This is our SK house bolognese, nuanced but uncomplicated, the ideal kind of long-simmered cozy cooking project perfect for a rainy weekend.
Prep Time
N/A
Cook Time
4h 0m
Servings
N/A
Difficulty
Medium
Cuisine
Italian
Ingredients
1 small yellow onion
1 slim carrot
1 rib celery
2 cloves garlic (optional)
2 ounces pancetta, diced (optional) or 2 to 3 tablespoons olive oil
Kosher salt
Freshly ground black pepper and red pepper flakes
1 pound ground beef (80/20 or 85/15)
1/2 cup whole milk, or 3/4 cup of a low-fat one
1/2 cup dry white wine
1 6-ounce can tomato paste
Water
1 bay leaf
A few gratings of fresh nutmeg
1 pound dried tagliatelle
Created by: David
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Instructions
Prepare your vegetables: Cut the onion, carrot, and celery into big chunks.
If you have a food processor or high-powered blender, pulse the onion, carrot, celery, and garlic (if using) in the machine until they’re chopped into very small pieces, ranging from couscous to pea-sized.
If you don’t have a machine, just continue to run your knife back and forth over the mix of vegetables, adding the garlic, until they’re chopped very small.,Build the base flavor: Heat a medium/large heavy pot or Dutch oven (- to quarts) over medium-high heat.
If using pancetta, add it to the pan dry and let it cook and crisp, rendering a puddle of fat.
If you’re not using pancetta, coat the bottom of the pan with the olive oil and let it warm up.
For both approaches, add the vegetables and season them generously with salt and pepper, and add a pinch or two of pepper flakes.
Cook the vegetables until they are evenly brown, stirring frequently and not fretting if they stick, it will all work out, about minutes.
Add your ground beef, season it generously with salt and pepper, and cook it until it’s very well-browned, about minutes.
Add the milk (which I do out of order in the photos, and regretted) and cook it until it has disappeared, to minutes, scraping up any stuck bits.
Add the wine and do the same.
Add the tomato paste and cook it for to minutes.
Add cups of water, a bay leaf, and nutmeg and bring to a simmer, then reduce heat to medium-low.
Congratulations, you’ve now reached the “walk away” portion of the recipe.,Cook the ragú: Here’s how the next hours (or more) hours will go: You'll keep a carafe of water near the stove.
You'll stir the sauce from time to time, I find checking in every minutes is about right.
As the water in the sauce cooks off, you’ll want to add more but you don’t want to add more than cup at a time or you’ll end up boiling the meat (shudder) rather than creating a thick, robust ragú.
Taste it from time to time and add more seasoning if needed.
Simmer for hours — longer if you wish, but I promise that solid hours will suffice.
Remove and discard the bay leaf.,To finish: Cook your pasta to to minutes shy of done in well-salted water.
Before you drain it, ladle cups cooking water into your carafe.
Drain the pasta and add it directly to the ragú, along with /to cup of the reserved water.
Cook the pasta and sauce together for to minutes, adding more pasta water if needed to keep it moving.
Serve in wide bowls.
Grated parmesan is not traditional to finish, but as the Academy is probably not coming to dinner tonight, I say you eat it in the way that makes you happiest.,Do ahead: If you don't want to use all of the bolognese right now, it freezes fantastically in a bag with any extra air pressed out.
Defrost in the fridge and bring back to a simmer in the same pot; you'll usually need a couple extra splashes of water to loosen it.,Fresh tagliatelle is the traditional pasta for bolognese, but I used what I could get, a loosely twisted trivelle.
Even Hazan calls using boxed, dried pasta “irreproachable,” as I’m sure she would understand the accommodations a pandemic kitchen requires.,I suspect you're about to ask me about making this in the InstantPot, which I have not tested.,I suspect you're about to ask me about turkey as well, which I have also not tested.
I do know that you'll want to use ground dark meat and that the braising time will be, at most, a fraction of the three hours here — I suspect that minutes will about as far as you can take it without it seeming over.,If you like everything about this recipe but prefer a less tomato-forward bolognese, it's as simple as using half a can of tomato paste instead of all, and doubling the milk.
You won't hurt my feelings.,If you need to make this dairy free, you can use a dairy-free milk instead of whole milk.,If you need to make this without wine, I'd deglaze the pan with to tablespoons white wine vinegar instead.