ETYM From Old Eng. dagh. Related to Dough.
1. A boiled or steamed pudding often containing dried fruit.
2. The partly decayed organic matter on the forest floor.
3. Fine coal; slack.
4. A stiff flour pudding steamed or boiled usually containing e.g. currents and citron.
A ribbonlike strip of pasta.
Shaped and dried dough made from flour and water and sometimes egg; SYN. alimentary paste.
Food made from a dough of durum-wheat flour or semolina, water, and, sometimes egg, and cooked in boiling water. It is usually served with a sauce. Pasta is available either fresh or dried, and comes in a wide variety of shapes. It may be creamy yellow or colored green with spinach or red with tomato. Pasta has been used in Italian cooking since the Middle Ages, but is now popular in many other countries.
Italian pasta shapes include narrow strands (spaghetti, vermicelli), flat sheets or ribbons (lasagne, tagliatelle, fettucine), shell-shaped (conchiglie, lumache), butterfly-shaped (farfalle), tubular (cannelloni, macaroni, penne), and twisted (fusilli). Some varieties are sold ready stuffed with a meat, cheese, herb, or vegetable filling (ravioli, agnolotti, tortellini). Some types of Far Eastern pasta are made from buckwheat.