeat with the other half of dough if using.

  4. Toss the shaped pici in flour to keep them from sticking together, and arrange on a parchment-lined and well-floured baking sheet. Or, set aside on a floured area of your counter you’re not using for rolling.

  5. To cook pici, boil a large pot of water, salt generously, and place noodles in the water. Cook until tender 4-5 minutes or so. Test along the way, cooking until tender. Drain and serve with favorite sauce.

Notes

Makes about 1 pound of pici dough, serving 4-6.

Serves

6

Prep Time

1 hr

Cook Time

5 mins

Join to PRINT

nutrition info nutrition info

July 29, 2023

permalink icon

Calories 217

Fat 1g

Saturated Fat 0.2g

Polyunsaturated Fat 0.3g

Monounsaturated Fat 1g

Sodium 611mg

Potassium 86mg

Carbohydrates 43g

Fiber 2g

Sugar 0.1g

Protein 7g

Vitamin A 1IU

Calcium 27mg

Iron 3mg

If you make this recipe, I'd love to see it - tag it #101cookbooks on Instagram!

Related Recipes

Homemade Cavatelli

Simple, homemade cavatelli pasta is a super fun shape to make! Pictured here spiked with turmeric and black pepper, and topped with roasted winter vegetables and Parmesan.

Mushroom Ragù

The ragù of your dreams. This hearty and deeply flavorful mushroom ragù moves from the stovetop to the oven, slow-cooking into a hearty, wonderful sauce featuring finely chopped mushrooms, tomatoes, white wine, and aromatics.

Homemade Pasta

Everything I know about making homemade pasta. Four ingredients! If you have flour, two eggs, a splash of olive oil, and a bit of salt, you can do it right now.

Homemade Pappardelle

Simple, homemade pappardelle pasta is a deliciously versatile shape to make! Pictured below topped with crispy mushrooms, clouds of Parmesan cheese, and lemon.

Homemade Pesto

A vibrant pesto recipe taught to me by my friend Francesca's mother who came to visit from Genoa, Italy. This is how to make pesto like an Italian grandmother. Made with hand-chopped basil, garlic, Parmesan, olive oil and pine nuts. The real deal.

Simple Bruschetta

Good tomatoes are the thing that matters most when it comes to making bruschetta - the classic Italian antipasto. It is such a simple preparation that paying attention to the little details matters.

Post Your Comment

More Recipes

Whole Grain

WFPB

Vegetarian Recipes

Vegan Recipes

Soup Recipes

Side Dishes

Sandwiches

Salads

Pasta Recipes

Quick

Main Course

Instant Pot

Holiday

High Protein

Gluten Free

Drinks

Dinner Ideas

Desserts

Cookies

Chocolate

Breakfast

Baking

Appetizers

Camping Recipes

Hand-Rolled Pici Pasta (32)

Join my newsletter!
Weekly recipes and inspirations.

Popular Ingredients

avocado

egg

herb

kale

lemon

lentil

quinoa

pasta

tomato

turmeric

yogurt

zucchini

arugula

asparagus

basil

broccoli

buttermilk

cauliflower

chickpea

chocolate

curry

tempeh

tofu

ALL

Hand-Rolled Pici Pasta (2024)

FAQs

What kind of pasta is pici? ›

Pici is a Tuscan form of spaghetti-style pasta typically made from flour and water. Arguably one of the most charming shapes in the pasta kingdom, it is shaped by hand and is quirky, irregular and purposefully imperfect.

What is the difference between pici and spaghetti? ›

Difference between Pici and Spaghetti

Spaghetti is long and thin, while pici is thicker and typically hand-rolled into long and rustic strands. Pici is sometimes compared to fat spaghetti, but its unique thickness sets it apart. Texture: Pici pasta has a chewier, denser texture due to its thickness.

What is the name of the pasta that is hand-rolled? ›

Pici is a really rustic shape originating in Tuscany and is a hand-rolled spaghetti shape that is often paired with my favourite cacio e pepe sauce. It is so simple to make, all you need is flour, water and olive oil. Rolling the strands take a bit of time but it's worth every minute!

Why is it called Pici pasta? ›

The name pici comes from the term “appiciare”, which refers to the traditional manual technique used to form these long, thick noodles. Ancient in origin, dating back to the Etruscans, they were made from only flour and water, the poor everyday pasta of the Sienese peasants.

What is the difference between pici and Bigoli? ›

Key Differences

Origin: Pici comes from Tuscany, while Bigoli is a specialty of Venice in the Veneto region. Shape: Pici is hand-rolled and thick like spaghetti, while Bigoli is extruded and has a round, hollow shape.

Do Italians roll their pasta? ›

Today, we'll try to make some clarity on the subject, and we are going to be very straightforward: the only acceptable way to eat spaghetti, or other long varieties of pasta, is rolling them around your fork. No other piece of cutlery – oh, hi, spoon and knife!

What is rolled filled pasta called? ›

Ravioli. Possibly the most recognisable filled pasta type, ravioli are named after the Italian term 'riavvolgere' meaning “to wrap.” Ravioli have been a staple of Italian cuisine since the 14th century.

Is it hard to hand roll pasta? ›

It's fairly easy to roll out your own dough with a rolling pin, and you might get a good arm workout in the process. To prevent sticking, be sure to knead and roll out the dough on a floured surface!

What pasta is similar to pici? ›

Pici, pinzi, umbricelli, strangozzi, lunghetti, ciriole, serpentelli, different names for the same pasta: very long and chubby spaghetti-like tubes of fresh pasta generally made only with flour and water, typical of Toscana, Umbria and Lazio.

What is pici Italian in English? ›

Pici (Italian: [ˈpiːtʃi]; locally [ˈpiːʃi]) is thick, hand-rolled pasta, like fat spaghetti.

What is pici in Florence? ›

Pici is the plural name for a typical homemade pasta from the southern province of Siena, particularly the area between Chiusi, Montepulciano and Mount Cetona. Interestingly in nearby areas such as Montalcino they are called pinci.

What are the 4 types of pasta in Italy? ›

In Rome, these discussions often revolve around pasta, particular the city's four classics: Cacio e Pepe, Gricia, Amatriciana, and Carbonara.

What kind of pasta is pesto? ›

Pesto Sauce

This fresh and fragrant pasta sauce is served uncooked, so choose a pasta shape that won't overwhelm it. Similar to oil-based sauces, pesto is served best with longer cuts of pasta, like the corkscrew shape of Fusilli. Pesto works best with Bucatini, Capellini, thinner Spaghettini, and Fettuccine.

What type of pasta is mostaccioli? ›

Penne mostaccioli or “small mustaches” has the exact same shape as penne pasta, however it does not have a ridged surface. Like penne, it is great in salads, casseroles, and stir fry dishes. The shape is originally from the Campania region in Southern Italy.

What type of pasta is ziti? ›

Ziti is a very popular tube shaped pasta. Ziti gets its name from the word zita, which means bride. In Naples, Ziti is the classic pasta served at weddings as the zita/bride's pasta.

References

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Geoffrey Lueilwitz

Last Updated:

Views: 5534

Rating: 5 / 5 (80 voted)

Reviews: 95% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Geoffrey Lueilwitz

Birthday: 1997-03-23

Address: 74183 Thomas Course, Port Micheal, OK 55446-1529

Phone: +13408645881558

Job: Global Representative

Hobby: Sailing, Vehicle restoration, Rowing, Ghost hunting, Scrapbooking, Rugby, Board sports

Introduction: My name is Geoffrey Lueilwitz, I am a zealous, encouraging, sparkling, enchanting, graceful, faithful, nice person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.