Science Chemists create world's thinnest spaghetti

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by University College London
November 21, 2024

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The team used a scanning electron microscope, scanning the mat with a focused beam of electrons and creating an image based on the pattern of electrons that are deflected or knocked-off. Each individual strand is too narrow to be clearly captured by any form of visible light camera or microscope. Credit: Beatrice Britton / Adam Clancy

The world's thinnest spaghetti, about 200 times thinner than a human hair, has been created by a UCL-led research team. The spaghetti is not intended to be a new food but was created because of the wide-ranging uses that extremely thin strands of material, called nanofibers, have in medicine and industry.

Nanofibers made of starch—produced by most green plants to store excess glucose—are especially promising and could be used in bandages to aid wound healing (as the nanofiber mats are highly porous, allowing water and moisture in but keeping bacteria out), as scaffolding for bone regeneration and for drug delivery. However, they rely on starch being extracted from plant cells and purified, a process requiring much energy and water.

A more environmentally friendly method, the researchers say, is to create nanofibers directly from a starch-rich ingredient like flour, which is the basis for pasta.

In a new paper in Nanoscale Advances, the team describe making spaghetti just 372 nanometers (billionths of a meter) across using a technique called electrospinning, in which threads of flour and liquid are pulled through the tip of a needle by an electric charge. The work was performed by Beatrice Britton, who carried out the study as part of her master's degree in chemistry at UCL.

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The team used a scanning electron microscope, scanning the mat with a focused beam of electrons and creating an image based on the pattern of electrons that are deflected or knocked-off. Each individual strand is too narrow to be clearly captured by any form of visible light camera or microscope. Credit: Beatrice Britton / Adam Clancy

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The nanofiber mat held between two fingers. Credit: Beatrice Britton / Adam Clancy

Co-author Dr. Adam Clancy (UCL Chemistry) said, "To make spaghetti, you push a mixture of water and flour through metal holes. In our study, we did the same except we pulled our flour mixture through with an electrical charge. It's literally spaghetti but much smaller."

In their paper, the researchers describe the next thinnest known pasta, called su filindeu ("threads of God"), made by hand by a pasta maker in the town of Nuoro, Sardinia. This pasta lunga ("long pasta") is estimated at about 400 microns wide—1,000 times thicker than the new electrospun creation, which, at 372 nanometers, is narrower than some wavelengths of light.

The novel "nanopasta" formed a mat of nanofibers about 2 cm across, and so is visible, but each individual strand is too narrow to be clearly captured by any form of visible light camera or microscope, so their widths were measured with a scanning electron microscope.

Co-author Professor Gareth Williams (UCL School of Pharmacy) said, "Nanofibers, such as those made of starch, show potential for use in wound dressings as they are very porous. In addition, nanofibers are being explored for use as a scaffold to regrow tissue, as they mimic the extra-cellular matrix—a network of proteins and other molecules that cells build to support themselves."

Dr. Clancy said, "Starch is a promising material to use as it is abundant and renewable—it is the second largest source of biomass on Earth, behind cellulose—and it is biodegradable, meaning it can be broken down in the body.

"But purifying starch requires lots of processing. We've shown that a simpler way to make nanofibers using flour is possible. The next step would be to investigate the properties of this product. We would want to know, for instance, how quickly it disintegrates, how it interacts with cells, and if you could produce it at scale."

Professor Williams added, "I don't think it's useful as pasta, sadly, as it would overcook in less than a second, before you could take it out of the pan."


Credit: Nanoscale Advances (2024). DOI: 10.1039/D4NA00601A

In electrospinning, the needle in which the mixture is contained and the metal plate upon which the mixture is deposited form two ends of a battery. Applying an electrical charge makes the mixture complete the circuit by streaming out of the needle on to the metal plate.

Electrospinning using a starch-rich ingredient such as white flour is more challenging than using pure starch, as the impurities—the protein and cellulose—make the mixture more viscous and unable to form fibers.

The researchers used flour and formic acid rather than water, as the formic acid breaks up the giant stacks of spirals (or helices) that make up starch. This is because the layers of helices stuck together are too big to be the building blocks of nanofibers. (Cooking has the same effect on the starch as the formic acid—it breaks up the layers of helices, making the pasta digestible.)

The formic acid then evaporates as the noodle flies through the air to the metal plate.

The researchers also had to carefully warm up the mixture for several hours before slowly cooling it back down to make sure it was the right consistency.

Source (Archive)
 
“Well, it’s not actually spaghetti”

Fucking journalists
I know, the researchers are talking about implications for tissue replacement and of course the journos have to slap a fucking reddit joke onto the headline.
 
a related article on super-thin pasta:

The Truth About The Rarest Pasta In The Entire World​

By Anna Kang March 12, 2022 2:30 pm EST

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We all have our favorite types of pasta, but there are actually over 300 kinds of this Italian staple and you'd be surprised at how different they all are when it comes to shape, texture, filling, and accompanying sauce. But there is one pasta so rare that only a small number of people have ever tried it. Why? To start, it's only produced in Lulu, a village near the city of Nuoro in Sardinia.

The village is home to Paola Abraini, whose family has been making su filindeu, which means "the threads of God," for more than 300 years. It is a mystery as to why or how her ancestors invented this one-of-a-kind pasta, but its recipe and technique has been passed down through the women. Today, only a few people know how to prepare su filindeu: Abraini, her niece, and her sister-in-law.

The thin, thread-like pasta reportedly requires so much time and effort to prepare that for the past 200 years, it was only served to those who underwent a 33-kilometer (21-mile) pilgrimage on foot or horseback from Nuoro to Lulu for the biannual Feast of San Francesco (via BBC Travel).

Why the rarest pasta is hard to make​

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Su filindeu only involves three components: semolina wheat, water, and salt. But don't be deceived by the short ingredient list. Many have tried to make the elusive pasta, but to no avail.

British chef and cookbook author Jamie Oliver visited Abraini and endeavored to learn how to make the dish under her instruction but had to give up after two hours, saying, "I've been making pasta for 20 years and I've never seen anything like this," per Channel 4. Engineers from pasta company Barilla attempted to replicate Abraini's technique with a machine — and they failed.

Why is su filindeu so difficult to make? It requires a certain intuition that can't be taught. After kneading the dough, Abraini continues working it until it's the right consistency by "understanding the dough with your hands" — something that can take years to master, as she told the BBC. If the dough needs to be more elastic, she dips her fingers into a bowl of salt water. If it needs more moisture, she dips into a bowl of regular water instead.

Once the dough has the perfect consistency, Abraini stretches and folds it eight times, making it become thinner with each pull. The result? 256 even strands that are about half as wide as angel-hair pasta (via BBC Travel).

What the rarest pasta tastes like​

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The thin strands of the su filindeu dough are laid across a round wooden tray as one layer. Another layer is put on top of it at a different angle, and then a third layer. The tray is left outside to dry under the sun, per Saveur.

After several hours, the layers harden into "delicate sheets of white razor-thin threads resembling stitched lace." To complete the dish, Abraini breaks the circular sheets of pasta into strips, which are later placed into boiling sheep's broth and topped with grated pecorino cheese. The pasta dish is meant to be enjoyed as a thick soup for pilgrims who make it to Lulu for the Feast of San Francesco, which is celebrated in October and May, according to BBC Travel.

What does su filindeu taste like? Saveur describes it as "bafflingly fine" noodles in a "potent and pasture-y broth" with a flavor unlike anything else. Australian chef Leo Gelsomino told SBS Australia that the texture of the pasta was "firm but silky and small" and tasted delicious and healing because the noodles absorbed so much flavor while cooking in the broth.

Why the rarest pasta is endangered​

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Su filindeu is exceedingly rare; in fact, it's one of the foods most at risk of becoming extinct, as Raffaella Ponzio, head coordinator of Slow Food International's Ark of Taste, told BBC Travel. The Ark of Taste is a project that aims to collect and protect culinary products that are in danger of disappearing. Among all the different types of pasta listed under the initiative, no other kind is made by as few people as su filindeu, thus making it the rarest and most endangered pasta in the whole world.

The future of its production is unknown. Out of Abraini's two daughters, one is knowledgeable of the basic technique but doesn't have the same passion and patience for it, and neither of them have daughters of their own. The two other women in Abraini's family who know how to make su filindeu are in their 50s and don't have potential successors among their children who are willing to learn and pass on the challenging recipe.

Seeing how her family's culinary tradition has become such an important cultural touchstone of Sardinia, Abraini attempted to teach girls from other families in Nuoro how to prepare su filindeu, but they were unsuccessful. She eventually invited students into her home, but they left and never returned when they saw how much effort was required to make the pasta, according to the BBC.
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The future of the rarest pasta​

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Despite all this, Abraini has refused to give up on trying to share the secret of su filindeu. She has gone to Rome twice to be filmed making the dish by Italian food and wine magazine Gambero Rosso. Abraini has also been making the special pasta for three local restaurants, thus introducing the dish to non-pilgrims for the first time.

Al Ciusa, one of those three restaurants, won Sardinia's Porcino d'Oro prize for best dish in 2010 with Abraini's su filindeu nero (a black squid ink version of the pasta). At Il Rifugio, another restaurant supplied by Abraini, su filindeu is the most sought-after menu item. "We have people coming from all over Europe just to taste it," owner Silverio Nanu said to BBC Travel.

For now it will take a trip to Sardinia to try su filindeu. Though not many have ever eaten the dish, those who have tasted it are adamant that it should be preserved.

article: (https://www.tastingtable.com/797084/the-truth-about-the-rarest-pasta-in-the-entire-world/)
archive: (https://archive.is/Nzje5)
 
Despite all this, Abraini has refused to give up on trying to share the secret of su filindeu. She has gone to Rome twice to be filmed making the dish by Italian food and wine magazine Gambero Rosso. Abraini has also been making the special pasta for three local restaurants, thus introducing the dish to non-pilgrims for the first time.

Al Ciusa, one of those three restaurants, won Sardinia's Porcino d'Oro prize for best dish in 2010 with Abraini's su filindeu nero (a black squid ink version of the pasta). At Il Rifugio, another restaurant supplied by Abraini, su filindeu is the most sought-after menu item. "We have people coming from all over Europe just to taste it," owner Silverio Nanu said to BBC Travel.

For now it will take a trip to Sardinia to try su filindeu. Though not many have ever eaten the dish, those who have tasted it are adamant that it should be preserved.
I genuinely love everything about this. This is true White culture and this is what we need to preserve. I wish nothing but the best to this grandma, I hope that we will still be making this pasta for centuries in the future.
 
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