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Tag Archives: pasta

Pork, Spinach & Ricotta Cannelloni

30 Saturday Sep 2017

Posted by Fabric of Madness in Dinner, Pasta, Pork, ricotta, Uncategorized

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pasta, Pork, quick, spinach

If you have read my previous posts, you’ll probably have a sense that I am pretty comfortable with easy and quick.   This is one of those recipes too.  I bought pre-prepared lasagne sheets and used a can of Italian chopped tomatoes for the ‘pasta sauce’.  This doesn’t take much time to put together, is tasty and allows you to spend more time watching a movie, sharing a glass of wine, or going for a walk (yes, that’s right, the last option is the one we all do).

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Serves 6.   Turn on oven to around 180C.

  • 500g Pork mince
  • 150g Ricotta Cheese
  • 100 g baby Spinach roughly chopped
  • 2 eggs
  • 1 tbsp mixed herbs
  • 1/2 tsp black pepper
  • Lasagne Sheets (one packet)
  • 400g can tinned Italian diced tomatoes
  • 2 teaspoons pesto
  • 2 teaspoons tomato paste
  • 1 1/2 cups grated mozzarella
  • Combine pork, ricotta, spinach, eggs, mixed herbs and pepper in a large bowl. Mix until well combined.
  • Take lasagna sheets and cut into 2 or 3 sections depending on the size of your lasagna sheet.
  • Spoon the pork mixture onto the centre of each sheet of lasagna, then roll the sheet to enclose the filling. Brush each edge with milk to seal the join.
  • Mix canned tomatoes, pesto and tomato paste in a small bowl (to save dishes perhaps the one you already mixed the pork in – I would)
  • Put a tablespoon or so of the tomato mixture into the bottom of the dish you are going to bake the cannelloni in.
  • Place each roll, seal side down in a baking dish in a single layer.
  • Pour the tomato mixture over the cannelloni and sprinkle the top with the grated cheese.
  • Bake in the oven for 25-30 minutes until the cheese is bubbling.
  • Serve warm with salad or vegetables.   We had fresh lettuce from the garden (first of the season – and it is Very Good), with some sliced red pepper, finely chopped chives and shredded fresh basil leaves, finished with a bit of raspberry vinegar and olive oil.
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Ready for the oven

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Comfort Food – Lasagna

29 Sunday May 2016

Posted by Fabric of Madness in Pasta, Pork, Uncategorized

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Tags

lasagne, pasta, Pork, vegetables

Yesterday was a rainy old day and a bit cold as well.   It was still before lunch time but I just knew that I wanted lasagne,  in fact I think I knew the previous night when I bought some pork mince from the supermarket.  Not like me to crave meat,  but for some reason that’s what happened.   Instead of a recipe I am just going to put up some pictures of the process.  Most of us know how to make lasagna,  and there are plenty of recipes online,  I’m sure you will find something that gets the tastebuds going.

First,  cut up some onions and sweat in a pan.

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Add some chopped garlic, celery and parsley.

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Mmmm,  it will be smelling good………

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Add in a can of chopped tomatoes with juices and also a few tablespoons for tomato paste

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Cook this down until thick and the vegetables have gone very soft.   Season with salt and pepper to taste.      In another pan brown off some pork mince,  when it has changed colour slosh in some wine (mine was a Viognier that happened to be open), heat up and then add in some chopped veges.   Ours were some more chopped onion,  carrot and courgette.  Cook for around 10 minutes until meat is cooked through.

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Add most of the tomato sauce in with the meat.  Keep back around 1/2  a cup.

Choose your dish, put a little olive oil on the bottom the pan and then cover bottom with some of the tomato sauce.   Cover this with a layer of lasagne.  I cheated and used bought pasta,  usually make my own which I think is way better, but sometimes short-cuts are just fine!

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After adding the lasagne sheets,  I then used a bit of the tomato paste, and then covered it with some meat (around a third).

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Then place some baby spinach on top of the meat.    Layer again with lasagna sheets and repeat a couple of times.   My lasagne was 3 layers.

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i used the last of the tomato sauce on top layer of the lasgne sheets and then put a bit of parsley and some grated parmesan.   What I have omitted to tell you before now is that I also made a bechamel sauce (with grated mozzarella and parmesan).   This will now be used to cover the dish.

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And then some more parmesan.   Oh boy,  I was looking forward to seeing this baby cooked and ready to eat!

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And here it is straight out of the oven…..ready to go onto the table with a green salad.

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And the creamy, gooey inside view………  Enough for leftovers!

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Pasta e Fagioli Soup with Focaccia

01 Sunday May 2016

Posted by Fabric of Madness in Dinner, Pasta, Soup, Vegetables

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Tags

bacon, beans, bread, focaccia, parmesan, pasta, pesto, vegetables

It must be the colder weather.   I just knew that what I wanted to eat needed to be soup, needed to be pasta, and needed some freshly baked bread.  What I didn’t know was what it was called.  So my apologies to any purists out there – this version was created and then I realised nothing is ever really created (well, ignoring the amazing items that come from Heston) and found that Italy has the name for my pot of bubbling goodness.

tiny little pieces of pasta just waiting to be souped

tiny little pieces of pasta just waiting to be souped


Enough for 3 or 4 people, or 2 really hungry ones:

3 tbs olive oil
1 onion finely chopped
3 cloves garlic finely chopped, or fewer or more, up to your taste
1 carrot diced
4 slices bacon finely chopped
1x400g can diced tomatoes opened
handful parsley chopped – I also had some basil that I chopped with the parsley – use whatever herbs you have on hand (or dried ones if your garden is bare
about 1 litre chicken stock yup, I cheated, and used the little pots of stock that you add water to. They are probably one step up from stock powder, but hey I’m not saying this is gourmet
150g soup pasta to be perfectly honest I would use any pasta shapes I had at home, just happened to have ‘soup pasta’. They are tiny little shapes of pasta that work well for soup.>
1 x 400g can cannellini beans opened and drained – you could be Very Organised and cook up your own, but this dinner is all about speed – after all it’s Saturday night and we have to watch the rugby
parmesan grated – as much or as little as you like – Mr MWCED likes his on the side so not much went into the soup – I grated about ½ cup and it all got used
Pesto to taste, about a teaspoon
salt&Pepper to taste – will depend how salty your stock is – I always grind a fair whack of pepper into my sauces and soups
  • Heat pan with a tablespoon of oil and brown off the bacon. Once this is cooked put aside.
  • Clean out pan and add rest of olive oil. Heat and add onion, let sweat a few minutes then add garlic and carrot.   Cook for around 5 minutes or so, then add tomatoes and half of the parsley. Cook for about 10 minutes.
  • Add half the stock and then pasta.   Stir continuously for around 6-8 minutes until pasta is soft. Add more stock as needed. Soup should be quick thick.
  • Add cannellini beans, a bit more parsley, the bacon and heat through. At this stage add parmesan and maybe a bit of pesto if you like.  Check taste and season with salt and pepper if needed.

This is a recipe that can be adapted however which way. Add more /different vegetables, experiment with herbs, use different pasta, add some chopped Italian sausage, just have fun.   And, more importantly, eat some delicious soup!

Italian Pasta and Bean soup

Because I had been thinking of soup most of the afternoon (I was cold therefore I needed to think warm things),  I was able to be ultra-efficient and get some ingredients into the breadmaker in preparation for dinner (usually I far from ultra or efficient!).   My Focaccia recipe came from a much used bread recipe book (Alison Holst’s Bread Book). Once the breadmaker had finished the dough cycle,  I then kneaded it for about 10 minutes – you know, until that time that the dough feels smooth and doesn’t need extra flour, doesn’t stick to your hands, and makes you feel kind of dreamy and proud of your domestic skills.   Roll into a rectangle, around 20cm x 30cm, place on an oven tray (I line it with baking paper) and put in a warm place for around an hour (my warm place was the oven which had been previously warmed and then turned off).   After an hour the dough should have doubled in size.  Turn oven to 225 Celsius.   Poke the loaf with your fingers to create holes over the surface.  Brush over oil and or whatever toppings you wish.  i had some homemade pesto which I mixed with a little olive oil and spread that over the bread then finished off with sprinkling Maldon salt.    Bake for around 15 minutes, until golden brown top and bottom and you Just Have To Take It Out Of The Oven And Feel Great Satisfaction.

Go on, you can do it!

Go on, you can do it!

 

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