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This is the biggest pasta factory in the world.
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Barilla produces 1400 tons of pasta each day at its flagship plant in Parma, Italy.
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Each line produces about 10,000 pounds of pasta per hour, which goes to fill roughly 230 blue Barilla boxes.
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The recipe for dry pasta is simple.
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It only takes durum wheat, semolina flour and water to make dough.
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Barilla then takes the dough and turns it into 103 different shapes, including long strands of spaghetti and bow ties of farfalle.
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Machines punch out each shape before the pasta goes through the drying process.
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This process allows the pasta to preserve itself so that nothing else is needed to keep it fresh.
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And this is what gives the box yellow carbs a longer shelf life than most other products.
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We press the pasta throughout a die, which is a metal plate with holes shaped in the way to obtain the format of pasta that we want to pack.
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We dry the pasta for up to 12 hours in this plant, depending on the recipe, depending on the formats.
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In order to obtain a shelf-stable, dry and ready to be eaten pasta.
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The Barilla factory operates 24 hours, seven days a week.
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We produce more than 320,000 tons of pasta per year, which means at the end of the year, more than 4.2 billions of pasta dishes.
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So we're very proud to say that in 18 months we can feed the entire population of the world.
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Barilla started as a small bake shop in the center of Parma more than 140 years ago.
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Today, the company is privately owned by fourth-generation Barilla Brothers Guido, Luca, and Palo.
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While ownership has stayed the same for decades, much has changed since 1877, especially in the way pasta is sold today.
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The turning point came when Pietro Barilla traveled to the U.S. after the Second World War and he saw the packaging of food and so he came back.
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He was very much in touch with artists and designers and together with the artist they designed the blue box, which is now famous all over the world.
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Barilla consumers around the world buy more spaghetti than any other blue box variety.
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And that's what makes it the most produced shape in the factory.
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I think that spaghetti, in terms of long cut pasta, is very well known all around the world.
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Because in China you have noodles, in Italy spaghetti, of course, but is not that far from the culture and the habits of many, many population in the world.
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Barilla is available in more than 100 countries, including Brazil, Singapore and Japan.
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Italy was traditionally the biggest pasta market for Barilla until the US recently took over the top spot.
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Today, the company controls 32.8% of the entire dry pasta market in the United States.
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The industry is growing beyond the US too, as consumer eating habits favor meatless meals and plant-based diets.
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We've seen definitely a shift towards more plant-based diets because it's now universally recognized that they are the best one for the health of people and of the planet.
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And so we are seeing globally an increase in pasta sales.
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The trend doesn't look to be dying anytime soon, which could mean more demand for blue boxes around the world.