Ingredients: (For a printable PDF shopping list click here, or right-click this link and choose 'Save target/link as' to save the list for later.)
1 x 395g/14oz tin of plum tomatoes
1 medium onion (peeled & roughly chopped)
1 stick of celery (washed & roughly chopped)
1 medium carrot (peeled & (roughly chopped)
500g/17.5oz minced beef
2 teaspoons of tomato purée/paste
Medium glass of red wine
8 washed and torn basil leaves
Salt & pepper
Extra virgin olive oil
Equipment:
Large pan/skillet
Vegetable peeler
Food blender/mixer (not essential, but I recommend this handheld mixer)
Timing
Approximately 1 hour
Step 1 – Wash and roughly chop the celery.
Peel and chop the onion and carrot (remembering to chop off the carrot’s ends).
Step 2 – Blend these ingredients a few seconds more in a food mixer if you have one. blender for a few quick seconds. If you don’t have a blender, just chop them more finely.
Step 3 – Cover the base of your pan with olive oil and add 2 full tablespoons of this chopped veg mixture (freeze the remainder for next time - it works for this lasagna's base too).
Put the pan on a medium heat hob, then cook and regularly stir it for 3-4 minutes (in other words, until the veg starts to soften and slightly brown).
Step 4 – Pour in half the wine and leave it heating for 2 or 3 minutes (here we’re evaporating away most of the alcohol, leaving just the flavour of the grapes).
Step 5 – Throw in the mincemeat and mash it up with a spoon (wooden is best). Add half a handful of salt (roughly 1 flat tablespoon) and a pinch or two of pepper.
Cook and stir this mixture on a medium heat for 15 mins. This will start the beef cooking). If the sauce is dry, add a little more wine (apply this rule throughout this bolognese sauce recipe, right until you finish the glass of wine).
Step 6 – After 15 mins, add the basil leaves, tomato purée, plum tomatoes (not the liquid from their tin). Give this a couple of minutes or more – for the toms to soften.
Step 7 – When these tomatoes feel soft under your spoon, break them up, crank down the heat to low (example, setting 2 out of 6) and set your timer for 30 mins.
Stir every 3 or 5 minutes or so.
Note: This is already an Italian style approach to sauce cooking, but many Italian cooks would actually slow this process down, using a lower heat hob and cooking the sauce for a couple of hours. Feel free to do this if you have the time but don’t worry if not… it’ll still be ultra-tasty.
When your sauce has thickened up (like that in the top picture), it’s done!
Done!
Combine this sauce with spaghetti or your favourite short pasta, a glass or two of red wine (I love this Castello di Verrazzano), and if you’re really hungry, some crusty bread… for a deliciously traditional feed.
And next: Now you’ve enjoyed this super-simple bolognese sauce, there’s no reason not to tackle your first mouth-watering meat lasagna (you’ll find this easy because its sauce filling is almost identical).
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