Skip to product information
1 of 1
Una Garlanda PIEDMONT

Whole Grain Rice Spaghettini – Gluten-Free

Whole Grain Rice Spaghettini – Gluten-Free

Regular price $15.00
Regular price Sale price $15.00
Sale Ships July 2026
Taxes included. Shipping calculated at checkout.
Quantity

Whole-grain rice spaghettini. Naturally gluten-free.

Thin spaghettini made from Italian whole-grain rice, naturally gluten-free, with the nutty, chewy character of real wholegrain in a pasta format that cooks the way pasta should.

Slim amber-tan strands with visible bran flecks. Cooks to a satisfying bite with a clean, nutty flavor and the slight chew that whole-grain rice naturally carries. Holds its shape under sauce, doesn't disintegrate.

Why this rice pasta is different. Garlanda mills its own Italian whole-grain rice into flour and extrudes it into a true spaghettini cut with bronze-die-style shaping and slow drying. No gums, no stabilizers, no rubbery corn-starch tricks.

About Una Garlanda. A family rice farm in Vercelli, Piedmont, working ancient Italian rice varieties biodynamically. Certified organic, certified from seed to plate, more biodiversity than just biological.

WHY YOU'LL LOVE IT

  • Naturally gluten-free, made from 100% Italian wholegrain rice
  • Real wholegrain with bran and germ intact
  • No gums, stabilizers, or industrial fillers
  • Cooks like pasta should, al dente with a real bite
  • From regenerative Piedmont paddies, biodynamic certified

HOW TO ENJOY IT

  • Light olive oil, garlic, and parsley sauces
  • Simple butter and Parmigiano
  • Light tomato and basil sauces
  • Asian-Italian fusion preparations
  • Brothy soups for gluten-free Italian comfort food

SPECIFICATIONS

  • Producer: Una Garlanda, Vercelli, Piedmont
  • Origin: Vercelli plains, Piedmont, Italy
  • Ingredients: 100% Italian wholegrain rice
  • Allergens: Naturally gluten-free
  • Net weight: 250 g (8.8 oz)
  • Cook time: 6 to 8 minutes
  • Storage: Cool, dry place

🌾 Whole-grain rice pasta | 🌱 Regenerative agriculture | 🇮🇹 Made in Piedmont

Educational information only. Not intended as medical advice.

Terra Sacra Field Notes — Health Properties

  • Naturally gluten-free: safe for celiac and gluten-sensitive diets
  • Whole grain fiber: bran and germ intact for digestive health and satiety
  • Complex carbohydrates: slower energy release than refined white rice
  • Mineral profile: magnesium, manganese, and selenium from the bran layer
  • Regenerative origin: biodynamic Piedmont paddies prioritize soil health and water stewardship
View full details

Frequently Asked Questions

What actually makes bronze-drawn pasta different?
Most pasta at the grocery store is made with Teflon dies — smooth, fast, cheap. The pasta it produces is perfectly uniform and sauce just slides right off it. Bronze dies create a rough, porous surface that sauce actually grabs onto — you can see it happen the moment you toss the pasta in the pan. That’s the whole explanation. We use bronze. It costs more, takes longer, produces better pasta. Not a complicated choice.
What is furosine, and what does it tell you about how pasta was made?
When pasta is dried at high temperatures — industrial operations run at 110°C or above to move fast — a compound called furosine accumulates as a direct marker of protein damage. Lysine, an essential amino acid, gets partially destroyed in the process. The numbers are stark: slow drying at 50–70°C over 36 or more hours produces furosine levels around 70–80 mg per 100g of protein. Industrial drying can push that past 500–600 mg per 100g — six to eight times higher. Animal studies have documented liver and kidney effects even at low concentrations. There is no legal limit for furosine in dry pasta under Italian or EU law — it doesn’t have to appear on any label. A low-temperature drying process is expensive and slow. It’s the choice a producer makes before anyone is watching.
What makes ancient grain pasta different — and what doesn’t?
Here’s the honest version, because the oversimplified one does nobody any favors. The genuine nutritional differentiator in pasta is whole grain versus refined — not ancient grain versus modern wheat. Whole grain pasta, whatever the variety, preserves the bran and germ where fiber, minerals, and slow-digesting starch actually live. Where ancient grains earn their place: flavor — more complex, nuttier, earthier than modern industrial durum, and that difference is real. And the science supports it: pasta dried at low temperatures preserves more slowly digestible starch than pasta dried at high heat, especially for wholemeal varieties. One more thing worth knowing: conventional wheat is routinely sprayed with glyphosate as a pre-harvest desiccant — directly on the crop in the final weeks before harvest, leaving residues on the grain itself. Organic certification prohibits this. All our pasta is certified organic.
How do I actually cook this pasta right?
Lots of vigorously boiling, heavily salted water — at least 4 cups (1 liter) per 100g. Don’t trust the package time: ancient grain pasta often cooks faster than expected. Pull it 2 minutes early and finish it straight in the pan with your sauce and a big splash of pasta water. That cloudy, starchy pasta water is the ingredient every Italian uses and most recipes skip — it’s what makes sauce cling to the pasta instead of pooling at the bottom of the bowl. The porous bronze surface is doing the work. Let it.
What makes Italian heritage rice worth paying more for?
The rice at your grocery store is almost certainly a modern variety bred for uniform appearance, fast yield, and easy harvesting — not for flavor. Italian heritage rice (varietà da conservazione) are ancient cultivars that predate industrial agriculture. Many were literally abandoned because they were too awkward to harvest with modern machinery. That inconvenience is part of what makes them special: slower, lower-yield, more complex. Grown in Italy’s Vercelli rice triangle under certified organic conditions — glyphosate-free farming genuinely matters in rice paddies, which are sensitive closed water systems. The flavor and cooking behavior are a completely different world from supermarket rice.