Pasta e Fagioli Recipe (Red Sauce Version)
Today I would like to share with you my Pasta e Fagioli recipe, cooked as the red sauce version. This is also known as pasta fazool recipe or pasta and beans recipe.
Written recipe:
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5 Minute Lamb Steak & Quick Bean Stew
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Meet 94yr old poet and maccheroni maker Angela from Sicily! | Pasta Grannies
94 year old Angela from San Marco d'Alunzio in Sicily shares her poetry and recipe for maccheroni with a lamb sauce.
A note on the word 'nipote' which in Italian means nephew, niece, and grandchild. In English there isn't a collective noun for nephews and nieces (well there is, but it's newly invented and I don't like it), so I've kept to nephews for brevity in the subtitles.
For the pasta: halved quantities: 500g semola rimacinata, 3 eggs, about 50ml of water
For the lamb sugo: 4 lamb chops, carrot, celery stick, onion, all finely diced, 2 bayleaves, up to 2 tablespoons white wine vinegar (be careful- vinegars vary in taste and can be very strong!), 400ml passata, salt.
The Ragu That Everyone Asks For Seconds
Today we're making one of my family's favorite dishes! This lamb ragu has a ton of flavor from the lamb, red wine, and rosemary and is tossed with rigatoni pasta. Pappardelle would be great as well! For this video, I used ground lamb. The print recipe below uses lamb shoulder. All other ingredients are the same, but keep in mind that ground lamb will have much more fat and I recommend scooping a lot of it out. I hope you enjoy this rigatoni lamb ragu!
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Texas-Style Italian: Smoked Ham Hock Pasta Fagioli (The Perfect Cold Weather Dinner)
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a few glugs of olive oil
1 white onion, diced
5 garlic cloves, chopped
1 head of celery, diced
1 bay leaf
2 sprigs of thyme
1 Parmesan rind
1 smoked ham hock
4 cups of chicken stock (or water)
additional water, as needed
8 ounces of dried white beans
about 6 to 8 ounces of ditalini, tubetti, or a similar small pasta shape
salt and pepper
fresh soft herbs, chopped up, to finish (parsley, chives, basil, chervil, etc.)
Place a dutch oven over medium heat. Add enough oil to coat the bottom of the pot. Add the onion, garlic and celery, then season it with salt and pepper and sauté it for about 5 minutes, or until it is sweated out. Add the bay leaf, thyme, parmesan, ham hock, chicken stock, and additional water to just barely submerge the hock. Bring it to a simmer, then cover it and simmer on low until the ham hock is tender to the touch and starting to easily pull from the bone -- about 1 to 1 1/2 hours.
Add the beans, and simmer, covered, adding more water as needed, until the beans are tender -- about 2 hours or so, but it will REALLY depend on your beans. Once the beans are cooked, taste the broth for salt and season to taste -- it should taste like a well-seasoned broth that you are ready to drink.
Remove the ham hock, discarding any fat, skin and bones. Remove the thyme stems and bay leaf as well. Pull the meat (once it is cooled) and add it back to the pot. Bring back to a simmer, then add the pasta and cook it until it is just al dente, adding more water as needed to make sure it has some broth to it, and is not a stew.
Serve immediately, topped with fresh herbs.
Cook until cooked, then taste again for seasoning.