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Yummy Italian Dishes Recipe that will make you Crave for More

Updated on January 22, 2017

Basic Recipes First

Italian Herb Bread Dipping Oil

Italian Herb Dipping Oil

1/4 teaspoon dried basil, crushed,

1/4 teaspoon dried oregano, crushed

1/8 teaspoon kosher salt 1/8 teaspoon

freshly ground black pepper

1/4 cup extra virgin olive oil

Greek Pasta Salad

Greek Pasta Salad: 10 oz. rotini, cooked and chilled 2 medium tomatoes, cored, seeded and cut into ½ inch dice 1 small cucumber, cut into ½ inch dice 1 small onion, finely chopped 1 cup feta cheese, crumbled 3 tbsp. chopped fresh oregano 3 tbsp. chopped fresh parsley 3 tbsp. red wine vinegar ¼ cup olive oil Salt and freshly cracked black pepper, to taste.

Another tasty salad

Fresh wedges of tomato, thinly sliced onion and sliced cucumber dressed simply with vinegar and oil makes the most simple salad possible—think of it as the Southern counterpart to the classic Italian tomato-and-mozzarella salad. It is best enjoyed at the height of summer, when tomatoes and cucumbers are fresh from the garden.

Italian Fries

The secret to awesome oven fries is presoaking them in salted water, which makes the potatoes release a bunch of their moisture before cooking. This ensures they will crisp up without having to risk burning them.

Ginger Beef, Mushroom & Kale Stir-Fry

Ginger Beef, Mushroom & Kale Stir Fry -- easy, delicious, and ready to go in just 30 minutes! |

Italian Fries
Italian Fries
Italian Herb Bread Dipping Oil
Italian Herb Bread Dipping Oil
Italian Fries
Italian Fries

Italian Wedding Soup with Escarole

In a large bowl, combine eggs, onion, bread crumbs, cheese, parsley, 1/2 teaspoon of the salt, and 1/2 teaspoon of the pepper. Add ground beef; mix well. Shape mixture into forty 1-1/4-inch meatballs. In a large skillet, heat 1 tablespoon oil; brown meatballs, half at a time. Drain on paper toweling.

Chicken Marbella---Is incredibly easy to make. Most of the preparation is done the day before…You simply rub the chicken with the marinade, toss in some capers, olives and prunes, and let it sit in the fridge overnight. The next day, you douse it with white wine, sprinkle some brown sugar over top, and bake it. That’s really all there is to it.

Parmesan Crusted Chicken: Mix 1/2 cup Mayo with 1/4 cup Parmesan Cheese, spread evenly on top chicken then sprinkle with Italian bread crumbs....I use honey flavored greek yougurt instead of mayo (gives it a sweet and salty taste) and I add garlic powder, seasoning salt, pepper and italian herbs and bake on 400 for 40 mins. (I used Good Seasons in mine, in place of all the herbs)

Parmesan Crusted Chicken
Parmesan Crusted Chicken
Busy Day Lasagna Toss
Busy Day Lasagna Toss

Best lasagna Recipes

Busy Day Lasagna Toss

Ingredients

Meat

  • 1 lb Ground beef

Produce

  • 3 Garlic cloves
  • 1 cup Green pepper
  • 1/2 cup Onion

Condiments

  • 1/4 cup Italian salad dressing
  • 1 26 oz. jar Spaghetti sauce

Pasta & Grains

  • 12 No boil lasagna noodles

Baking & Spices

  • 1/4 cup Brown sugar

Dairy

  • 1 cup Mozzarella cheese
  • 1/2 cup Ricotta or cottage cheese

Liquids

  • 1 2/3 cup Water

Lasagna Toss. Added red pepper and celery to beef mixture. Transferred beef mixture to stock pot. Used on can of pasta sauce and one can of petite diced tomatoes for sauce. Omitted brown sugar, used parmesan instead of ricotta.

Barilla No-Boil Lasagna

1.5 hrs to make, serves 1

Ingredients

Meat

  • 1 lb Ground beef or 1 lb sausage

Produce

  • 1 Parsley

Refrigerated

  • 2 Eggs

Condiments

  • 2 (24 ounce) jars Spaghetti sauce

Pasta & Grains

  • 1 (9 ounce) boxbarilla no-boil lasagna noodles

Dairy

  • 4 cups Mozzarella cheese
  • 1/2 cup Parmesan cheese
  • 1 (15 ounce) container Ricotta cheese

This is the best lasagna ever!! The noodles are so nice and thin and there is NO PREBOILING!! I will never purchase any other lasagna other than Barilla. Ive been making this now for 3 years and everyone agrees-the recipe makes the very best! The instructions are right on the back of the lasagna box. I usually make multiple batches and freeze them. Its a great housewarming or new baby meal for a friend!

Lasagna Bolognese

Prep time: 1 hourCook time: 5 hoursTotal time: 6 hoursYield: 10 to 12 servings ingredients:Bolognese sauce*

  • 2 T butter
  • 2 T olive oil
  • 3-4 oz pancetta or prosciutto di parma, chopped
  • 2 lbs ground beef, OR a combo or ground veal, pork and beef, or two of the three, equaling 2 lbs.
  • 28 ounces canned San Marzano tomatoes,- drained and the juice and seeds squeezed from each tomato and discarded
  • 2 medium onions, chopped
  • 2 large carrots, finely diced
  • 2 large celery stalks, finely diced
  • 3 cloves of garlic, minced
  • ½ cup dry red or white wine (your preference)
  • ½ cup whole milk, heated with cream prior to adding
  • ¼ cup heavy cream, heated with milk prior to adding
  • 1 cup chicken stock, or beef stock, or veal stock, or a combo of beef stock and chicken stock to make one cup, heated prior to adding.
  • salt and fresh ground pepper to taste
  • 2 to 4 tablespoons of butter to finish (optional)

Pasta Dough

  • 3¼ to 3½ cups 00 or AP flour.
  • 4 whole eggs
  • 1 egg yolk

Bechamel Sauce

  • 1 stick of unsalted butter (1/2 cup)
  • ½ cup of AP flour
  • 4 cups of whole milk
  • salt, pepper, freshly grated nutmeg
    2 cups grated Parmigiano-Reggiano cheese (Not part of Bechamel sauce ingredients. Part of lasagna assembly)

Directions:For the Bolognese Sauce

  1. Heat the oil and butter in a large saute pan, then add the onion, celery, and carrot and cook over medium heat until the onion turns pale gold. Add the pancetta or prosciutto, and let it cook down until most of the fat has rendered out, then add the minced garlic, and cook for another minute or two, being careful not to burn the garlic.
  2. Pushing the carrots, onions, celery, garlic and pancetta off to the side of the pan (or removing it to a plate for time being), add the beef or combo of ground meats and let sear until brown (this is a very important step for flavor)..then start breaking it up and letting it cook until most of the juices have evaporated. Add or push the veggies and pancetta back in with the meat, and let it cook together for another few minutes, until almost dry.
  3. Turn the heat up to high and add the white or red wine, scraping up the 'fond' (aka flavor) from the bottom of the pan (deglazing), then let the wine cook down until almost evaporated.
  4. Transfer the beef, veggie, pancetta mix to a dutch oven or large oven proof pot. Turn your burner down to medium heat and add the tomatoes, breaking them up as you stir them in (or just squeeze them with your hands in a bowl prior to adding them), and let it cook for about 15-20 minutes.
  5. Add the stock, cook for 1 minute, and then the milk and cream, and bring to a boil.
  6. Now, you can either let the bolognese simmer on the stovetop, uncovered, for about 3-5 hours, stirring and keeping watch, OR, do as I learned from Francois at FXCuisine (so much easier and no burning on the bottom without constant stirring). Preheat your oven to 350 F, while preparing the sauce on the stovetop. After you transfer it to the dutch oven and bring it to a boil..COVER and put it in the oven. Let it cook anywhere from 2-4 hours (check every hour after 2, to see if it's cooked down enough for your taste. Also, give it a stir every hour from the start). It should be thick and meaty (thick like oatmeal), with barely any juice or 'sauciness'. Taste for seasonings, such as salt and pepper, but this is so concentrated and flavorful, I only needed to add some ground black pepper.
  7. If you like, remove half or a quarter of the sauce to a separate pot or bowl and use an immersion blender to break it down a little, then add it back into the original sauce, and let it cook on the stove top so it reduces down a little more. If you'd like, for an even richer sauce, stir in the 2 to 4 tablespoons of 'optional' butter once it's finished cooking. I mostly do this when I'm making this sauce just to serve over pasta.
  8. Let sauce cool to room temperature, then refrigerate until ready to assemble the lasagna.

For the Homemade Pasta Dough and Lasagna Sheets

  1. Mound the flour on a sturdy board, and make a decent sized well in the middle (think volcano). Crack the eggs into a bowl, and add the egg yolk, to insure no shell gets into the 'well'. Pour the eggs into the well, and beat very carefully until uniform, making sure you keep those walls of flour intact to hold the pool of beaten eggs in. You don't want your volcano erupting! OK, I admit it, my 'volcano' did start to erupt, but fortunately, I was able to save it in time with some masterful bench scraping. Which brings me to that tip - have a bench scraper on hand just in case!
  2. Slowly start to incorporate the flour into the beaten eggs, until you have a soft dough. Start to knead the dough, adding more flour from your original 'volcano' (You most probably won't be incorporating all the flour from the volcano into the dough, (DO NOT try to force it all in, as you'll end up with a dry, crumbly bunch of pieces that won't hold together and tough pasta to boot), to get a nice, firm but smooth and elastic dough..about 10 minutes. You can also add the formed dough to your food processor/robocoupe, and finish it off there with a 30 second to1 minute pulse/run. You can even make the whole dough in the food processor, but you'd have to start out with a lot less flour, and slowly add it to the beaten eggs as the machine is running, until it's reached the right consistency. However, like I said above..I prefer the old fashioned way for this lasagna, since you've already put so much TLC into everything else.
  3. Once the dough is nice, smooth, and yellow to light yellow, wrap it in plastic wrap, and let it sit for 20 minutes or more. I refrigerate mine overnight, then let it come to room temp before I start cutting off pieces and rolling..but then again, as mentioned above, I do everything but the bechamel and the rolling of the pasta sheets the day before I make the Lasagna Bolognese.
  4. When the dough is almost ready, bring a large pot of water to boiling, (adding salt once it comes to a full boil). Break off or cut off about a golf ball or larger size piece and flatten in your hand, folding it into a small rectangle. (Cover the remaining dough with plastic wrap until you need to cut off another piece).
  5. Set your pasta machine at the widest setting, and run it through several times (you may have to flour the piece of dough lightly and sporadically to prevent sticking). Your sort of kneading it again, and making it nice and smooth for the final run throughs. Once it feels silky enough, flour it lightly and turn the knob up to number 2, and run it through a few times, then 3 (this is where I usually stop, as you don't want the sheets too thin, since it'll be cooking in the oven for about an hour). Leave your sheets rustic, no trimming (this is down home italian comfort food, not haute cuisine) and set them somewhere to dry, like a VERY lightly floured pan, drooping them over the rim, or some kind of rack. You don't want them to dry long, as you want them as fresh as possible.
  6. Once you've finished, add the pasta sheets, about two to three at a time, to the salted, boiling water. Let cook for only 40-50 seconds at most. Immediately transfer them to a large bowl of ice water, using a strainer of some sort (I use a Chinese strainer/skimmer), keeping that water in the pot and at a rolling boil. Keep repeating with the rest of the pasta sheets, adding more cold water to the bowl (you may have to use two bowls if the one you have isn't big enough for all that pasta) each time you add more of the semi-cooked sheets.
  7. Once you're finished, strain the pasta sheets and place them on a VERY lightly oiled pan (or one with a silpat) to dry. Then cover with plastic wrap until you're ready to assemble the lasagna.

For the Bechamel Sauce

  1. Heat the milk until almost boiling in a heavy bottomed sauce pan. In a separate pot melt the unsalted butter over low heat, then add the flour all at once. Stir rapidly with a whisk. Cook until you have a uniform blonde roux, do NOT let it brown, not even a little. We're not making gumbo here
  2. Slowly add the hot milk to the roux in increments, whisking until the roux absorbs each ½ to 1 cup of hot milk, in which you'll keep getting a thicker and thicker paste which will soon start to turn into a sauce. Once you've added all the milk, you'll have a nice, white, creamy sauce with no lumps, that should coat the back of a spoon.
  3. Season with salt, pepper and a few grates of fresh, whole nutmeg (not too much..taste with each grate). Set aside to cool until you're ready to assemble the lasagna.

Assemble Lasagna

  1. Get your 'mise en place' together - the two sauces, the partially cooked and dry lasagna sheets, and about two cups of freshly grated Parmigiano-Reggiano cheese. By the way, don't throw out the rind of the cheese. It makes a great flavor enhancer for soups, sauces, stews, rices etc. Of course you don't eat the rind once it's served its purpose. Preheat your oven to 350 F.
  2. First start with a light layer of sauce on the bottom of a deep 13 x 9 or 10 x15 baking dish. (I make this lasagna about 5-6 layers deep, but 3 or 4 layers is fine. Each layer will just be 'saucier'. You can leave the pasta dough as is, as those amounts are just about right for 3 or 4 layers, and as mentioned above, I usually double that or make another half of the recipe to make 5 or 6 layers. Top the sauce with a few lasagna sheets or whatever amount covers since you've kept your lasagna sheets 'rustic'. Cut sheets in half, if need be,
  3. Add a heavier layer of Bolognese sauce on top of those sheets, then next a layer of Bechamel sauce, then a handful of the Parm-Reg cheese.
  4. Top with another layer of lasagna sheets, then the same as above; Bolognese sauce, Bechamel Sauce and Parm-Reg cheese until you've used up all the lasagna sheets, sauces and cheese. Your top layer should the remainder of the sauces and cheese, not plain lasagna sheets.
  5. Now it's ready for the oven. Bake at 350 F for about 45 minutes to an hour. After 30-40 minutes, start checking if it's ready by sticking a long, thin knife into the center. If the knife comes out hot, it's ready. Lukewarm, keep cooking. If the top starts to get too brown, cover with aluminum foil for the remainder of the baking time.

Notes:

*Bolognese sauce can be made 2 days ahead. Cover and chill.


Pasta dough can be made one day ahead, Bring to room temperature before rolling out. OR, make and boil pasta sheets, then stack each sheet between layers of parchment paper on a baking sheet. Wrap baking sheet with plastic wrap and chill until ready to assemble lasagna. Bechamel sauce can be made one day ahead. Just reheat until loose, but not hot, when ready to assemble lasagna.


For a 6 layer lasagna, double the Bechamel and Bolognese,,and add 1½ more cups of Parmiagiano-Reggiano cheese. You will also need enough pasta dough for about 18 lasagna sheets.


If your Bolognese sauce is a little dry for some reason, like your oven running hot, just stir in a little tomato sauce and/or stock to bring it back. On the flip side,iIf it still seems too saucy after cooking, it's okay, it will thicken up as it cools. If it doesn't thicken up, in a pot on the stove top, cook it down over medium - high heat, constantly stirring, until the extra sauce reduces.


Barilla No-Boil Lasagna
Barilla No-Boil Lasagna
Lasagna Bolognese
Lasagna Bolognese
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