Pin It!

Friday, April 24, 2015

How I Make Lasagna

When Kimmie asked for the recipe to my Lasagna from two posts ago, I couldn't say no. I have recreated the afternoon of fun here in words. If anything is unclear or fuzzy, I'm available to answer questions or make meals and sell to those who need them :)

I make the meat sauce from tinned tomato sauce and paste. I use two cans of each-the sauce comes in 20 ounce size and the paste in six ounce cans. First I brown off a pound of quality ground beef and another pound of seasoned bulk pork sausage over medium heat with a big white onion and a yellow bell pepper both diced. I season the meat with black pepper, salt and garlic (fresh or powder) and oregano. Once that's cooked I add the cans of tomato and about six ounces of water and let it all simmer while I prepare the rest.

Cook a full box of Barilla or deCecco lasagna noodles for about eight minutes. Drain and douse with olive oil to keep them separated.

Grate one pound of whole milk mozzarella into a 30 ounce (liter) of whole milk ricotta cheese. Add two eggs and season with salt, white pepper and some more garlic powder. (I never measure seasonings-just do it by eye and flavor, sorry cannot be more exacting but you already know how to make stuff taste good) Mix thoroughly and set aside.

Now comes the fun (read: messy) part of the operation. Wash hands (again) and spray the baking pans ( a 9x13 inch cake pan and a loaf pan this time) with non-stick spray-bottom and sides. Set the pot of sauce, the bowl of cheese mixture and the noodles out in a row and begin by covering the bottom of the pans with sauce. Then layer the three ingredients  in  both pans until the noodles are all gone. I put noodles first then cheese blobs then sauce. Repeat using less than a cup of sauce per layer--too much sauce makes it all sloppy and unable to set up like it should.

I add in a layer of fresh mushrooms that I sauté in real butter separately from everything else at this point. Then put a thick layer of sliced and shredded mozzarella, another 8 ounces should do it. Cover with a Tent of foil (keep the foil Off the cheese) and bake for an hour at 350 F (175 C). Let stand for at least fifteen minutes and then cut into serving sized squares.

Cooking it one night before you actually need it, then into fridge for overnight then into the oven again the next day is how I did it this time. It tastes better the second day after the flavors have had a chance to meld and influence one another. In addition then the day of the event, whatever it is, is not fraught with worry and excess work. You can tell it is hot all the way thru by sticking a flat blade into the middle and feeling it. Or, like my Sweetie, use a meat thermometer !~! I'd shoot for 165 F (75 C) in the center

I like to cut individual pieces and put them into plastic containers that I get at the dollar store (5 for a buck). Then freeze them for later use. The neighborhood smells it cooking and lines up outside the door some days it seems. The box of noodles filled those two pans you see in the picture. The smaller one went home with Burp and gave them two nights dinner with no hassle for mama. Then we had a guy over last night who brought a pumpkin pie for dessert and he loved it too. 

If I were changing anything, I'd lower the tomato paste by one half; I'd use only one six ounce can instead of two. You may need to thin a bit too, do it cautiously tho, the sauce should be thick so it sets as it bakes. Not supposed to be runny like some people eat marinara sauce over pasta.

Reheating is simple. I use the microwave at half power for 3-4 mins. The big oven would take half hour for a single serving, more for larger pieces.

OK, now that you have the basic recipe more or less figured out there are wonderful variations on this theme. Most common is "no meat" and pump up the veggie count with zookini, squash, spinach leaves, eggplant, any tasty greens raw or lightly steamed, hard-boiled eggs... Many people don't want all that ricotta/mozzarella layered and so use a Bechamel (white) sauce instead. Fresh peas and small broc flowers are also delicious. Sauteed mushrooms, on top just before the last cheese layer, add a wickedly decadent taste to the bites in which they are contained.

Have fun, enjoy, share the bounty and the recipe. Hold a lasagna class one Saturday afternoon and bring in a couple of friends to make a Huge Batch and then everyone scores a few meals and an afternoon of fellowship and fun.


5 comments:

  1. I do a veggie lasagna with a bechamel sauce. It's almost as good as the "regular" lasagna.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Occasionally we all have days inspiration in the kitchen! I'm sure your neighbors and friends enjoyed the meal! And the sunflowers will be gorgeous! Have a nice day full of creativity and good things! Kisses from Catalonia, Lynda!

    ReplyDelete
  3. Occasionally we all have days inspiration in the kitchen! I'm sure your neighbors and friends enjoyed the meal! And the sunflowers will be gorgeous! Have a nice day full of creativity and good things! Kisses from Catalonia, Lynda!

    ReplyDelete