Categories
MAIN COURSE

BOLOGNESE

The difference between this and the traditional Bolognese recipe is that I do not let it cook for very long because I do not use canned tomatoes. I prefer the freshness and lightness the fresh tomatoes give the dish.

BOLOGNESE

To start:
25 g/8 oz butter
25 g/8 oz olive oil
2 cloves garlic, finely chopped
1 carrot, finely chopped
2 celery stalks, finely chopped
2 large mushrooms, finely chopped

The meat:
25 g/8 oz butter
25 g/8 oz olive oil
70 g/2½ oz pancetta, finely sliced
1 onion, finely chopped
300 g/10.6 oz beef, minced
100 g/3.5 oz pork, minced
2 large, fresh tomatoes, peeled, deseeded and finely diced
¾ cup/175 ml white wine
1 cup/250 ml beef stock
¾ cup/175 ml whole milk

The pasta:
spaghetti (for 4 servings)
2 tablespoons/30 ml olive oil
2 tablespoons/30 ml parsley, finely chopped
grated Parmesan cheese, to serve

To start:
Melt the butter and oil in a heavy-based pan over medium heat, then add the garlic, carrot and celery and fry for 2 minutes. Add the mushroom and cook until the mushroom are cooked. Remove the vegetables from the pan with a slotted spoon and add some more butter and oil.

Turn up the heat then add the onion and pancetta and let it cook for a minute or so. Add the minced beef and pork, breaking it up with wooden spoon and leave to brown without stirring. Then stir and let brown some more. Stir in the reserved mushrooms and vegetables and the milk and stir through until the milk is well absorbed. Add the white wine and let it cook down, then add the tomatoes and half the stock. Cook until nearly dry then add the rest of the stock and cook some 15 minutes longer. Season to taste and remove from the heat. Keep it warm.

While the Bolognese is “resting”, cook the pasta until al dente in a deep saucepan with lots of salted water. Drain and pour back into the saucepan and drizzle some olive oil over. Stir through the parsley.

With a pasta serving fork, roll up the pasta and gently slide it onto a warm serving plate. Neatly spoon the meat sauce over the pasta, top it with freshly grated Parmesan cheese and more parsley if preferred.

Make double the meat sauce and use leftovers for making:
Stuffed roast peppers
Stuffed mushrooms
Sausage rolls with puff pastry.

For leftover spaghetti:
Mix with breadcrumbs, herbs and cheese and put it under the grill for a few minutes for a delightful snack or with a salad for lunch.

STELLA's avatar

By STELLA

I have had no formal chef’s training. Classical piano was my parents’ choice, and that took care of the first 20 years of my life. Journalism and radio followed (my own choices, this time), and these opened many doors for me into different countries, people, cultures — and, of course, foods. In a six week series on radio I used it as a platform for my love of food and shared lots of interesting recipes and food news with listeners.
My earliest memories of food come from the family kitchen at home; I can still remember the wonderful smells of the dishes my mother prepared. I became aware of the flavors of her creations at an early age. Some I enjoyed and preferred, while others depressed me with their lack of interesting flavors. My mother was a good cook, but not a gourmet, and sadly this often showed. What I did appreciate was that she always involved me in the preparation, sharing her knowledge of nutrition, flavor, color, and the harmonies of each plate she dished up. She was also a genius with leftovers and quick meals when unexpected guests arrived. This is one of the things that stands out in my mind, and it inspired me to create wonderful dishes from leftover foods myself.

I carried on with the tradition of carefully planning meals to combine nutrition, color and flavor, while at the same time offering variety and elegant presentation. In the process, I developed a passion for seeking out the best available products, adhering to each season’s offerings, and treating it with the respect it deserves, which eventually became part of my daily culinary life and travels. I did these things not because I wanted to become a chef, but to satisfy myself, family and friends with creations of gorgeous food and exciting flavors. All of which, I hope, is reflected in this blog.