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KitchenAid SNFGA Pasta Maker Attachment for Stand Mixers

KitchenAid SNFGA Pasta Maker Attachment for Stand Mixers
Brand: KitchenAid

List Price: $84.99
Buy New: $49.99
You Save: $35.00 (41%)



New (8) from $49.99

Rating: 2.5 out of 5 stars 31 reviews
Sales Rank: 3368

Autographed: No
Memorabilia: No
Shipping Weight (lbs): 2.7
Dimensions (in): 4 x 7 x 7
Warranty: 1

MPN: SNFGA
Model: SNFGA
UPC: 050946000237
EAN: 0050946000237
ASIN: B00004SGFN

Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Features:
  • Makes five different kinds of pasta
  • Use with any KitchenAid household stand mixer
  • Includes storage case, cleaning tool, and food grinder attachment
  • Dishwasher-safe except for wooden food pusher tool
  • One-year full warranty

Accessories:

  • KitchenAid FGA Food Grinder Attachment for Stand Mixers
  • VillaWare V150-25 Imperia Noodle Machine Ravioli Attachment
  • KitchenAid FVSP Fruit and Vegetable Strainer Parts for Food Grinder
  • KitchenAid SNPA Pasta Maker Plates for Food Grinder Attachment for Stand Mixers
  • KitchenAid SSA Sausage Stuffer Kit Attachment for Food Grinder

Similar Items:

  • KitchenAid KPRA Pasta Roller Attachment for Stand Mixers
  • Norpro Pasta Drying Rack
  • KitchenAid SSA Sausage Stuffer Kit Attachment for Food Grinder
  • KitchenAid KICA0WH Ice Cream Maker Attachment
  • KitchenAid KSM150PSER Artisan Series 5-Quart Mixer, Empire Red

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
Have a homemade Italian meal made from scratch using this pasta maker attachment with your KitchenAid stand mixer. Coupled with the food grinder, separate plates produce varying thickness of pasta, like noodles, macaroni or lasagna. Also included are bowl clips, a cleaning tool and a storage case for the interchangeable plates, clips and cleaning tool. It???s simple to use. And your diners will especially enjoy the taste of fresh pasta made from scratch. Now that???s amore!

Amazon.com Review
Spaghetti, macaroni, egg noodles, lasagna noodles--you won't be at a loss for something to make for dinner with this pasta maker attachment set that fits all models of KitchenAid stand mixers. It consists of a grinding auger, grinder body, and small circular plastic plates with varying holes that shape the dough into pasta shapes. Also included are a plastic wrench tool, a wooden tool to push the dough, a small cleaning tool, metal clips, and a storage case for the pasta plates. Complete directions and some basic pasta dough recipes are included. --Marcie Bovetz


Customer Reviews:   Read 26 more reviews...

1 out of 5 stars I wish I had read the reviews here first and saved my $$$   May 26, 2005
Axella Johannesson (Victoria, Australia)
101 out of 103 found this review helpful

I didn't bother coming here first because Amazon won't ship this attachment to Australia.

Anyway, I finally got the thing the other day, after a lot of trials and tribulations, from a local store that was able to get it for me. And after all the effort and waiting to get it, what a huge letdown. I honestly expected more from KitchenAid.

I have not used the grinder to grind - I didn't need a food grinder. I only purchased it to make pasta, and the plates are made to be used with the food grinder only.

I have worked as a professional cook, have successfully made hundreds or maybe even thousands of kilos of from-scratch fresh pasta in my life, and have never come across such a reputable manufacturer offering such a poorly designed product as this. Shame on you, KitchenAid.

For years, I've used my little Italian hand-cranked pasta maker, and thought I'd try this one because it would allow me to make tubular macaroni. I also thought the extrusion process would be easier than cranking. Not true.

As others have said, getting the consistency just-so for extrusion is tricky. A couple of batches ended up in the rubbish.

The object is to continue to drop walnut-sized pieces of dough into the tube, while also catching the pasta as it comes out of the machine. Because it tends to get warm and stick together in one huge blob, people on the KitchenAid boards have suggested sprinkling the emerging pasta with flour. And for this, you need three hands. Those of us lucky enough to have been born with three arms may find it a breeze, but the rest of us will struggle. And this is not even to mention the additional mess (and wastage) of the sprinkled flour! By the time I was finished (or rather, surrendered), the place looked like an explosion in a flour mill!).

The first disk I started with was the noodle disk, and then went to the lasagne disk.

I can't see how the lasagne disk can be used for ravioli, as it has a "join" in tbe middle of the dough (which can be seen as a transparent streak. This is because the dough is actully extruded from this disk in two pieces which join when they are dropping from the disk). I can't see that pasta holding up to being filled and boiled.

The instruction booklet (it was the European version) was a letdown - only one recipe - "Basic Egg Noodle dough". The recipe in English was in the "home style" volume measurement of cups, whereas the European measurements were in weight (used by professional cooks, because it's more precise). I used the European ones, except that was difficult to translate the names of the ingredients (KA, please give us weight recipes along with the volume measurement ones, in English). I couldn't believe that the KA website doesn't have any recipes! Do they really want to sell these things?

The instructions could have been clearer. I expected to drop a walnut-sized piece of dough into the machine, and have at least something come out. But the first piece is for the 'screw'. It takes until the second piece and beyond, before you start seeing pasta. They could've mentioned that, as I thought I was doing something wrong.

I do not recommend spending money on this pasta maker (the food grinder might be good. I haven't tried it). The only thing this purportedly does that my hand-cranked one doesn't is tubular macaroni, and after seeing how it handled simple fettucine, I have my doubts about it (also, the instructions said that macaroni could not be dried and kept, but had to be used within 4 hours of making, which may not always be practical). I've decided that if I need macaroni, I'll buy it! The rest will be more than adequately handled by my dependable Atlas machine (for which I now intend to get the add-on motor).

Now, I think I'll go to ebay and list this attachment, since I have no need for the grinder part, and the pasta function is pretty dismal.



1 out of 5 stars Glob-esque noodles, time consuming...   November 29, 2000
K Richter (Pittsburgh, PA)
55 out of 55 found this review helpful

As a pasta enthusiast (but amateur cook...), I've used everything from a hand-crank pasta roller (only works with 2 people unless you buy the motor!) to this Kitchen Aid attachment. From this pasta attachment, the noodles immediately chunk together, and require extremely delicate effort to get apart. Don't even try ot use a non-egg noodle recipe or semolina flour recipe - the dough, while tastier - takes too long to stiffen up without the eggs, and clumps into globs, not noodles! I thought I'd save time and money by buying this pasta extruder - but it's frustrating and takes forver to get the delicate noodles apart. (We're not even going to mention time spent cleaning the attachment...)

The better solution? Well, apart from re-designing the attachment (Why are the extrusion holes in a CIRCULAR FORMATION?!?!?!), this is what I'm going to try: Kitchen Aid also makes a pasta roller attachment, much like the old-fashioned hand crank + motor combination. It seems like a much better idea. Buy it - try it - I know I'm going to. Hope this attachment works better then the first!

(By the way - I really do love my Kitchen Aid - even Einstein came up with bad ideas...)


1 out of 5 stars not recommended   January 8, 2005
Alexanderplatz (Kentucky)
45 out of 48 found this review helpful

I agree with the reviewer below who says that it is impossible to make the dough dry enough to not get all gummed up. It is easier to make pasta with an inexpensive hand-operated roller than it is with this attachment. I ended up buying the KitchenAid pasta roller attachment, which does a much better job.


1 out of 5 stars Not worth the frustration   February 22, 2001
Tracy J Ross (Belmont, CA United States)
29 out of 31 found this review helpful

I purchased this attachment in hopes of making pasta shapes which weren't possible with my hand crank pasta maker, or simply to save time, but after many failed attempts and much cursing, I returned it. As several other reviewers have commented, the pasta clumps together as it is extruded, no matter how dry the dough. The motor seems to heat up the dough, so that it becomes impossibly sticky, and the noodles don't come straight out as one might hope. Definitely a bad investment.


1 out of 5 stars Pasta my foot!   October 31, 2000
Rod Jones (Dallas Texas)
25 out of 26 found this review helpful

This item sounds like it will work but BUYER BEWARE!As the noodles come out they run back together.I am a professional in the business and have tried everything, including letting the noodles fall into a bowl of flour to keep them separated but nothing seems to work. Definitely a BAD idea by Kitchen Aid.


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