Lasagna

Updated Jan. 22, 2025

Lasagna
Christopher Testani for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Simon Andrews.
Total Time
4 hours
Rating
5(9,908)
Comments
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In 2001, Regina Schrambling went on a week long odyssey in search of the best lasagna recipe. Her ideal here has an intensely flavored sauce, cheeses melted into creaminess as if they were bechamel, meat that’s just chunky enough and noodles that put up no resistance to the fork.

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Ingredients

Yield:8 to 10 servings

    For the Sauce

    • 1cup extra virgin olive oil
    • 2medium red onions, finely diced
    • 2large cloves minced garlic
    • 8ounces pancetta, diced
    • Salt and freshly ground black pepper
    • cups good red wine, preferably Italian
    • 228-ounce cans Italian plum tomatoes
    • 3tablespoons tomato paste
    • ¾pound ground sirloin
    • ¼cup freshly grated Pecorino Romano
    • 2eggs
    • 10sprigs fresh parsley, leaves only, washed and dried
    • 2large whole cloves garlic
    • ½cup flour
    • 1pound Italian sausage, a mix of hot and sweet

    For the Lasagna

    • 115-ounce container ricotta cheese
    • 2eggs
    • 2cups freshly grated Pecorino Romano
    • ½cup chopped parsley
    • 1pound mozzarella, grated
    • 16sheets fresh lasagna noodles, preferably Antica Pasteria
Ingredient Substitution Guide
Nutritional analysis per serving (10 servings)

951 calories; 65 grams fat; 23 grams saturated fat; 0 grams trans fat; 32 grams monounsaturated fat; 7 grams polyunsaturated fat; 45 grams carbohydrates; 3 grams dietary fiber; 7 grams sugars; 41 grams protein; 1186 milligrams sodium

Note: The information shown is Edamam’s estimate based on available ingredients and preparation. It should not be considered a substitute for a professional nutritionist’s advice.

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Preparation

  1. Step 1

    For the sauce, heat ½ cup oil in a large heavy Dutch oven or kettle over low heat. Add the onions, minced garlic and pancetta, and cook, stirring, for 10 minutes, until the onions are wilted. Season liberally with salt and pepper. Raise heat slightly, add the wine and cook until it is mostly reduced, about 20 minutes. Crush the tomatoes into the pan, and add their juice. Add the tomato paste and 2 cups lukewarm water. Simmer for 1 hour.

  2. Step 2

    Combine the sirloin, cheese and eggs in a large bowl. Chop the parsley with the whole garlic until fine, then stir into the beef mixture. Season lavishly with salt and pepper. Using your hands, mix until all the ingredients are well blended. Shape into meatballs and set aside.

  3. Step 3

    Heat the remaining oil in a large skillet over medium-high heat. Dust the meatballs lightly with flour, shaking off excess, and lay into the hot oil. Brown the meatballs on all sides (do not cook through) and transfer to the sauce.

  4. Step 4

    In a clean skillet, brown the sausages over medium-high heat. Transfer to the sauce. Simmer 1½ hours.

  5. Step 5

    Heat the oven to 350 degrees. In a large bowl, combine the ricotta, eggs, Pecorino Romano, parsley and all but 1 cup of the mozzarella. Season well with salt and pepper. Mix thoroughly.

  6. Step 6

    Remove the meatballs and sausage from the sauce, and set aside to cool slightly, then chop coarsely. Spoon a thick layer of sauce into the bottom of a 9-by-12-inch lasagna pan. Cover with a layer of noodles. Spoon more sauce on top, then add a third of the meat and a third of the cheese mixture. Repeat for 2 more layers, using all the meat and cheese. Top with a layer of noodles, and cover with the remaining sauce. Sprinkle reserved mozzarella evenly over the top. Bake 30 minutes. Let stand 10 minutes before serving.

FAQS

  1. The basic building formula for lasagna is sauce, noodles, more sauce, then cheese. Repeat the noodle-sauce-cheese order until the pan is nearly filled, then end with sauce and cheese on top.

Ratings

5 out of 5
9,908 user ratings
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Comments

What is the advantage of making the meatballs, just to chop them up later?

We had this for Sunday dinner and it is way too much work for the mediocre result. How did we get SO FAR from classic, authentic Lasagna pasticciate, consisting of nothing more than layers of freshly made bechemal and exquisite ragú bolognese made from beef,pork, and chicken livers? Find the recipe in the superb 1968 Time-Life The Cooking of Italy and be prepared to be blown away.

Thanks for mentioning the importance of the Antica Pasteria noodles, which are unavailable in the United States.

Excellent recipe. I don't understand the naysayers. It's not a bechamel-based lasagna, but a different animal. (I had to shorten the sauce simmering time, and it was still great.) Use a deep pan (a lasagna pan is not the usual 9x13 one inch deep pyrex). The amount of sauce, meat, etc. was spot on for mine.

A labour of love, for sure. I enjoyed the process, but as other have commented, not sure it was completely worth it. But I picked up many small tricks on the way! Question: my ricotta-egg cream gets very dense. How do you spread it evenly? It’s easier with a more liquid bechamel sauce.

I see this in many recipes and I wonder what the point is of adding wine to a recipe, simmering to reduce the quantity, then promptly adding back even more water? Please can a more experienced cook than me explain what this achieves?

@Clare. Hi Clare. As an Italian who has been making “sauce” for a long time, wine adds a gorgeous level of deliciousness to the sauce. Whenever I have eaten sauce made without wine it tastes flat and heavy. If you simmer sauce with wine for a while, it’s more balanced and not acidic. It adds a natural sweetness especially if the tomatoes are bitter. I have also used white wine if have an open bottle and want to use up the wine. It too is as delicious as using red wine. That’s my own personal taste and I’m sure others might disagree. As an aside, if using canned tomatoes, use Cento tomatoes. They are the best and worth the extra money. Happy cooking!

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