How To make Ragu Alla Bolognese
1/2 oz Dried porcini mushrooms
1/2 lb Lean veal shoulder
1/2 lb Lean beef round or shin
2 1/2 oz Pancetta or blanched bacon
4 oz Large yellow onion
1 lg Carrot
1 lg Celery stalk
5 tb Butter
3 tb Olive oil
1 tb Salt
1/4 ts Freshly ground black pepper
1/2 c Dry red wine
2 1/2 c Drained canned plum tomatoes
1/2 c Heavy cream
Freshly grated parmigiano Freshly ground pepper This takes a fair amount of time to make, but it freezes very well, so make a large batch. This is enough for 2 1/2-to-3 pounds of pasta. PUT THE PORCINI in a small bowl. Pour boiling water over them and let them sit for 30 minutes. Drain them, rinse carefully, chop coarsely and rinse carefully
again. With a food processor or meat grinder, finely chop first the veal and beef, then the pancetta, onion, carrot and celery. Saute the pancetta and minced vegetables in the butter and oil in a heavy-bottomed casserole for 2 minutes over medium heat. Turn heat to very low, cover and continue cooking 30 minutes, stirring occasionally. Uncover the pot and raise heat to medium high. Add the beef, veal, mushrooms, salt and pepper. Cook, stirring constantly, until the meats just begin to lose their raw red color. Then pour on the wine and cook until it is entirely evaporated. Set a food mill with the medium blade over the pot and mill in the tomatoes. Stir everything together and simmer, covered for 40 minutes. If possible, complete preparation to this point several hours in advance, or even the night before you plan to use the sauce. Take it off the stove and let it cool if not serving immediately. Transfer to container. Cover and refrigerate. The sauce may also be made to this point and frozen. Shortly before serving time, bring the sauce slowly to a simmer. Simmer 5 minutes. Stir in the heavy cream and serve immediately over freshly cooked pasta, passing parmigiano and a pepper mill. To serve ragu in smaller quantities, heat about 1/2 cup of sauce per person and stir in 1 1/2 to 2 tablespoons cream per serving.
How To make Ragu Alla Bolognese's Videos
Gennaro Contaldo's Classic Italian Ragu Bolognese | Citalia
One of Italy’s most versatile sauces is the ragu Bolognese. Originating in the Emilia-Romagna region, this rich and delicious sauce can be used for a variety of dishes.
There are many versions of this recipe but Gennaro Contaldo’s authentic recipe shows you how to make a simple and flavoursome sauce, using far fewer ingredients than you may have been expecting. You will see that instead of tins of tomatoes, for example, Gennaro uses a small amount of concentrated tomato puree, diluted in stock, making the sauce lovely and rich but not overly tomato-y. In fact, it is the good quality mince used in the recipe which is the star of the show.
Gennaro’s recipe is simple to make and as it is slow-cooked over a gentle heat for at least two hours, it is a relatively effortless recipe to pull together, allowing you to get on with other things as the house fills with the delicious smell of Italian cooking.
Gennaro’s top tip is to make more than you need and then freeze the excess in batches, ready to be used another time in a tagliatelle Bolognese or hearty lasagne.
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Ingredients
4 x servings
45ml extra virgin olive oil
25g butter
1 x onion, finely chopped
1 x celery stalk, finely chopped
1 x carrot, finely chopped
150g pancetta, cubed
200g minced beef
200g minced pork
200ml red wine
2 x tablespoons double-concentrated tomato puree'
200ml stock
Method
Heat the extra virgin olive oil and butter in a pan, add the onion, celery, carrot and pancetta and sweat on a gentle heat for about 10 minutes until the onion has softened. Add the meat and brown all over. Increase the heat, add the wine and allow to evaporate. Dilute the tomato puree in a little of the stock and stir into the meat.
Reduce the heat to low, cover with a lid and cook on a gentle heat for 2 hours, checking and adding a little extra stock from time to time to avoid the sauce from drying out.
Gordon Ramsay Bolognese Sauce Recipe Authentic Italian
Gordon Ramsay's Bolognese Sauce Recipe captures the essence of authentic Italian cuisine, blending traditional flavors with his unique touch. This Recipe features a rich and hearty sauce made with ground beef slowly simmered with onions, carrots, and garlic. The aromatic dried oregano adds depth, while the canned tomatoes and tomato puree form the base of the sauce, creating a perfect balance of sweetness and acidity.
Actual Recipe:
Directions:
00:07 Transform average mince into a tasty bolognese by grating onion and carrot for quick cooking.
00:20 Create a purée of vegetables in a hot pan with olive oil for a richer sauce, seasoned with garlic and oregano.
01:07 Quickly sweat mince meat in the center of the pan to prevent greying, making space to cook off the tomato purée.
01:30 Add red wine to the mixture, reducing it to syrup before incorporating chopped tomatoes and seasoning with Worcester sauce.
02:14 Finish the bolognese with a splash of milk for a smooth, rich flavor.
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87 year old Betta makes tagliatelle al ragù! | Pasta Grannies
Lovely Betta shares her recipe for tagliatelle with a meat sauce. Meat - carne in Italian - means a mixture of beef and pork, rather than chicken or rabbit. This is her mother's recipe and it was served on special occasions.
Her recipe ingredients are: 300g 00 flour and 3 eggs for the pasta. For the ragù: half an onion, carrot and celery. 200g unsmoked pancetta (pork belly) and 400g minced beef, one glass red wine, 400ml tomato passata, salt. Parmigiano cheese is optional for serving.
Ragù alla Bolognese: The original recipe from Pellegrino Artusi
This is the first ever recorded version of the Ragù alla Bolognese, from an earlier unofficial version by Alberto Alvisi, then published by Pellegrino Artusi in 1891 in his book Scienza in Cucina e l'arte del mangiar bene. This is the predecessor to the Ragù Bolognese we all know today, whose official recipe was first registerd at the Bologna's Chamber of Commerce in 1982, then revised on April 20th, 2023.
Ragù alla bolognese: 2 ricette di Aurora Mazzucchelli, Gianni D'Amato e Dario Picchiotti
Tre chef emiliani per una tra le ricette italiane più famose e riprodotte, il ragù alla bolognese. Aurora Mazzucchelli, Gianni D'Amato e Dario Picchiotti presentano due ricette: una classica, che segue rigorosamente i criteri della tradizione, e una provocazione che gioca con tanti equivoci della cucina globale.
Guarda anche il video delle reazioni alle ricette della bolognese più viste al mondo:
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Klassisches Ragù alla Bolognese – Stephan Schnieder kocht
Dieses Mal haben wir uns einen absoluten Klassiker vorgenommen. Traditionalisten bestehen auf die absolute Einhaltung des Rezepts – die Erfahrung durften wir selbst schon in der Kommentarsektion eines unserer älteren Videos machen ????. Für heute haben wir uns also das Originalrezept aus Bologna vorgenommen, und was sollen wir sagen: es schmeckt natürlich fantastisch. Viel Spaß und guten Appetit!
Z U T A T E N :
- 500g Hackfleisch vom Rind
- 150g Pancetta oder Bauchspeck luftgetrocknet
- 80g Staudensellerie
- 80g Möhren
1 große Zwiebel
250ml Weißwein oder Rotwein
400ml Milch
500g Passata
Salz
Pfeffer
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