Cavatelli are one of southern Italy's most widespread hand-shaped pastas—small, elongated shells formed by pressing and dragging a piece of semolina dough across a wooden board with two or three fingertips, creating a concave, ridged shape that is simultaneously a vessel for sauce, a textural pleasure, and a testament to the hand-shaping traditions that define southern Italian pasta culture. Cavatelli are made across Puglia, Basilicata, Molise, and Campania, with each region claiming its own version and name: cavatelli in Molise and Puglia, cavatieddi in Basilicata, cecatelli in some areas. The technique is consistent: a small piece of semolina-water dough (about the size of a chickpea) is placed on a rough wooden board and dragged toward you with two or three fingertips, pressing down and forward simultaneously. The pressing creates the concavity, the dragging creates the curl, and the rough board surface creates the ridges. The result is a pasta about 2-3cm long, hollow, curled slightly, with a rough exterior—a shape perfectly designed to trap sauce in its cavity and ridges. Cavatelli pair beautifully with broccoli rabe (as in the Pugliese classic), with ragù, with fresh tomato and ricotta, or with clam sauce. They are one of the easiest hand-shaped pastas to learn, making them a good entry point for anyone beginning to explore the craft of southern Italian pasta-making.
Semolina-water dough. Drag small pieces across a rough wooden board with 2-3 fingers. Concave, ridged, curled shape. About 2-3cm long. Pairs with robust sauces: ragù, broccoli rabe, tomato and ricotta. Common across Puglia, Basilicata, Molise.
A rough wooden board (not plastic, not marble) is essential—the friction creates the ridges. Work with a small amount of dough at a time, keeping the rest covered. A slight rocking motion with the fingers as you drag creates a better curl. Dust finished cavatelli with semolina and let them dry on a tray for at least 30 minutes before cooking. They freeze beautifully—spread on a tray, freeze, then bag.
Using a smooth surface (the rough board creates essential texture). Pressing too hard (the pasta becomes too thin and loses its concavity). Making them too large (they should be small, 2-3cm). Using egg pasta dough (traditional cavatelli are semolina-water). Not letting them dry slightly before cooking (they can stick together).
Oretta Zanini De Vita, Encyclopedia of Pasta; Touring Club Italiano, Regional Italian Cooking