I Am... Small Batch Mini Chocolate Sourdough Babka Loaf
After my mini cinnamon babka success, I decided to make another mini loaf, this time chocolate since chocolate babka is the babka everyone thinks of when they think of babka.
Read More →I Am... Ragu beyond Bolognese: Modena Edition
One of the best meals we had in 2019 was at Rezdora NYC, where we lingered over plates and plates of expertly made pasta, great wine, and wonderful service that never rushed us even though it was a full reservation kind of night. The stand out dish – a pretty simple ragu modenese - blew my mind and was one of the only times in my life I peppered a waiter with questions about a dish. I found out that night that ragu modenese is like bolognese’s lesser known – but no less tasty – distant cousin.
What is ragu Modenese?
Just as ragu bolognese comes from Bologna, ragu modenese comes from Modena, a neighboring city to Bologna. Wherever there are two major cities in one region, there is also usually a rivalry, and these two are no different. Few cities have taken it this far though: hundreds of years ago, these two cities went to war in something called The War of the Bucket. Thousands died, and to this day, some say the actual bucket still hangs in Modena. Things were no less competitive on the food front, but although Bologna became famous for its ragu, Modena’s contribution to the food world was balsamic vinegar and the invention of tortellini. That wasn't because Modena’s ragu wasn't as good, however, it was that Bologna’s ragu was so extremely over the top that it took all the air out of the room in the way that over the top things do.What about ragu Bolognese?
Ragu bolognese has traditionally been for the ultra wealthy. Correctly made, it features multiple cuts of meats from different animals and its flavors are built from a ton of cream, cheese, and wine. Bologna was a very rich city in its heyday, and liked to show off that wealth through food. Even though “bolognese sauce” is common nowadays, to make proper, authentic ragu bolognese will still cost you an arm and a leg even in our modern world where food is mostly cheap relative to incomes. Ragu modenese, on the other hand, is a much more humble affair, and for me, that makes it so much better. It’s easy to build an amazing sauce with dozens of exotic ingredients, but to make something comparable with a few relatively cheap items is magical. Ragu modenese is just a simple sofritto, proscuitto, mortadella, pork, broth, and cheese. There’s nothing more to it, but around the 5-6 hour mark, it seems to magically transform all of a sudden into something that you wouldn’t believe came from so few ingredients. This was an excellent low effort, low cost rendition of ragu that I’ll be making again and again. Both versions were amazing with any pasta shape, and properly speaking you should pair this with freshly made, heavy-on-the-yolk tagliatelle, but the best packaged shape I had it with was fusilli.Cooking Notes
I loved this sauce (so much) but I’m also pretty lazy, and mostly impatient. So I made it twice. Once conventionally, and again in an Instant Pot. They tasted the same, and in fact if anything the instant pot version tasted better, so definitely don’t spend the 6-7 hours simmering unless you enjoy it, or don’t have an Instant Pot. You’ll notice that there is no tomato paste or garlic in this sauce. While writing this, I was reading roads and kingdom’s excellent piece on ragu and came across a few interesting quotes that applied to this recipe: “The meat can change based on the circumstances. The liquid can, too. But the one thing a ragu never has in it is garlic.” - The original recipe properly omits garlic, but I don’t personally know that my North American palate really enjoyed that. The next time I make this, there will be garlic. “We never had tomatoes in Emilia Romagna, so how did they end up in the sauce? Tomato is used to cover up bad ingredients.” - It also called for a couple of tablespoons of basic tomato sauce. When I made it the second time, I skipped the tomato and didn’t miss it, so I didn’t include it here, but feel free to, if you like the flavor of tomatoes. “99 percent of ragu starts with machine-ground meat. But why?” - Finally, I made this with ground pork per the original recipe, but if I were to do it again, I’d skip it for a good pork shoulder. I’ve always held that shredded meat makes all the difference in a quality ragu, and the long cooking time of this one makes it especially suitable.How to make restaurant quality pasta
One final note: the biggest difference in restaurant quality pasta and the pasta you make at home is how you finish and sauce the pasta. The best way to finish this specific sauce is to cook the pasta 1 minute before the time on the package, then drain the pasta and transfer to a non-stick skillet along with about 1/4-1/2 a cup of sauce per portion. Once the pasta is well sauced, add extra cheese and chili flakes as desired, and plate. Enjoy immediately. If you have an Instant Pot, this version is just as good and 4-5 hours faster.Authentic Ragu Modenese Recipe
- 2 tbsp Extra virgin olive oil
- 1/2 medium onion
- 1 small carrot
- 2 stalks celery
- 4 ounces Prosciutto di Parma (thinly sliced)
- 4 ounces mortadella (thinly sliced)
- 1 pound ground pork (see note)
- 1 parmigiano rind (about 2 ounces)
- 1-2 quarts chicken stock (no sodium)
- 2 cups parmigiano reggiano cheese (finely grated)
Finely dice your onion, carrots, and celery.
Mince your proscuitto, mortadella, and ground pork.
Add the olive oil to a large saute pan over medium-high heat and deeply caramelize the onions, carrots, and celery, about 5 minutes.
Add the meats, parmigiano rind, and enough stock to cover, then reduce the heat to a bare simmer. Cover and simmer for 6-7 hours, checking on it every hour or so to make sure it hasn't gone dry. Add stock as necessary.
After simmering, add the cheese, then season with salt, if necessary.
based on Rezdora NYC via today.com
I Am... Instant Pot Ragu Modenese Recipe
Ragu modenese is like ragu bolognese's lesser known, but no less hot, baby brother. It's just a simple sofritto, proscuitto, mortadella, pork, broth, and cheese. You won't believe this magical sauce came from so few ingredients, with so little prep time. You can read more about ragu modenese at our long form writeup, along with a recipe if you don't have an instant pot, here.
How to make restaurant quality pasta
One final note: the biggest difference in restaurant quality pasta and the pasta you make at home is how you finish and sauce the pasta. The best way to finish this specific sauce is to cook the pasta 1 minute before the time on the package, then drain the pasta and transfer to a non-stick skillet along with about 1/4-1/2 a cup of sauce per portion. Once the pasta is well sauced, add extra cheese and chili flakes as desired, and plate. Enjoy immediately.Instant Pot Ragu Modenese Recipe
- 2 tbsp Extra virgin olive oil
- 1/2 small onion
- 1 small carrot
- 2 stalks celery
- 4 ounces Prosciutto di Parma (thinly sliced)
- 4 ounces mortadella (thinly sliced)
- 1 pound ground pork
- 1 parmigiano rind (about two ounces)
- 1/2 quart chicken stock (no sodium)
- 2 cups Parmigiano Reggiano cheese (finely grated)
Finely dice your onion, carrots, and celery.
Mince your proscuitto, mortadella, and ground pork.
Add the olive oil to the Instant Pot and select saute high. Once hot, add the onions, carrots, and celery. Caramelize, stirring occasionally, about 5 minutes.
Add the meats, parmigiano rind, and just enough stock to barely cover (about 1/2 qt) to the pot. Cover and set to high pressure for 2 hours and 15 minutes.
When the time is up, quick release, then remove the parmigiano rind.
Set the heat to saute high again, and cook, stirring, until the sauce is reduced to your liking, about 5-10 minutes. Stir in the cheese and enjoy.
I Am... How to a Make Soboro Donburi
What have you guys been eating lately? I feel like people are going two ways: either eating ALL the comfort foods and making things that they’ve been wanting to make but never had the time to and those people who genuinely don’t want to spend any time in the kitchen and are relying on delivery and takeaway. We’re in both camps – we’ve mostly been cooking at home with a bit of delivery thrown in for fun.
Read More →I Am... 29 Bread Recipes to Bake When You’re Stuck at Home
Are you looking for comfort carbs? These twenty-nine recipes are BREADY for you! Heehee I couldn’t resist. Anyway, in case you’re looking for some bread recipes because you love the gluten life, here you are, twenty nine gloriously dreamy carb-y things. Plus, six recipes that don’t use yeast, because I see you, people who didn’t manage to snatch up any yeast before this all went down.
Read More →I Am... Small Batch Black Bottom Banana Bread
Back when the world was a different place, one where you could casually walk into a bakery and peruse the offerings on hand, Mike and I loved going to one of the many little bakery cafes in our neighborhood. They had SO many baked goods: sweet little fun flavored loaves, all the cookies, laminated pastries, and, my favorite: a black bottom banana cake. Black bottom banana cake is kind of unassuming looking from the top. It looks like a square piece of banana cake. But hidden under it’s banana-y goodness, there’s a deep and dark layer of moist and rich chocolatey cake.
Read More →I Am... Garlic Parmesan Pasta with Sausage
This is the best weeknight pasta
This sausage garlic parmesan pasta is probably the best thing you can make with only 5 ingredients and 15 minutes. It’s easily as good as any $25 plate of pasta you’d get at a nice Italian restaurant, assuming any survive this COVID-19 crisis. Besides being super easy, you can endlessly riff on this basic recipe with different kinds of sausages, cured meats, or fresh pasta.How to make garlic parmesan pasta
Garlic parmesan pasta is an incredible base for making up your own weeknight variations. All great italian sauces basically start with garlic and end with a very heavy dusting of parmesan anyway. The trick is what you put in the middle, which can range from nothing to expensive slow braised cuts of meat. In this version, we use Tuscan sausage, which is a fatty uncured sausage you can usually find at any grocery store meat department. It’s a good starting point because it’s already flavored and spiced, so we don’t need to spend time slow braising or finding dozens of dried and fresh herbs and spices. The fat from the sausage renders out to emusify with the pasta water and cheese to form a deliciously rich and meaty sauce that you won’t believe only took about 15 minutes to make.The best pasta dishes are the simple ones
Over the many hundreds of years Italians have been making pasta, the process to make a simple, quick, and rustic (yet dreamily delicious) sauce has been refined into a few basic steps that you can use to make any pasta dish: start with a fat, ideally olive oil, add some aromatics like garlic or soffritto, then add your meat. Once your meat is browned, add your liquid of choice, reduce, and add some cheese and just-undercooked pasta. Finish the pasta by swirling gently until a thick and creamy sauce forms, and molto buono, you’ve got dinner in under 15 minutes.Pasta tips and tricks
1. Follow these simple tips and tricks to get restaurant quality pasta: 2. Use high quality fresh or bronze extruded dried pasta 3. Salt your pasta water, it makes your actual pasta taste good 4. Add pasta to already boiling water, set a timer and cook 1 minute before the package time, and finish in the sauce 5. Always pre-grate your cheese so you know you’ve got enough 6. Splurge on the authentic Italian cheese with laser printed rinds 7. Look for Parmigiano Reggiano, it makes a huge difference.Weeknight Garlic and Parmesan Pasta with Sausages
A restaurant-level 5 ingredient, 15 minute weeknight pasta recipe
- 1 tbsp olive oil
- 6 oz pasta of choice (2 portions)
- 2 links Tuscan sausage (or other fresh sausage)
- 8 cloves garlic (peeled and sliced)
- 1 tbsp dried chili flakes (optional)
- 2 cups Parmigiano Reggiano cheese (finely grated)
Bring a pot of salted water to a boil. Cook the pasta in salted water, using a timer. Cook 1 mins before the time on the package.
While the pasta is cooking, heat up some olive oil in a nonstick skillet over medium heat. Fry the sausage in little balls or break up into pieces with a wooden spoon.
When the sausages are browned and crisp, add garlic and chili flakes, if using. Fry until crispy and fragrant.
Add 2 cups of pasta water to the pan and swirl. Once reduced by about half, remove from the heat until the pasta timer goes off, then add the almost al dente pasta to the skillet and turn the heat back up to high.
Swirl the pasta until al dente and a thick sauce has formed and coated each strand or piece of pasta. Add the cheese, then stir lightly to melt. Serve immediately, topped with more parmesan.
I Am... Small Batch Baking: How to Create a Small Sourdough Starter and Bake a Small Sourdough Loaf
It seems like everyone is either sweets baking away their blues or caffeinating at a high rate while they’re stuck at home during Covid. But small batch baking treats and coffee aside, I think the biggest thing that everyone is doing right now is baking sourdough!
Read More →I Am... Small Batch Mini Sourdough Babka
Like everyone else on the internet, I’ve been playing around with wild yeast and baking sourdough. I just finished baking my third loaf (each loaf is getting better and better!) and I thought I’d try my hand at some other sourdough goods, like sourdough babka.
Read More →I Am... How to Make Tuna Onigiri: Miffy Tuna Onigiri
How’s everyone doing out there? It’s pretty wild to think that we’re all pretty much stuck at home with travel being something that is not going to be happening for a long time. I feel very grateful that Mike and I got to spend some time in Tokyo late last year before everything started going south. It seems like a lifetime ago, us wandering the streets, popping into a combini (Japanese convenience store) for an onigiri whenever we felt like a snack.
Read More →I Am... Perfectly Pan-Seared Garlicky Mushrooms
Are you looking for a plate of comfort right about now? Have you’ve been obsessively googling how to start a sourdough starter? My little starter is happily bubbling away on the counter, just waiting for me to make a loaf. I love baking bread (even if my bread making skills are severely lacking) but sometimes I need comfort immediately, which means a big ol’ plate of sautéed mushrooms.
Read More →I Am... How to Make Whipped Matcha (Dalgona Matcha) Two Ways + Tips
I’m sure by now you’ve heard of dalgona coffee, that viral instant coffee drink that’s ALL over right now. This is the matcha version: fluffy, dense, frothy, foamy matcha floating on iced milk. There are three different ways people are making dalgona matcha: with just straight matcha, with egg whites, and with whipping cream. I made dalgona matcha with egg whites and with whipping cream so you can take a look at the difference and decide which way you want to dalgona matcha at home today!
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