The real ragu: Andrew Coppolino's recipe for a great Bolognese - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 11:20 AM | Calgary | -10.8°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Kitchener-Waterloo

The real ragu: Andrew Coppolino's recipe for a great Bolognese

The classic pasta dish is doused with a heavy and rich meat sauce, but you may not have ever had a true Bolognese. CBC K-W's food columnist Andrew Coppolino offers up a recipe so you can make the delicious dish at home.
Bolognese is a heavy and rich meat sauce used on pasta. (Kate Bueckert/CBC)

If you visit restaurants frequently especially those serving Italian food whether or not it is a traditional Italian restaurant you have probably seen spaghetti Bolognese on dozens of menus.

The classic pasta dish is doused with a heavy and rich meat sauce which, with a glass of robust red wine andsatisfies mightily. The question is: have you actually had a true Bolognese?

First some background. In the style of Bologna, a major city in the Emilia-Romagna region in northern Italy, the sauce is a ragua meaty stew-like preparation of onions, carrots, pork, beef and veal, butter and tomato.

In their cooking, the Bolognese will use three or four fats: olive oil, butter and lard, some of the country's best pork produced in the region. It's no wonder you don't leave a meal of tagliatelle alla Bolognese hungry.

Like the Feast of the Seven Fishes, spaghetti alla Bolognese seems to be primarily an Italian-American creation, though an Italian culinary organization claimed to codify a recipe based on an historical record from the 1800s.

While we traditionally visualize spaghetti sauce as primarily a tomato-based creation to which meat is added, a Bolognese puts the meat first: there is relatively little tomato compared to beef and pork and sometimes even chopped chicken livers and giblets.

Andrew Coppolino sprinkles some Parmesan on the pasta alla Bolognese. (Craig Norris/CBC)

Hours-long process

Another aspect of a true Bolognese is the several cooking techniques used and the time required to build the flavours.

Finely diced vegetables are gently "sweated down" to a soft texture but without colouring them, diced pancetta and butter are sauted and rendered, and the integrated ingredients are slipped into a low-heat oven for what is essentially a long winter's braise.

While we can splash together a bright, acidic and fresh tomato sauce and twirl the pasta round our forks for dinner in a relatively short time, a Bolognese can cook for anywhere from four to six hours. The result, when it is dished out and you taste it, is eye-opening.

The key to a good Bolognese is pork simmered in milk. (Image Source: Getty Images)

Add ... milk?

There is another quality of cookery in Emilia-Romagna that warrants attention, both because of its uniqueness and because of how it influences the flavour and texture of ragu Bolognese: milk.

The region traditionally prepares "maiale al latte alla Bolognese" pork simmered in milk. The ragu for pasta includes a cup of whole milk or a cup of heavy cream or both. Otherwise, it is a dish with relatively little seasoning: sage, popular in the region along with bay leaves, are really the only herbs added to the dish and perhaps some nutmeg. There is usually no call for garlic.

Listen to Andrew Coppolino talk about Bolognese:

Dining out

Several local restaurants prepare a variation of the dish: Del's Enotecain Kitchenerfeatures a red wine-braised beef ragu, roasted mushrooms, red onion, ricotta and spinach served on casareccia (rolled) pasta; Casa Rugantino, spaghetti with meat sauce; and Ennio's Pasta House a meat sauce over spaghetti.

Many family-style restaurants also serve a pasta and meat sauce; however, none likely takethe time to braise themeaty sauce for six hours.That remains for you to do.

The holiday season, offering perhaps a bit more time at hand to play in the kitchen, may be a good opportunity to prepare your own rich Bolognese after the turkey leftovers have been picked through at your house. I'm sure you'll find the deeply braised flavours of some simple ingredients, along with a bit of interesting food history, very satisfying.


Andrew Coppolino brought in pasta and Bolognese for the The Morning Edition crew to try out. (Kate Bueckert/CBC)

Ragu alla Bolognese

Ingredients
1 tablespoon olive oil
2 tablespoons butter
1 onion, finely diced
2 celery stalks, finely diced
1 carrots, finely dice
1 lb. ground beef
1 lb. ground pork
1 lb. pancetta, diced
1 28oz. can tomatoes, pureed
1 cup red wine
1 cup whole milk
2 to 6 cups beef stock as needed
2 bay leaves
1 cup whipping cream
salt and pepper
Parmesan cheese for garnish

Method

Preheat oven to 300 F.

Heat the olive oil and onetablespoon of the butter in a saut pan and gently sweat down the onion, celery and carrot until soft.

Meanwhile, in a second pan heat the remaining butter and saut the pancetta.

In a large oven-safe casserole dish, gently brown the ground beef and ground pork. Drain some of the rendered fat.

Add the vegetable mixture and pancetta to the casserole of ground beef and pork and incorporate. Add the tomatoes, red wine, milk, 2 cups of stock and bay leaves. Season with salt and pepper.

Bring the mixture to a gentle boil. Place the casserole in the oven, uncovered.

After onehour, stir in the heavy cream. Let the sauce simmer for at least fourhours stirring and scraping down the sides of the pot occasionally. Add some stock if the sauce seems too dry.

Serve with tagliatelle, freshly grated Parmesan cheese and full-bodied red wine. Enjoy!