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General Cooking (rec.food.cooking) For general food and cooking discussion. Foods of all kinds, food procurement, cooking methods and techniques, eating, etc. |
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"karen" > wrote in message
oups.com... > Good recipe but it seems like tons of work. Not as much work as you might think. Lasagne is one of the most versatile things you can make and the variations are infinite. And, certainly, by doing a double batch of the sauces, you make the second lasagne quite quickly and easily. Or make both lasagne at the same time and freeze the second in serving-size portions. You have many options. Of course, you also don't have to make put the entire lasagne together on the same day, if you find the task overwhelming (and for you folks who are snickering in the background, cut it out -- many-ingredient and multi-step recipes are intimidating to a lot of people). The meat sauce can be made and stuck into the fridge a day or two before until you're ready to use it; ditto the white sauce. If you don't want to make a white (or a mornay [cheese]) sauce, you can often buy it in boxes in the dairy case (it goes against my lasagne-making ethic [but, then, I also don't use a white sauce in my lasagne], but it's what my husband does for his, and it turns out quite nicely -- not like mine, but still very tasty). Don't forget to add some nutmeg. If you don't want to pre-cook the pasta, you can buy a type that doesn't require pre-cooking in either fresh or dried form (if you're using the dried form, you might want to skip the flour in the meat sauce -- a bit of extra moisture wouldn't be out of place to help hydrate the pasta). Read the package. So don't give up -- try it. You'll probably find that, if you go about the process in a methodical manner, you'll be just fine. Oh, and one more thing. Please quote a bit of what you're replying to -- the vagaries of Usenet propagation are still with us, and your comments can end up hanging alone in the open air, so to speak, completely out of context. -j |
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Holy Toledo, I ain't gonna quote all of that.
We simple people sometimes like simple lasagne. Perhaps we use cottage cheese and sometimes we use ricotta. You know what, it always tastes good. It is very nice of you to give me pointers in things I have done for years. I have used the no-boil pasta many times and liked the results. From here, I have learned that one may use the regular lasagne noodles without boiling with good results. You know what, nobody ever complains about my lasagne. |
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"karen" > wrote in message
oups.com... > Holy Toledo, I ain't gonna quote all of that. Don't quote all of it -- just quote *some* of it. http://www.netmeister.org/news/learn2quote.html > It is very nice of you to give me pointers in > things I have done for years. Well, if it doesn't help you, perhaps it'll help someone else. ![]() > I have used the no-boil pasta many times > and liked the results. From here, I have > learned that one may use the regular lasagne > noodles without boiling with good results. I can't bring myself to not boil the noodles for my lasagne. I'm freakish that way. > You know what, nobody ever complains about > my lasagne. I imagine not; from your description it sounds good. -j |
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![]() "karen" > ha scritto nel messaggio oups.com... > Holy Toledo, I ain't gonna quote all of that. > > We simple people sometimes like simple lasagne. Perhaps we use cottage > cheese and sometimes we use ricotta. You know what, it always tastes > good. > It is very nice of you to give me pointers in things I have done for > years. > > I have used the no-boil pasta many times and liked the results. From > here, I have learned that one may use the regular lasagne noodles > without boiling with good results. You know what, nobody ever > complains about my lasagne. Once upon a time I've tried to use lasagne without boil them. They remained raw (very hard). So, I always boil them (with a little oil in the pan with water) for 3-4 minutes. Cheers Pandora > |
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