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MACARONI (from dialectic Ital. maccar...

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Originally appearing in Volume V17, Page 192 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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MACARONI (from dialectic Ital. maccare, to bruise or crush)  , a preparation of a glutinous wheat originally
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peculiar to Italy, where it is an article of food of
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national importance . The same substance in different forms is also known as vermicelli, pasta or
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Italian pastes, spaghetti, taglioni, fanti, &c . These substances are prepared from the hard, semi-translucent varieties of wheat which are largely cultivated in the south of
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Europe, Algeria and other warm regions, and distinguished by the Italians as grano duro or grano da semolino . These wheats are much richer in
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gluten and other nitrogenous compounds than the soft or
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tender wheats of more
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northern regions, and their preparations are more easily preserved . The various preparations are met with as
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fine thin threads (vermicelli), thin sticks and pipes (spaghetti, macaroni), small lozenges, stars, disks, ellipses, &c . (pastes) . These various forms are prepared in a
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uniform manner from a granular product of hard wheat, which, under the name of semolina or middlings, is a commercial article . The semolina is thoroughly mixed with boiling
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water and incorporated in a kneading machine, such as is used in bakeries, into a stiff paste or dough . It is then further kneaded by passing frequently between rollers or under edge runners, till a homogeneous mass has been produced which is placed in a strong steam-jacketed cylinder, the
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lower end of which is closed with a thick disk pierced with openings corresponding with the diameter or section of the article to be made . Into this cylinder an accurately fitting plunger or piston is introduced and subjected to very
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great pressure, which causes the stiff dough to squeeze out through the openings in the disk in continuous threads, sticks or pipes, as the case may be . Vermicelli is cut off in short bundles and laid on trays to dry, while macaroni is dried by
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hanging it in longer lengths over wooden rods in stoves or heated apartments through which currents of air are driven . It is only genuine macaroni, rich in gluten, which can be dried in this manner;
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spurious fabrications will not bear their own
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weight, and must, therefore, be laid out flat to be dried .

In making pastes the cylinder is closed with a disk pierced with holes having the sectional

form of the pastes, and a set of knives revolving close against the
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external
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surface of the disk cut off the paste in thin sections as it exudes from each opening . True macaroni can be distinguished by observing the flattened mark of the rod over which it has been dried within the
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bend of the tubes; it has a soft yellowish colour, is rough in texture, elastic and hard, and breaks with a smooth glassy fracture . In boiling it swells up to double its
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original
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size without becoming pasty or adhesive . It can be kept any length of time without alteration or deterioration; and it is on that account, in many circumstances, a most convenient as well as a highly nutritious and healthful article of food .

End of Article: MACARONI (from dialectic Ital. maccare, to bruise or crush)
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