Tinkyada Brown Rice Fettucini Style Pasta Product Review
For other GF dinner ideas, visit Linda at the Gluten-Free Homemaker.
When I discovered Tinkyada pasta for the first time, I was pretty excited to try a new brand. They have a white rice pasta which I reviewed last month and thoroughly enjoyed. Then I realized that everyone else knew about Tinkyada pasta before I did! It's sold in most of the stores I frequent, including New Season's on NE 33rd and at Food Front on NW Thurman. (It's also widely available on the internet.) I read several blog posts about how good their brown rice pasta was, and I was eager to try it.
Well, I was disappointed. I actually like the Trader Joe's brown rice pasta better, if you want to campare apples with apples. To read about my all-time favorite pastas, Ancient Harvest and Mrs. Leeper's, read my review The Best and Worst of Gluten-free Pasta.
This pasta gave me problems from the start. Trying to be fair, I tried it three times. The first time I under-cooked it, and the noodles stuck together, probably because I paused before stirring to take this picture:
That picture was really not worth it. The second time I stirred it diligently so it wouldn't stick to itself, then I over-cooked it. The third time I stirred it and timed it diligently, I tested it often, I took it off the stove five minutes early (for a 13-minute stated cooking time, a 5-minute difference is significant), and it was still over-cooked.
I like my pasta al dente, it's true. It's possible my standards are too high. But for a product that proclaims right on the front of the packaging "NOT MUSHY AL DENTE" I thought it was pretty soft. It certainly didn't live up to the Tinkyada white rice pasta I had before (which I still haven't seen anywhere in town - any ideas?) It also didn't live up to its claim that it could "withstand quite a bit of over-cooking." I found the texture smooth enough for brown rice pasta, but otherwise the texture was a disappointment. I also found the flavor a bit lacking. I salted the water, but it the pasta was pretty bland.
Enough kvetching. Here is what I did for dinner:
I started some water boiling and heated a saucepan on another burner. I cut some sausage up into pieces and threw them in the saucepan. When the water started boiling I threw in the pasta and stirred it diligently. Then I put some chopped broccoli in the pan with the sausage. I stirred that for a bit then threw in some Classico spaghetti sauce (my favorite when I can't get home-made). By the time the pasta was done the sauce was hot and I served everything piled on a plate and with cheese on top. This whole process takes about 15-20 minutes.
Then I eat.
This is a shot of the meal prepared with the Ancient Harvest linguini. It was so much better!
Comments
Jessie
WendyGK - I haven't tried De Boles yet. I'll have to check that out. Good tip! Thanks.
Love the quick and easy dinner idea.
Also, I just started my own food blog about eating gluten free while traveling on a bus and truck tour across America. Check it out if you get the chance!
www.glutenfreegidget.blogspot.com
To me, this pasta seems the most "real" and I have tried a lot of them. Other gf pastas actually crumble and break. These noodles don't break at all and have a great texture when cooked al dente.
Culinary Taste: With good gluten-free pastas I don't need to put olive oil in. Have you tried any quinoa pastas?
BC Bioglut? Really? That sounds horrible! If they are decent tasting, they at least have bad taste in naming!
Dazy - yours will almost certainly not be as bad as my pictures!