Home Today Is Spaghetto Is The Singular Word For Spaghetti (Video)

Spaghetto Is The Singular Word For Spaghetti (Video)

National Pasta Day is celebrated every October 17. The individuals who invented pasta certainly knew what they were doing. Hundreds of years of Italian tradition go into this simple meal. Each October, we devote a special day to this incredible dish. Pasta comes in many shapes and sizes, but no matter the form, it’s something nearly every American Family has grown up with.
  • 5000 BC – The first reports of pasta were in China, not in Italy. These reports go way back in history, with the first reports of individuals eating pasta as early as 5,000 BC.
  • 400s – The Etruscan civilization shows evidence of people making pasta in the area that is now known as Italy
  • 1271 – The origins of pasta are a little difficult to trace, but many researchers support the theory that Marco Polo brought noodles back to Italy upon returning from a trip to China in 1271.
  • 16th Century AD – First pasta maker in Italy. Beginning at the court of Ferrara and then adopted by the Neopolitans, the pasta maker Christoforo Messisbugo documents what he refers to as the ”macaroni invention
  • 1600s – Pasta manufacturing machines were made in the 1600s across the coast of Sanremo.
  • 1740 – In Naples, people became vociferous macaroni-eaters.
  • 1789 – Thomas Jefferson was the first person to bring pasta to America.  While many people surely know him as being the third president of the United States, we may forever know Thomas Jefferson as the reason we get to enjoy pasta here in the U.S.
  • 1848 – The first pasta factory in the U.S. was built in Brooklyn. Zerega was founded by a French immigrant (Antoine Zerega) in 1848 and is still making pasta today. [Philadelphia Macaroni bought Zerega’s in May 2020]
  • 1877 the Barilla Pasta Company is founded in Parma, Italy.  the Barilla company will eventually become the largest pasta company in the world
  • 1914 – The process of creating dry pasta allowed it to be widely available in Italy
  • 1957 – Spaghetti Grows on Trees.  April 1 in 1957, the BBC made everyone believe that spaghetti grows on trees. At the time, spaghetti was considered by many as an exotic delicacy. The spoof program explained how severe frost can impair the flavor of the spaghetti and how each strand of spaghetti always grows to the same length. This is believed to be one of the first times television was used to stage an April Fools Day hoax.
  • In Italy, names of specific pasta shapes or types vary with locale.
  • Cavatelli is known by 28 different names depending on the region and town.
  • There are over 600 types of pasta, some with over 1300 names.
  • There are approximately 350 shapes of pasta
  • In Greek mythology, it is believed that the God Vulcan invented a device that made
    strings of dough. This was the earliest reference to a pasta maker.
  • The three most popular pasta dishes are macaroni and cheese, spaghetti bolognaise, and lasagne.
  • Italy produces 2,700,000 TONS of pasta per year.
  • The US produces 1.9 Million tons.
  • Before pasta machines were invented, the dough for pasta was kneaded by foot as workers would walk over large batches of the dough!
  • Spaghetto is the singular word for spaghetti
  • Because pasta dough is so tough, workers would walk over large batches of dough to knead it and a single batch would take “a full day’s walking” to make.
  • The average Italian eats 51 pounds of pasta per year. While Americans eat just 26 pounds a year. 
  • 24% of the global consumption of pasta is by Americans – the largest of any country in the world. Americans consume 6 billion pounds of pasta each year.
  • The United States produces 4.4 billion pounds of pasta annually, making it the second-largest pasta-producing nation.
  • According to studies, spaghetti is the favorite pasta for Americans. Second place is penne and then it is rotini.
  • Macaroni Hair Style. In the mid-eighteenth century, “macaroni” referred to an overblown hairstyle as well as to the dandy wearing it.
  • To cook one billion pounds of pasta, you would need 2,021,452,000 gallons of water – enough to fill nearly 75,000 Olympic-size swimming pools.
  • One billion pounds of pasta is about 212,595 miles of 16-ounce packages of spaghetti stacked end-to-end — enough to circle the earth’s equator nearly nine times.

 

Sources:

National Day Calendar

Faith Based Events

The Fact Site

Buzz Feed

Italian Notes

Foodimentary

Bottiglia LV

Days of the Year

Antico

National Today


Disclaimer

The information contained in South Florida Reporter is for general information purposes only.
The South Florida Reporter assumes no responsibility for errors or omissions in the contents of the Service.
In no event shall the South Florida Reporter be liable for any special, direct, indirect, consequential, or incidental damages or any damages whatsoever, whether in an action of contract, negligence or other tort, arising out of or in connection with the use of the Service or the contents of the Service. The Company reserves the right to make additions, deletions, or modifications to the contents of the Service at any time without prior notice.
The Company does not warrant that the Service is free of viruses or other harmful components