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Lasagna Recipe

Filed under All Seasons, Beef, Casserole, Comfort Food, Main Course, Pasta

Lasagna

Simply Recipes reader Alton Hoover sent me his favorite recipe for lasagna which he has been cooking up since college days. His original recipe created enough lasagna for a small army so I halved it. What is posted here will easily serve 8 people. From what I can tell the secret behind Alton's lasagna is the addition of sugar to the sauce and using about twice as much cheese as most other recipes. There are a few minor tweeks to his original recipe that I found necessary, for example adding a dash of wine vinegar to the sauce and using a mix of red, yellow, and green peppers because I didn't have enough green pepper on hand.

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Lasagna Recipe

Ingredients

Ingredients:

1 lb lean ground beef
1/2 medium sweet white onion, diced.
1/2 large green bell pepper, seeds and veins removed, diced.
1/2 lb dry lasagna noodles (requires 9 lasagna noodles - unbroken)
1/4 cup sugar
1 28 oz can tomato sauce
1/2 28 oz can (16 oz) stewed tomatoes
1/2 6 oz can (3 oz) tomato paste
1 lb Ricotta cheese
1 1/2 lb Mozzarella cheese (large flat square slices)
3/4 lb freshly grated parmesan cheese
Garlic Power
Oregano
Italian Spice
Salt
Garlic Salt
Parsley diced (fresh flat leaf preferred)
1 Garlic Cloves, minced
White wine vinegar


Cooking Utensils

Large skillet (for browning beef, onions, green pepper)
6 Qt pot (for noodles)
3 Qt pot (simmer sauce)
13" x 9" x 2" lasagna pan (preferably a stainless lasagna pan. Do Not Use Aluminum Pans - the aluminum will react with the acidic tomato sauce, leaching the aluminum and ruining the taste of your lasagna sauce.)
Large colander (drain/blot beef, drain noodles)
Large baking pan (to wash and cool noodles)
Large slotted cooking spoon
Large cooking spoon
Paring knife

Method

1 Brown lean ground beef in skillet until lightly browned and cooked through. Put a few layers of paper towels in large bowl. With slotted spoon, remove browned beef from skillet draining off excess beef fat and put on top of blotting towels. After all the browned beef has been removed from the skillet, drain off and dispose of excess beef fat. Wipe skillet clean with paper towel. (If your ground beef is sufficiently lean, there won't be any excess fat to drain.)

Add diced green pepper and onion to skillet. Brown for a few minutes on medium high heat, add browned beef back to the skillet, lower the heat to low and continue to cook for 5 more minutes stirring frequently.

2 Transfer browned beef, green pepper and onions to 3 Qt. pot. Add tomato sauce, tomato paste. Open stewed tomatoes and dice, then add to 3 Qt. pot. Add oregano, parsley, Italian Spice Mix to taste, probably 2 teaspoons of each. Add garlic and a pinch of garlic salt, to taste. Add a dash of white wine vinegar. Add sugar a couple tablespoons at a time, until desired level of sweetness, no more than 1/4 cup of sugar. Note that it is hard to follow a pure recipe when it comes to pasta sauce. One Italian spice mix is not like the other, nor is one can of tomato sauce not like the other. So you really do need to taste the sauce as you are adding the spices, sugar and vinegar.

Stir and allow sauce to simmer 15-45 minutes to thicken (do not scorch bottom, stir frequently). Remove from heat.

3 Cook 1 lb lasagna noodles in 6 Qt. Pot per cooking directions (al dente). (Note noodles may be cooked in advance.) Stir often to prevent from sticking and be sure that water remains at a low boil during the entire cooking to prevent noodles from sticking. I usually add 1 Tablespoon of olive oil to the cooking water to help prevent sticking and I add 1/2 teaspoon of salt so the noodles are more flavorful. Drain in colander and place in cool water filled pan to keep from drying out and sticking together.

4 In dry lasagna pan, ladle one cup of sauce and spread along the bottom of the pan. Apply a layer noodles 3 length wise (edges overlapping). Ladle in sauce sparingly into center trough of 3 noodles. Apply a layer of mozzarella cheese slices on top of lasagna sauce. Place ricotta cheese dollops (about a Tablespoon) every 2 inches in center of noodles on top of mozzarella cheese slices, sprinkle grated parmesan cheese in thin even layer on top of ricotta cheese. Apply second layer of noodles, repeat three time topping with noodles. If you have extra sauce and cheese you can spread that over the top. Tent lasagna pan with aluminum foil (not touching noodles or sauce). Bake at 375°F for 45 minutes. Allow to cool before serving.

Note - Flavor improves for second service and may be reheated in convention or microwave. Leave aluminum tent on for storage (Do not allow aluminum to touch the sauce.)

Serves 8.

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Posted by Elise on Dec 16, 2004 and indexed Casserole, Lasagna, Pasta

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Comments

I am quite a young cook, but this recipe is to DIE for!!!!!!!

Posted by: Jonathan Lam on April 21, 2005 9:11 PM

Hi Jonathan - yep it's pretty darn good, isn't it?

Posted by: elise [TypeKey Profile Page] on April 22, 2005 5:56 PM

I made this lasagna recipe recently and it was definatley the best lasagna I've ever had!

Posted by: Zarah on April 24, 2006 9:59 AM

Well I tried this lasagne recipe last night and I have NEVER attempted to make lasagne before. I couldn't believe how great it turned out! It was fantastic! My boyfriend took some to work today and was the envy of his workmates :-) Mind you we will be eating lasagne for the next week so perhaps next time I'll halve the recipe. Thanks for a great site.

Posted by: Cathy on July 28, 2006 6:44 AM

Thanks Elise! This was wonderful - I made it to take to a family dinner tonight (along with your garlic bread) six adults and a 14 mo. old (who loved the noodles!) polished off the whole pan! No leftovers - son & daughter both asked for the recipe which I just mailed. We will fix this again and again! Trish, Omaha, Ne

Posted by: Trish on October 1, 2006 6:56 PM

Hey, I have a quick question. Is it possible to prepare a lasagna up to the point immediately prior to baking, freeze it, and then thaw and bake when ready?

I've started to do all my cooking for the week on the weekend, and would really like to try this recipe and save it for a later day in the week. Any suggestions?

Posted by: Michael Marchand on October 9, 2006 12:30 PM

Thank you for the recipe. This is definitely an easy recipe for a first-time lasagna cook like me. The lasagna turned out really good and I will absolutely make it again in the future.

The only thing I remind myself if i make it next time is to make sure that the lasagna pan is not filled too full with the red sauce before baking.

Posted by: coco on January 29, 2007 6:24 PM

I just wanted to let everybody know that this lasaugna is EXCEPTIONAL!! Everybody who ate it loved it...Thank you for such a good recipe, I just finished up the left overs. The only thing I did different was used grated cheese instead of cheese slices of motzerella.

Posted by: Nic Tenthorey (Orangevale, California) on March 28, 2007 9:18 PM

I plan on making this recipe but want to confirm that 3/4# of parmesan is correct, and not 3/4 of a cup. 3/4 of a pound is a lot of grated cheese. Any help would be appreciated.

Posted by: Fred Kujawski on April 11, 2007 2:36 PM

Hi, it's really nice but there are so many ingredients, and it takes a long time. Did anyone else find that?

Posted by: Becky on April 24, 2007 8:22 AM

Fred--I don't know how the original recipe has the proportions, but since the parmesan cheese is only used as an additional layer (as opposed to being an integral part of something, like a bechamel), I would just use your own discretion as to how much cheese you want to have on each layer. That way you can determine how much cheese you do or do not have to buy.

Posted by: maria on May 21, 2007 7:42 PM

Hi Fred - it's definitely 3/4 pound of Parmesan. You wouldn't get much impact from 3/4 of a cup in this recipe.

Posted by: Elise on September 3, 2007 11:44 PM

For storage I substitute plastic wrap as aluminum foil always gets crushed onto sauce while stored in fridge.
I also do not precook the noodles but make my sauce slightly thinner. I make enough sauce held in reserve in case the lasagna turns out drier than expected.
Ps. I also tried sausage sometimes as substitute and other times in conjunction with hamburger.
I agree, this is a great dish.

Posted by: Leon on October 19, 2007 5:16 AM

I am an excellent cook, and I knew how to make lasagna but the last time I made it, the noodles burnt to a crisp on the bottom of the pan. Now, when I say I am an excellent cook, I mean that at the age of 23, I can out cook the typical guy, and as long as I keep my creativity in check, most of my food is delicious. Well, I hate making the same mistake twice if I can help it, your recipe explained to me the importance of saucing the bottom of the pan, as well as using aluminum foil. Thank you, this advice solved both of my problems. Even cooking Elise, and please keep teaching us your secrets.

Posted by: Jericho on December 5, 2007 9:13 PM

Nervously and excitedly tried this recipe for Christmas meal (my first lasagna ever!).. and nearly 3 hours later (yup, amateur I am)..it turn out soooo delicious. Thank you very much! Now we only need a recipe for shedding off those extra kilos (it served 2 in my case :p )
Thanks again.. really appreciate it..

Posted by: Jules on December 29, 2007 1:16 PM

My family loved this recipe, especially my picky little girl. Will be making this again, tonight, along with your Chicken and Dumplings. Thank you for sharing your recipes. I'm one who definetly is benefitting from them as a cook, and my family enjoys eating the foods that I prepare. THANK YOU!!

Posted by: Yvette on January 6, 2008 10:32 AM

Random, but do you have the original recipe? I actually need something that will feed a small army and am wary of doing calculations myself!

Posted by: rachel on January 18, 2008 8:22 AM

This was my first time making lasagna. I'm a special occasion cook (have no time and energy on a daily basis). So I am very inexperienced when it comes to making anything in the kitchen. But I can follow directions very well.

My Husband said this was the best lasagna he's ever tasted, he wasn't just tring to be nice. It really was the best I have ever tasted.

He did take some to work to brag to his buddies.
Hint to everyone making it for the first time: don't skip any steps, do it exactly according to recipe.
It can't go wrong. Fantastic!

Posted by: Jolanta on February 1, 2008 1:22 AM

What about using the no-cook lassagna noodles?

Posted by: Shelly on February 4, 2008 11:58 AM

I was cooking this for dinner tonight and it obviously turned out quite well.The only question I have is,there is so many juice came out from somewhere during baking it.Is it a common issue for lasagna?(This is my first lasagna ever).

Posted by: Vega on February 17, 2008 4:53 PM

You can absolutely make this lasagna up to the point of baking and then freeze. Just allow enough time for it to thoroughly thaw before cooking. A great recipe!!

Posted by: Michelle on March 16, 2008 5:27 PM

Hello everyone. Well I tried this recipe today and my husband is still smiling. It was fabulous. I will defintely try this again. I just wish lasgana wasn't so fattening. But it's defintely enjoyable calories.

Posted by: K. G. from jamaica on April 13, 2008 6:04 PM

This is a great recipe! For those that have diabetes or eat low-carb, it's possible to make this recipe using Dreamfields pasta noodles. They only have 5g of digetsable carbs per serving - but be careful not to overcook or the amount increases.

Posted by: David Edelman on May 12, 2008 7:50 AM

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