Ingredients

  • 1/3 cup dry red wine
  • 2 tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil
  • 1 teaspoon white wine vinegar
  • 1 1/2 cups unbleached pastry flour or unbleached all-purpose flour, plus more for dusting
  • 2 tablespoons sugar
  • 1/4 teaspoon kosher salt

Method

  • Whisk the wine, olive oil, and vinegar in a medium bowl to combine.
  • Put the flour, sugar, and salt in the bowl of a standing mixer and mix at low speed just to combine.
  • With the mixer still running, add the wet ingredients, reserving 1 tablespoon, and continue to run the mixer on low speed until the dough comes together.
  • Add the reserved liquid if the dough feels hard and dry, otherwise discard it.
  • (Alternatively, to make the dough by hand, combine the dry ingredients in a large bowl, and combine the wet ingredients in a separate bowl.
  • Turn the dry ingredients out onto your work surface and create a well in the center.
  • Pour the wet ingredients into the well and mix with your hands, working from the outside in, to bring the dough together.)
  • Turn the dough out onto a lightly floured work surface and knead it for a few minutes to bring it together.
  • Form the dough into a ball, wrap it in plastic wrap, and place it in the refrigerator to chill for at least an hour and up to a week.
  • Adjust a pasta sheeter gauge to the thickest setting (number 8 using a KitchenAid attachment).
  • Line a baking sheet with parchment paper and cut two or three more sheets of parchment paper roughly the same size.
  • Remove the dough from the refrigerator and cut it into quarters.
  • Dust one segment of the dough lightly with flour and pass it through the pasta sheeter, dusting the dough with flour as it passes through, to create long sheets.
  • Adjust the sheeter to the next thinnest setting and pass the dough through again.
  • Continue to pass the dough through the sheeter in this way until you have passed it through the thinnest gauge.
  • Place the sheeted dough on the prepared baking sheet, dust it with flour, and place another sheet of parchment on top.
  • Pass the remaining sheets of dough through the sheeter in the same way, separating each sheet of dough by a sheet of parchment paper to prevent them from sticking together.