If you think all pasta brands are identical, I promise you, your sauce disagrees. Two packets can sit side by side on the same shelf. Same shape. Similar price range. Nearly identical ingredients. Yet one makes the sauce cling happily, while the other sends it swimming around the plate.
It’s not about the logo on the packet, but about how that pasta was made long before it reached your kitchen.
To help you make good decisions, I am ranking the most well-known Italian pasta brands, from industrial giants to artisan producers, not to attack anyone, but to help you understand what truly separates average pasta from exceptional pasta.
I have cooked pasta my entire life, visited factories and watched bronze dies shape semolina into rough, sauce-loving strands. I have seen industrial drying tunnels that finish pasta in a few hours to maximise speed and volume and the difference shows up immediately on the plate.
This review is not about expensive versus cheap but instead, about understanding what you are paying for.
Before we rank the most famous Italian pasta brands in the world, let’s first look at how to judge them properly. There are 3 key things I always check before buying dry pasta, and once you understand them, the supermarket pasta aisle becomes much easier to navigate.
Watch: Ranking Italian Pasta Brands (From Worst to Best)
1. Bronze or Teflon? The Surface Tells the Truth
Pick up a packet of dry pasta and look closely at it. Does it look shiny? Almost glossy? Very bright yellow? That usually means it was extruded through teflon dies. Teflon creates a smooth surface. Smooth is efficient, fast, and cheaper to produce. But smooth pasta has a problem -sauce struggles to cling to it.
Now look at bronze-cut pasta. It should be slightly pale, almost dusty and a little rough to touch. That rough surface is not a defect, it’s intentional. Bronze dies create tiny ridges that allow sauce to grip properly. When you finish your pasta in the pan, that texture helps the sauce bind and turn glossy and cohesive instead of separating.

2. Protein: The Backbone of Al Dente
Turn the packet around because this is where the real clues are hiding and look at the protein content. If it says 11% or 12%, the pasta will cook, but it won’t have much resilience. It softens quickly and can turn mushy if pushed even slightly past the cooking time.
Now look for 13% or even 14% protein. This higher protein content supports stronger gluten development, which gives the pasta the firmness needed for a proper al dente bite. Good pasta should feel alive. It should stay stable in the pan as you finish it with the sauce, not collapse under pressure.

3. Drying Time: The Detail Most People Ignore
Drying time is something most shoppers never think about but it actually changes everything.
Industrial pasta is often dried very quickly at high temperatures, sometimes even in just a few hours. It’s efficient and speeds up production plus it reduces cost, but high heat stresses the dough. It can weaken the internal structure and affect how the pasta behaves when cooked.
Artisan pasta is different. It is dried slowly at lower temperatures, sometimes for 20, 30, even 40 hours. This gentle process protects the integrity of the wheat and preserves the natural flavour of the semolina. The result is pasta that holds its shape better, absorbs sauce more effectively, and delivers a deeper, more satisfying texture on the plate.
You may not see drying time printed boldly on the front of the packet, but when you taste properly made pasta, you understand immediately why patience matters.

Ranking Italian Pasta Brands (From Worst to Best)
Here’s how they performed.
D Tier – Widely Available, Limited Structure
Barilla
The blue box most of us recognise instantly. It’s consistent and widely available, but the smooth teflon-extruded surface means sauce tends to slide rather than cling. Perfectly fine for a quick midweek meal, but it lacks the structure needed for dishes where pasta and sauce must truly become one.

Divella
Affordable and easy to find. It can work for simple preparations or cold pasta salads, but in sauce-driven dishes like carbonara it struggles to hold its shape. Budget-friendly, yes. Technically impressive, no.

C Tier – Reliable, But Not Premium
Pasta Garofalo
Consistent and predictable, which is why many restaurants rely on it. The protein level is solid and it performs reliably in busy kitchens, however, compared to higher-tier brands, the surface feels slightly too smooth and the overall texture lacks personality.

B Tier – Strong Supermarket Performers
De Cecco
This brand from my region of Abruzzo was once considered the king of the supermarket shelf. It’s still a good pasta, and many home cooks trust it. But over time, the quality feels more standard and less distinctive. It performs well, but for me, without the character it once had.

Voiello
A favourite in Naples, made with 100% Italian wheat. It delivers a firm, satisfying bite and behaves well in the pan. The only downside is availability outside Italy, but when you can find it, it’s a solid choice.

A Tier – High Performance Without Full Artisan Price
Rummo
Famous for its “Lenta Lavorazione” method, meaning slow working. This pasta is known for keeping its bite, even if you slightly overcook it. It’s structured, dependable, and forgiving in the pan.

Pastificio Liguori (PGI Gragnano)
Certified PGI from Gragnano, which means strict production standards and bronze-die extrusion. There is history in every packet, and it delivers reliable texture and solid sauce absorption.

Delverde
Made with pure spring water from the Verde River in Abruzzo. There’s a noticeable cleanliness to the flavour. It performs well and offers good balance between price and quality.

La Molisana
High protein, rough surface, and a slightly nutty flavour. One of the strongest supermarket performers available. It consistently delivers structure and grip without pushing into artisan price territory.

Pastificio Di Martino
You may have seen Dolce and Gabbana branding on the packaging, but inside is genuine Gragnano Gold quality. Rough, sandpaper-like texture and excellent bite make it far more than just a pretty bag.

Armando
Often found at Aldi at a very accessible price point. Surprisingly strong performance, with good structure and reliable al dente results it competes really well with brands that cost significantly more.

S Tier – Artisan Legend
Benedetto Cavalieri
This pasta has a longer cooking time but it releases generous starch, helping sauces turn naturally creamy without added tricks. Deep texture and serious character.

Mancini
They grow their own wheat right next to the factory. Full control from field to packet. The result is precision, balance, and texture that many consider the Rolls Royce of pasta.

Pastificio Cocco
Abruzzo pride. Traditional machines, old methods, and extraordinary texture. Harder to find, but when you do, it’s worth stocking up.

Rustichella D’Abruzzo
Zero compromise and traditional craftsmanship. When you visit their production facility, it becomes clear how seriously they treat their process. The texture and flavour reflect that dedication.
Thanks to organic grain and high-altitude production conditions, this pasta is trusted by many professional chefs because of its clean structure and consistently excellent results.

Felicetti
Made from organic grain and high-altitude production conditions. Trusted by many professional chefs this pasta is clean, structured, and consistently excellent.

Final Thoughts on Pasta Brands
So what does this mean when you’re standing in the supermarket aisle?
It doesn’t mean you must always buy the most expensive pasta or that cheaper brands are “wrong.” It simply means you should consider what you’re choosing.
Aim for A Tier or strong B Tier brands when you can. The difference in texture, bite, and sauce performance is clear, even if the price difference is small.
Pasta is simple food, but when food is simple, quality matters even more. Choose wisely, your sauce will thank you!
And if I missed one of your favourite pasta brands, tell me in the comments. I’m curious to hear what you think about this ranking.

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Now That You Know Which Pasta Brands to Buy, Read This Next
- 10 BIGGEST PASTA COOKING MISTAKES AND HOW TO AVOID THEM – Even the best pasta brands can disappoint if you cook them incorrectly. Discover the 10 biggest pasta cooking mistakes and learn how to fix them for perfect texture and sauce every time.
- THE MOST POPULAR TYPES OF PASTA SHAPES AROUND THE WORLD – Choosing quality pasta is only step one. You also need to learn which pasta shapes are most popular worldwide and how to pair each one with the right sauce for the perfect combination.

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