Posts Tagged ‘Thanksgiving cooking’

Fran’s Thanksgiving Lasagna

Tuesday, December 2nd, 2008

Thanksgiving is a special holiday for my wife and me. First, we get to go and hang out with her whole family in New York; second we really enjoy visiting New York City, and finally there is Fran’s lasagna night! (which we do every year in addition to our traditional Thanksgiving dinner) New York of course is a land of great bagels and pizza and excellent Italian food, but it’s a real treat when your Italian food comes from the source – an Italian family. Italian food over all is very simple to make, yet it’s very hard to find good Italian food in this country. (Hell, it’s even hard to find in New York) The reason for that is that most people try to add more to Italian food that it needs to have. The beauty of an Italian meal, as with many things in life, is in its’ simplicity.

So here is a real-deal, New York style slice of Italian pre-Thanksgiving celebration on Long Island, which became a family tradition:

Frans Meat Lasagna

Fran's Meat Lasagna

Method:

Sautéing, Stewing, Baking

Fran Cooking

Fran Cooking

Cookware:

Sauté pan, Large Saucepan or Dutch Oven

(Fran says:)

4 28 oz cans of Tuttorosso crushed tomatoes

or San Marzano whole tomatoes put through a food-mill (this is really important!)

3 pounds lean ground beef

1 lb sweet Italian sausage links chopped with casings removed

5 cloves of garlic chopped

1 medium onion finely chopped

Olive oil

Salt, pepper, basil to taste

Brown meat in a separate pan in a small amount of olive oil, and set aside.

Cover bottom of a large heavy bottom saucepan or Dutch oven with olive oil. When hot add onion and sauté until soft, add garlic until light golden color then add crushed food-milled tomatoes, salt and pepper and basil. (Both dry or fresh basil work, but Fran prefers dry) Bring tomato sauce to simmer then add browned meat. Cover and simmer for approximately 2 hours stirring occasionally. Adjust with salt and pepper to taste.

Lasagna

Ingredients:

Cooked lasagna pasta

Tomato sauce (above)

Ricotta mix: Ricotta (3lb) + 1egg + ½ cup Parmesan Cheese – well mixed

parmesan, mozzarella cheese

In a Lasagna pan add a little of Fran’s sauce on the bottom, then add a layer of cooked Lasagna pasta, ricotta mix, mozzarella cheese. Sprinkle Parmesan cheese on top. Add a layer of sauce and repeat the process. Top layer should have sauce on it. Cook for a few hours and add cheese on the top at the last 15 minutes.

Tips & Tricks:

Use only high quality canned Italian plum tomatoes (like San Marzano)

Simmer on low, never boil your sauce

Use heavy cookware – it will prevent your food from burning or hot spots.

Keep it simple.

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About It’s Cookin’!

Thursday, October 23rd, 2008

This is my first post, so I wanted to briefly introduce the concept of this blog, summarizing what you might find here. Hopefully the style of that will be self evident within a few immediate blog posts.

My name is Andy, I live in the San Francisco Bay Area and like many of you I love to cook and share my food and my culinary experiences! More so, I like to have fun with it. I love to experiment, play around with the ingredients, mess with the classic recipes, and add my own twists to things. I also accommodate allergies and intolerances, create recipes of my own, I love to read up on history of cooking and food in general and, of course, have a great meal. I also believe that making a great meal doesn’t have to be too complicated or too involved. Great meals can take 5 minutes or 5 hours to prepare. Its’ greatness is not in the time spent, but in its’ taste.

I feel like it’s important to note that I am not a professional chef, nor do I want to be – I make great money doing what I do (web technologies, design and advertising), and have little interest in screwing up another hobby by making it my job (I have done that already with music, design, writing, web design and photography.) Cookin’ is a blog I’m gonna write for me, and I’m hoping you find my experiences of value as well! This is a personal journey, my own perspective, a constantly evolving style and menu that borrows from all and from all over the world, and seeking inspiration in many outlets. In “my kitchen” there will always be something you can eat and I have time for substitutions as well!

I was inspired to create this blog by my daily explorations of cooking, food, wine and world cuisine. Here I simply would like to share some of the tricks, tips, techniques, recipes, histories, anecdotes, and cooking tools I find useful while I enjoy cooking, and the process (or culture) that goes with it. And I feel there is a culture – a very rich one – carried on by many great professional chefs, superb restaurants, countries, and most importantly, just people that cook everyday for themselves and their friends, families, etc and carry on traditions of generations.

I think food is an “open palette,” so to speak – everyone can join in this blog, I encourage you to comment, write to me, and most importantly share your experience or favorite food.

Enough of the preamble … I would like to actually get into the food aspect… Thanksgiving is coming and I suppose that means there will be plenty to share… Stay tuned…

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