Pasta Sauce

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CommanderJameson

Original Poster:

22,096 posts

239 months

Wednesday 19th December 2007
quotequote all
From here:

ehyouwhat said:
I certainly bloody do use Ragu sauce: 1 jar of, added to by half a tin of chopped toms, two chopped peppers, a load of chopped mushrooms, and sometimes a handful of frozen peas thrown in for good measure. How should I be making it?
Well, this is my generic pasta sauce (it's a nod to bolognese but it's also other things too. Mrs J doesn't like mushrooms, hence their absence)
  1. Finely chop a small onion and soften along with a handful of pancetta cubetti
  2. add mince and brown well
  3. add garlic and diced peppers and cook a bit
  4. add 2 tsp pesto, 2 tsp tomato puree, 1 tsp paprika, and a good grind of black pepper, cook a bit
  5. add chopped tomatoes (fresh or tinned, fresh is better) and half a can (to get all that tomatoey goodness rinsed out) of water
  6. add a good sprinkle of dried oregano
  7. gently simmer for ages - longer is better
  8. check for salt required (depends on taste, but usually a pinch of Maldon sea salt suffices)
  9. add a nice big handful of chopped fresh basil and a glug of extra virgin olive oil, stir in and serve with pasta of your choice
Variations:
  • take the edge off the tomatoes with a teaspoonful of honey
  • add a bit more bite with half a teaspoon of dijon mustard
  • flat-leaf parsley instead of basil, added before the tomatoes go in
  • A single mild green chilli, seeded and finely chopped, adds character. Add when you put the garlic in.

ehyouwhat

4,606 posts

231 months

Wednesday 19th December 2007
quotequote all
Sounds nice, but I'm not sure I could deal with the hassle. Having said that, my cooking has come on hugely in the past year or so (before which I relied purely on takeaways) so I'll maybe give a 'proper' sauce a go at some point.

Stu R

21,410 posts

228 months

Wednesday 19th December 2007
quotequote all
ehyouwhat said:
Sounds nice, but I'm not sure I could deal with the hassle. Having said that, my cooking has come on hugely in the past year or so (before which I relied purely on takeaways) so I'll maybe give a 'proper' sauce a go at some point.
It's no hassle really, obviously a bit more involved than cracking open ragu, but still a very quick dish to prepare.

vernan

137 posts

222 months

Wednesday 19th December 2007
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The thing about all these sauces etc is that they taste better if frozen - reduces it a bit, flavours intermingle, takes harsh edges off etc. Same with casseroles, pie fillings whatever. So the trick is to make all these things in double or triple quantities, then freeze them.

anonymous-user

67 months

Wednesday 19th December 2007
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Stu R said:
ehyouwhat said:
Sounds nice, but I'm not sure I could deal with the hassle. Having said that, my cooking has come on hugely in the past year or so (before which I relied purely on takeaways) so I'll maybe give a 'proper' sauce a go at some point.
It's no hassle really, obviously a bit more involved than cracking open ragu, but still a very quick dish to prepare.
yesAnd the taste will be miles ahead. In fact I'm going to try CJ's recipie for dinner tonightlick

Plotloss

67,280 posts

283 months

Wednesday 19th December 2007
quotequote all
Always cook a pasta sauce the day before its needed and reheat.

Tastes much better.

Stu R

21,410 posts

228 months

Wednesday 19th December 2007
quotequote all
Plotloss said:
Always cook a pasta sauce the day before its needed and reheat.

Tastes much better.
yes Don't freeze it though, fridge smile

nightfever

914 posts

232 months

Wednesday 19th December 2007
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Oddly I've never tried it with pancetta. I always start with the traditional onions, celery, carrots though.

I love making pasta sauce - it's so adjustable, tasty and cheap!

iamlofi

2,224 posts

217 months

Wednesday 19th December 2007
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we usually use smoked bacon instead of Panchetta

brum

5,892 posts

219 months

Wednesday 19th December 2007
quotequote all
Its pretty much the only thing i cook - but its the worlds greatest Bolognaise sauce;

1 very large onion chopped.
2 cloves of garlic finely chopped
Stick of celery diced
Handful Fresh Basil
Pancetta.
Chicken livers.
Mushrooms
One litre Passata
2 tins chopped tomatoes
Good extra virgin olive oil
Bottle of good, full bodied red wine
50ml Noily Prat/dry vermouth
1 Kg of good minced beef.


Add a good slug of olive oil to a very large heavy bottomed pan.
Quickly fry the pancetta for 60 seconds to release the fat - drain and put to one side.
Add onion,garlic and celery and slowly soften.
Add Noily prat and reduce - leave to one side - combine with pancetta.

Brown mince in saucepan
Add chopped chicken livers
Deglaze pan with half bottle of red wine and reduce by half.
Add onion, garlic, celery and pancetta
Add half the bazil
Add chopped tomatoes, pasatta and rest of wine
Add mushrooms and half cup of water.

The sauce should now resemble quite a water soup - leave to reduce for 45 minutes until the sauce is thick, rich and unctous, the beef should have swelled considerably as it takes up the sauce.
Add the rest of the chopped basil.

Serve with tagliatelle and shaved parmesan.

Ladies and gentlemen - i thank you.


bowtie

smiller

12,120 posts

217 months

Wednesday 19th December 2007
quotequote all
iamlofi said:
we usually use smoked bacon instead of Panchetta
Chorizo (finely chopped) adds a nice dimension, rather than pancetta.

We always add a little sugar to it as well. Takes away the bitterness of the toms.....





Edited by smiller on Wednesday 19th December 23:33

sleep envy

62,260 posts

262 months

Thursday 20th December 2007
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secret recipe under lock and key but I'll give you a quick tip, it needs to reduce for at least 2 hours

Noger

7,117 posts

262 months

Thursday 20th December 2007
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The Tagliatelle alla bolognese I have had in Bologna were a bit of a revelation compared to a lovely rich tomato, mushroom and red wine heavy "Spag bol".

So delicate and light. No what I was expecting at all. Not saying it was better, just different.

Tend to use the Marcella Hazan version (beef gently cooked in milk, then white wine, few tomatoes, 3-4 hours cooking) if I want the "authentic".

TIGA84

5,379 posts

244 months

Thursday 20th December 2007
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Try a combination of 2/3rds mince beef, and 1/3 minced pork as another variation as well.

As with most things involving meat, longer and slower is better. Have been known to leave for 5hrs+ on occasion, literally just turning over slowly, does make the difference IMO.


CommanderJameson

Original Poster:

22,096 posts

239 months

Thursday 20th December 2007
quotequote all
Symbolica said:
Stu R said:
ehyouwhat said:
Sounds nice, but I'm not sure I could deal with the hassle. Having said that, my cooking has come on hugely in the past year or so (before which I relied purely on takeaways) so I'll maybe give a 'proper' sauce a go at some point.
It's no hassle really, obviously a bit more involved than cracking open ragu, but still a very quick dish to prepare.
yesAnd the taste will be miles ahead. In fact I'm going to try CJ's recipie for dinner tonightlick
Did you? Was it good?

anonymous-user

67 months

Thursday 20th December 2007
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CommanderJameson said:
Did you? Was it good?
I certainly did (meant to post here earlier) and it was gorgeouslick. I had to make two alterations (due to a lack of pancetta and pesto) but apart from that did exactly as you said, I've now got a bowl full saved up for the weekend. You were right about adding the chilli, brings something extra to it.

ali_kat

32,053 posts

234 months

Friday 21st December 2007
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Need to add a tiny amount of chilli, and perfect smile