Masterclass: Chef Mimmo Ferraro’s Golden Rules for Perfect Pasta
For Executive Chef Mimmo Ferraro of Las Vegas’s legendary Ferraro’s Ristorante, pasta is far more than a simple carbohydrate—it is a precise architectural art form driven by specific, unyielding culinary structural principles. To help home cooks elevate their everyday cooking, Chef Mimmo shares his professional rules, secret techniques, and the common mistakes to avoid in order to achieve a restaurant-quality dish every single time.
The Golden Rule of Fresh Extruded Pasta
When preparing fresh pasta in the Ferraro’s kitchen, achieving the perfect structure for that classic “al dente” bite requires an exact approach to ingredients. When pressed on the kitchen’s technical formulation, Chef Mimmo reveals a crucial structural secret.
“Now you want to know our secrets!” chuckles Chef Mimmo. “Our golden rule is we only use egg whites in our extruded pasta, which helps keep it al dente.”

Matching the Shape to the Sauce
Choosing between a delicate, hand-rolled ribbon and a sturdy, hollow tube is never an aesthetic choice—it is a functional engineering design choice. The physical geometry of the pasta must match the viscosity and texture of the sauce it carries.
“Most of the time we like to stay traditional, like Bucatini for Amatriciana and Pappardelle for Bolognese,” Ferraro explains. “Depending on the dish, you want the pasta to be able to grab the sauce or fill the holes, like rigatoni.”
The Magic of Pasta Water Emulsion
For home cooks working with high-quality boxed pasta, Chef Mimmo notes that the single biggest mistake occurs at the kitchen sink. Dumping the starchy boiling water down the drain is throwing away the most critical ingredient for the sauce.
“The answer is in the question: pasta water!” emphasizes Chef Mimmo. “Always reserve pasta water to create the perfect creamy sauce. Home cooks should take the pasta out of the water one minute before the specified cook time and continue cooking the pasta in the sauce with some of the pasta water. The starch helps bring the dish together.”

Finishing in the Pan
One should never simply ladle hot sauce over a naked bowl of drained pasta. True Italian cooking requires the ingredients to marry over the flame, allowing the pasta to absorb the fundamental flavors of the sauce from the inside out.
“Finishing in the pan with the sauce helps the flavor of the sauce to absorb directly into the pasta, especially during the last minute of cooking,” says Chef Mimmo. “Most pasta dishes are finished with grated Parmigiano or Pecorino – always off the heat – and drizzled with a quality extra virgin olive oil.”
Salting “Like the Sea”
Proper seasoning begins long before the sauce or pasta even touches the pan. According to Chef Mimmo, timing and volume are everything when preparing the cooking water.
“Salt should always be added when the water is boiling before the pasta goes in,” instructs Chef Mimmo. “We like to use sea salt and will often just dip a finger into the water quickly to taste. It should taste like the sea!”
The Philosophy of Simplicity
Ultimately, the greatest professional chef’s tip for elevating a simple boxed pasta dish at home relies on restraint rather than complexity. By relying on a few exceptional pantry staples, the true character of traditional Italian cuisine shines through.
“Less is more,” concludes Chef Mimmo. “Use high-quality, fresh ingredients, and let them speak for themselves. Keep it simple: olive oil, garlic, tomatoes, fresh basil and Parmigiano.”
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