Lasagne

Jun. 19th, 2009 08:07 pm
serenecooking: (peppers)
Last weekend, [personal profile] stonebender and I got together and had a bulk-cooking day. I made three lasagne and four chicken-and-rice casseroles (one of which I spilled all over my kitchen floor). Seven huge casseroles (with meat) for around $70. Not bad at all. We ate one lasagne that night, I left one there, and I brought one home with me. This one is extra-special because I forgot to put the mozzarella in it. :-)

What I made:




Lasagne

[Note: Instructions are for my mom's version, without forgetting mozzarella; [personal profile] stonebender's mother uses breakfast sausage rather than Italian sausage, so I did that just for fun. It was good, just not exactly like my mom's. :-)]

Ingredients:

Approximately 12 lasagna noodles (a twelve-ounce box of pasta is more than enough for one pan of lasagne; two pounds made enough for three pans with a little left over)
1 pound each ground beef and Italian sausage, crumbled, cooked, and drained
enough of your favorite pasta sauce to just moisten the meat -- don't use too much (I make my mom's sauce from scratch, and I'd say I use around a few cups for one pan of lasagne. Mom's sauce ALWAYS has parmesan added at the end, so you might want to do that)
1 to 1.5 pounds mozzarella, shredded
1 to 1.5 pounds ricotta
1 egg
salt/pepper
1/2 to 1 cup parmesan cheese, grated or shredded


Get all set up:

1) Cook lasagna noodles until they're almost done (I'd estimate 6 or 8 minutes); drain and set aside in a bowl of cool water
2) Mix together meats and sauce
3) Mix ricotta with the egg, some salt, and plenty of pepper

Preheat the oven to 350F. In a 9x13 or so pan, layer the lasagna in this order (when I say "sauce", I mean the meat/sauce mixture). Steps 11-13 are not a typo: mom says it's necessary to do them that way in order to keep the mozzarella from drying out.

1) Enough sauce to cover the bottom of the pan
2) Lasagne noodles, lengthwise in one layer
3) 1/2 of the ricotta
4) 1/3 of the remaining sauce
5) 1/3 of the mozzarella
6) Noodles, sidewise in one layer
7) remaining ricotta
8) The second 1/3 of the sauce
9) The second 1/3 of the mozzarella
10) Noodles, lengthwise in one layer
11) Remaining mozzarella
12) Remaining sauce
13) All the parmesan

Bake at 350F for 60-90 minutes, uncovered. [To make ahead, wrap well and refrigerate up to 2 days or freeze up to 6 months. To reheat from frozen, either thaw overnight or add around one hour to cooking time. Today, I did a slow reheat, since we were off doing laundry before dinner. 2.5 hours at 275F and the last 30 minutes at 350F was perfect, but I found the noodles a little mushy.]



How we liked it:

[livejournal.com profile] sogwife: "It was yummy, and it had the right amount of sauce and everything."
[livejournal.com profile] someotherguy: "Yeah. By the time lasagne is cold, it should be finger food."
[livejournal.com profile] wtfpotatoes: "I like lasagne. This is awesome. I like MEAT in lasagne. This is AWESOME."
[personal profile] serene: I thought it was kick-ass, even though my mouth expected mozzarella. I thought the noodles were a little tiny bit soggy from the slow reheat, but no one else thought so. Not one of us was able to finish the size piece we chose for ourselves. This stuff is VERY filling.

Cost per serving:

Ten large servings (or eight HUGE ones, huger than any sane person could eat).

Total: $1.56 per serving (or $1.95 per HUGE serving)

Noodles: $1
ground beef: $2
sausage: $1.50
sauce: $2.50 (including the parmesan)
mozzarella: $3.50
ricotta: $3
egg: 10 cents
salt/pepper: negligible
parmesan: $2
serenecooking: (Default)
Most Sundays lately, [livejournal.com profile] someotherguy and I have been having buttermilk pancakes and either sausage or bacon. (Buttermilk pancakes are SO much better than ones made with milk, and we don't usually keep buttermilk in the house, so we decided to do a little ritual of buying it on Saturdays to have on Sundays, and then we started adding a few strips of bacon or something to the ritual.)

Anyway, no buttermilk pancakes on LID, and no bacon or sausage. Unless, of course, you make the sausage yourself.

I used the recipe my net.pal Nathan posted at House of Annie as a starting point, but I didn't use brown sugar (I used white to be safe -- not sure about the iodine in the molasses), and I was out of marjoram. I also, because I don't yet have a meat grinder, used store-bought ground pork.

He's right -- they're much less greasy, even without using super-low-fat pork, but also more flavorful and fresh-tasting than store-bought sausage. I highly recommend this. It's as quick as throwing together meat loaf or something, and I'm freezing a dozen uncooked patties for next weekend.

[Note: I covered the pan while cooking, because I have a little worry about undercooked pork. They turned out great.]

Food for yesterday, day six )

I'm not as hungry as I was before going hypo, especially in the morning. Usually it's noon or later before I can even bear to eat. But when I eat, I eat very well if I have any say over it.
serenecooking: (Default)
I really need to get into the habit of photographing dinner again, especially since I have this new camera.

Anyway, dinner was good. Sauteed some onion, celery, bell pepper, and garlic in bacon grease. Added sliced andouille sausage and cooked red beans (along with salt, pepper, a little butter). Served over white rice, with sauteed mustard greens and macaroni salad on the side. Yumma.
serenecooking: (Default)
1) Enchiladas made with corn tortillas, chopped pressure-cooked pork butt, enchilada sauce (recipe below), black olives, and cheddar cheese.

2) Frijoles de la olla (pinto beans left whole, seasoned with fat, salt, and garlic).

Really yummy, I thought.


Enchilada sauce (recipe posted by Becca on rec.food.cooking in 2002):

Enchilada Sauce

12 New Mexico dried chiles [I used anchos, I think]
1/2 onion, quartered
4 cloves garlic
1 qt boiling chicken broth [I used salted pork stock, so I didn't add any salt]
1-2 tblsp Masa Harina [the sauce came out thick, so I didn't use this]
salt to taste

Remove stems and seeds from chiles and rinse. Combine chiles, onion,
garlic and boiling chicken broth in a blender and allow to sit for 10
minutes. Puree until smooth. To thicken, and add flavor, I will us a
tablespoon or two of Masa Harina, then salt to taste.

Instead of using a food processor or blender, you can bring the
chicken stock to a boil, add the chiles, onion and garlic, then use the hand
held immersion blender in the pot.
serenecooking: (Default)
1) Making this kalua pig recipe for dinner. The house smells really good already.

2) [livejournal.com profile] someotherguy, yesterday: "You have this magic way of, you're baking potatoes or something, and it's just potatoes, but somehow it just smells so damn good." *beam*

3) My new camera will, I hope, mean food pics will return to this blog. Because, hey, food porn, y'know?
serenecooking: (Default)
So, the lamb shanks. Very yummy, SOOoooo tender. I was going to make one of the recipes folks posted, but then we didn't get to the store in time, so I browned them, then threw them in the slow-cooker to braise with a chopped beefsteak tomato, a jar of pickled red cabbage, and a few cloves of garlic. While we're talking weird foods, the sides were some fresh spinach tagliatelle with pistachio pesto (I made the pesto but not the pasta), and some cucumber/roma-tomato/maui-onion salad with a vinegar/salt/sugar dressing.

It was weird, I'll grant you, but very good. And now I want to go eat the leftover pesto with a spoon.

Lamb shanks

Jun. 4th, 2008 04:21 pm
serenecooking: (Default)
Okay, folks, lamb shanks.

They were on sale at the Berkeley Bowl this afternoon, and I've never made them. I bought two (about 1.5 pounds total) and I need ideas, and I know that I've seen some lovely recipes from you folks. Help with pointers would be great, and I'll also cruise google groups.
serenecooking: (Default)
I have always found my mother's knaedlach soup (matzoh-ball soup) to be about the equivalent of manna from heaven if I believed in manna from heaven. For the first couple of years that I was a vegetarian, I took one day a year off, my birthday, to eat my mom's matzoh-ball soup. On the third or fourth birthday, she found a vegan "schmaltz" and made me a veg version, so I didn't have her real-deal soup for another 20 years or so.

Yesterday, I boiled a chicken for stock, rendered chicken skin for schmaltz, and bought the vegetables. Right now, there is matzoh-ball batter/dough in my fridge, resting, and I shall pull the chicken off the bones in a little bit (I don't care at all about the chicken part, but most people seem to expect it.

When it's almost time to make the knaedlachs, I will put a pot of chicken stock on the stove, add onions, celery, and carrots, and bring them to a boil. My mother says she's been boiling the knaedlachs in water lately to help them stay together better, but that's not how she did it when I was growing up, so that's not how I'm gonna do it. I'll drop them into simmering soup and do them the old way. If they fall apart, they fall apart. I'll live with it.

Mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm, souuuuuuuuuup.

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