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minutesLasagna is my love language. I grew up in Westchester County New York, a suburb of Manhattan with a very large Italian American population. When I was growing up, everyone’s Mom made some variation of lasagna regularly, Italian or not! My mother typically made it on Sunday, as it takes a little more effort than a weeknight meal. Mom always made homemade sauce, as do I, but many I knew used jarred sauce. I don’t judge, but I think homemade sauce is really worth the effort and makes a truly memorable lasagna.
Some lasagna recipes call for Bechamel sauce, a sauce made of butter, flour, and milk, which I find wholly unnecessary. I believe that the ricotta mixture, thinned down with a little heavy cream is plenty rich enough. I typically serve lasagna with a big salad, or some roasted veggies, and we all happily overeat.
As for meat, my family prefers beef, chuck to be precise, which is typically fattier than other types of ground beef. It is sometimes sold as “80/20” ground beef, which means 80% lean and 20% fat. You could certainly get away with a 90/10 beef, but I would not recommend going any leaner than that. Sometimes I use ground turkey in my lasagna, but again, I recommend a fattier mixture that contains turkey dark meat, and not turkey breast which is very lean. Some people enjoy pork sausage in their lasagna instead of, or in addition to, ground beef. Make adjustments as you like and make it your own!
16 lasagna noodles (NOT “no boil”. I use the curly ones.)
1 batch Mamma’s Red Sauce, warmed gently on the stove
2 cups grated Parmesan cheese (Pecorino Romano or Grana Padano work well too)
16 oz. container whole milk ricotta cheese
1.5 lb. whole milk mozzarella cheese, shredded, about 6 cups
1/2 cup heavy cream
1 large egg, lightly beaten
1 lb. ground beef or turkey (Don’t use a lean meat like 95% lean ground beef or ground turkey breast. You want at least 90/10 beef or fattier- I prefer 80/20 chuck, or ground turkey that contains dark meat.)
1 medium onion, finely diced
3 cloves garlic, minced
2 ribs celery, finely diced
Kosher salt
freshly cracked black pepper (from a pepper mill)
grapeseed oil, or other neutral flavored oil
olive oil
Sarah is a classically trained chef and Mom whose passion is spreading the gospel of salad. A native New Yorker, she now calls Miami, FL home.
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