- Overcooked pasta can’t hold sauce and loses its ideal texture.
- Al dente pasta has a lower glycemic index and keeps you fuller longer.
- Taste pasta early and finish cooking it in the sauce for best results.
A box of spaghetti and a can of tomatoes can become dinner in a matter of minutes, but while cooking a box of dried pasta seems straightforward, there are a number of ways you can actually mess it up. The biggest culprit according to the experts? Overcooking your pasta.
“Perfect pasta will have a bite to it. Many people will go to Italy and be surprised by how much more al dente Italians cook their pasta,” says Giada De Laurentiis, host of Everyday Italian, author of nine cookbooks and founder of Giadzy, an Italian food brand. “[Pasta] needs to be toothsome and still have texture to it.”
Why Overcooked Pasta Is a Problem
Overcooking your pasta doesn’t just result in a mushier texture—it can affect how it interacts with the sauce and how your body digests it. “Overcooked pasta is sacrilegious. It turns limp, loses its bite and soaks up more water than sauce,” says New York restaurateur and Food Network chef Adam Sobel. “When the starch breaks down, the pasta can’t hold onto the sauce and unfortunately, the sauce slides off. You end up with a bland, watery dish that tastes disconnected—pasta on one side, sauce on the other.”
De Laurentiis agrees on the sauce—and pointed out that al dente pasta is actually better for you than pasta that’s been overcooked. “We digest overcooked pasta differently too. Al dente pasta keeps you fuller for much longer,” she says. That’s because al dente pasta also has a lower glycemic index than overcooked pasta, as the starch is less gelatinized and your body has to work harder to digest it.
How to Avoid Overcooking Pasta
Thankfully, it’s easy to avoid overcooking your pasta. Both De Laurentiis and Sobel recommend tasting the pasta a minute or two before the package says it’s done. “I like to pull it off the heat when it’s still firm in the center, because it keeps cooking a little in the pan with the sauce,” De Laurentiis says. Just set a timer so you know exactly when to test it.
Fresh Versus Dried Pasta
While dry pasta can take 10 minutes or more to reach al dente (depending on the shape you’re making), fresh pasta needs only a minute or two in boiling water before you should strain it, master pasta maker Tori Messinger with Orlando Foods says. And while it’s easy to determine when dried pasta is, well, edible, it can be a bit trickier to know when fresh pasta is al dente. Plus, it can go from al dente to overcooked in seconds.
“Perfect pasta should have life to it. When cooked, dried pasta ought to be a soft, pale yellow that is slightly larger than when it started, with that signature al dente bite: tender yet pleasantly firm,” Messinger explains. “Fresh pasta, on the other hand, should be silky, light and tender, with a gentle bounce when you bite into it.” In order to achieve that texture, she recommends taste testing the pasta periodically during that short cooking time, pulling it out of the boiling water after a minute or two and letting it finish cooking in the sauce.
Other Pasta Mistakes to Avoid
While the experts we spoke with all said that overcooking pasta is the number one mistake they encounter, it’s not the only blunder that can impact your final dish. Using too little water to boil your pasta in, for example, is one issue Antonio Rummo, sixth-generation pasta maker and president of Pasta Rummo, sees often. “If you don’t use enough water, the pasta becomes gummy as the natural starches aren’t getting diluted properly and also starts to stick together,” he says. A few other mistakes he’s noticed? Adding your pasta before the water has reached a full boil can make it cook unevenly (and add to your cooking time) while adding oil to the water will make the pasta actually repel sauce.
The one pasta mistake that’s particularly cringe-worthy? Breaking a long pasta like spaghetti or fettucini in half, says Anthony Costella, founder of Antonio Carlo Gourmet Sauces. “It might seem harmless, but it completely changes the texture and experience of eating it,” he says. “Long pasta is meant to be twirled; that’s part of the beauty and rhythm of the dish. When you break it, you lose that elegant motion—and the sauce doesn’t coat the strands as evenly.”
The Bottom Line
According to the experts we spoke with, overcooking your pasta is the biggest mistake a home cook can make. That’s because it doesn’t just lead to mushy spaghetti—it can make it more difficult for sauce to cling to your pasta and elevate the pasta’s glycemic index. Thankfully, this mistake is easy to avoid: Set a timer for a minute or two less than the time on your package suggests, then taste your pasta when the timer goes off. It should be tender yet firm, a little bigger than it was when you first put it in the pot, and a soft, pale yellow.
