Pappardelle Al Ragù Recipe - Tasting Table (2024)

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Make a beautiful pile of meaty pasta

Pappardelle Al Ragù Recipe - Tasting Table (1)

ByTasting Table Staff/

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Recipe adapted from Tim Maslow, Ribelle, Brookline, MA

Pappardelle Al Ragù

5 from 3 ratings

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Tim Maslow of Ribelle in Brookline, MA, stirs mortadella, veal and smoked pork hocks stock for this rich Bolognese.

Cook Time

8

hours

Servings

4

servings, plus leftover sauce

Pappardelle Al Ragù Recipe - Tasting Table (2)

Total time: 10 hours

Ingredients

  • Smoked Stock
  • 2 (2-pound) smoked pork hocks
  • 1 pound raw meat bones (pork, veal or beef)
  • Vegetable scraps (from ragù prep below)
  • Ragù
  • 2 large stalks celery
  • 2 large red onions
  • 1 medium carrot
  • About ¾ cup extra-virgin olive oil, plus more as needed
  • 1 pound ground veal
  • 1 pound ground pork (not lean)
  • ½ pound ground mortadella (sweet Italian sausage can also be used)
  • 3 garlic cloves, very thinly sliced
  • 1 small jalapeño, stemmed, seeded and, finely chopped
  • 1 cup drained and crushed whole canned San Marzano tomatoes
  • 2½ cups dry white wine
  • 8 cups smoke stock (see recipe above)
  • Bouquet garni (a sprig each of thyme, bay leaf and rosemary enclosed in a square of cheesecloth)
  • Small piece of Parmesan rind
  • 4 cups whole milk
  • Freshly grated Parmesan cheese, to taste
  • 2 lemons, quartered and seeded
  • 1 pound fresh pappardelle (store-bought or homemade; see Maslow's recipe)
  • 1 bunch green kale, stemmed and torn into small pieces

Directions

  1. Make the smoked stock: Put the pork hocks and raw bones into a large pot and add just enough cold water to cover. Bring to a simmer over high heat, then lower the heat so the liquid continues to simmer very gently. Agitate the bones, moving them from bottom to top, so that scum trapped underneath has chance to rise. Cook for 1½ hours, skimming the scum from the surface every 10 minutes or so. Add the vegetable scraps from the ragù vegetable prep (see below) and simmer for 30 minutes more. Strain, discarding the bones and vegetable scraps.
  2. Prepare the ragù: By hand or in a food processor, very finely chop the celery, onions and carrot. Save the ends and scraps for the stock (above). Set a large skillet over high heat. Add ¼ cup of the olive oil. When the oil is hot, add the ground veal, pork and mortadella to the hot pan and cook, stirring occasionally, until the meat begins to brown, about 20 minutes.
  3. Meanwhile, set a large, wide braising pan or Dutch oven over medium heat and add ½ cup of the olive oil. When the oil is hot, add the chopped celery, carrot, red onion, garlic and chile and cook, stirring often, until very tender but not brown, 20 to 30 minutes. Add the tomatoes and cook for about 20 minutes more.
  4. Drain most of the fat from the meat and add it to the vegetables. Place over high heat and add the wine. Gently boil until the wine has nearly evaporated, then add just enough of the smoke stock to barely cover the meat mixture. Add the Parmesan rind and bouquet garni and simmer until the stock has reduced and the mixture is almost dry. Add just enough of the milk to barely cover the meat and simmer until nearly reduced. Continue this process, alternating stock and milk, until you use all of the stock and milk or until the sauce is tender and delicious, about 4 to 6 hours. Remove Parmesan rind and bouquet garni and discard.
  5. Taste and add grated Parmesan cheese, lots of olive oil, a squeeze of lemon juice and salt as needed. Leave 4 cups of ragù in the pot and set over medium-low heat, adding a little water to loosen the sauce as needed; reserve the remaining to eat another day or freeze.
  6. Boil the pasta: Bring a large pot of salted water to a boil. Add the pasta and cook until al dente, about 4 minutes. Drain the pasta, reserving 1 cup of the pasta cooking water. Add the pasta to the pan with the sauce, adding a little pasta water to loosen it as needed. Season to taste with additional salt and pepper.
  7. Cook the kale: Right after the pasta hits the water, heat your largest skillet as hot as possible. When smoking hot, add the kale, followed by a splash of olive oil. Cook the kale on one side without stirring until lightly charred, about 2 minutes, then squeeze lemon over the kale and season with salt. Turn the kale over and cook 1 minute longer.
  8. Divide the pasta among four plates and serve topped with the charred kale and additional grated Parmesan.

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Pappardelle Al Ragù Recipe - Tasting Table (2024)

FAQs

What is the best cut of meat for ragu? ›

If you want to cut the meat yourself, get cuts like chuck or flank steak, as per the Bolognese tradition, or even a skirt steak (the diaphragm, practically impossible to find at the butchers). The same goes for pork: choose pieces like the thigh which are fatty and tasty.

What is pappardelle pasta good for? ›

Pappardelle are long, flat and broad ribbons of (traditionally) egg pasta, that originate in Toscana (Tuscany), a region known for rich, intense – and generally meaty – sauces. The large surface area and rough texture of the pasta make pappardelle the perfect accompaniment to more robust sauces and ragus.

What does pappardelle mean in Italian? ›

Pappardelle (Italian: [papparˈdɛlle]; sg. : pappardella; from the verb pappare, meaning 'to gobble up') are large, very broad, flat pasta, similar to wide fettuccine, originating from the Tuscany region of Italy.

What pasta is best for ragu? ›

pappardelle and tagliatelle are great options, as the long and wide strips are perfect for catching tender morsels of sauce. Though slightly harder to come by, mafalde is a great choice too - the long, wavy strands deft at capturing larger shreds of meat.

What is the secret to a good ragu? ›

The secret to this authentic Ragù Bolognese sauce recipe is cooking the meat in milk first before adding white wine and tomato paste. The texture will melt in your mouth! Serve with fresh homemade pasta, lasagna noodles or homemade gnocchi for a classic old world taste.

What makes ragu taste better? ›

15 Tips For Making The Perfect Ragu
  1. For your fat, use olive oil. Fcafotodigital/Getty Images. ...
  2. Master your soffritto. chaechaebyv/Shutterstock. ...
  3. Use the right cut of meat. ...
  4. Use the right cookware. ...
  5. Your wine selection is as important as your meat. ...
  6. Don't rush. ...
  7. Choose your tomato products carefully. ...
  8. Remember to layer your flavors.
Sep 2, 2023

Why does pappardelle taste different? ›

The different types of pasta, taste different due to their thickness and texture, which affects the absorption of the sauce.

What is the difference between pappardelle and lasagna noodles? ›

Pappardelle is a flat, long ribbon shaped pasta. It is wider than tagliatelle but not quite as wide as lasagna.

How many pappardelle nests per person? ›

The pappardelle are dried into little nests and portioned so that 3-4 nests would be enough per person.

What is Ragu vs Bolognese? ›

Even though both are considered meat sauces and are thusly chunky, ragù is more like a thick tomato sauce with recognizable bits of ground beef within it. Bolognese, though, is creamier and thicker because it is made with milk. It is not considered to be a tomato sauce.

What pasta is similar to pappardelle? ›

If you're looking for a noodle that's similar in taste to pappardelle but narrower in shape, tagliatelle is a great choice for a wide array of pasta recipes. Other great substitutes include fettuccine and linguine.

What do real Italians call pasta? ›

Italians call spaghetti “spaghetti “ and pasta “ pasta “.

What pasta do Italians eat with ragu? ›

In Bologna ragù is traditionally paired and served with tagliatelle made with eggs and northern Italy's soft wheat flour. Acceptable alternatives to fresh tagliatelle include other broad flat pasta shapes, such as pappardelle or fettuccine, and tube shapes, such as rigatoni and penne.

Should you mix ragu with pasta? ›

The proper (read: pedantic, old fashioned) way to serve ragu alla bolognese is with tagliatelle. And, yes, traditionally, the pasta and sauce should come well-intermixed, ready to eat.

What pasta holds the most sauce? ›

Tubular shapes like penne and ziti are perfect with hearty, thick sauces like ragu. Rigate, the ridged ones, capture even more sauce. Wide, flat pastas like pappardelle are ideal for sopping up creamy sauces. Generally, the wider the noodle, the heavier the sauce.

Is pork or beef better for ragu? ›

Ragù can be made with any kind of ground meat—most commonly beef or pork or a mixture of the two. But don't rule out veal or lamb or even buffalo. Chicken or turkey can work too, but stick with the dark meat and consider mixing in some nice fatty pork products to help keep your sauce tender and delicious.

Why is my beef ragu tough? ›

If the beef is still tough after 2.5 hours of cooking, it needs to cook for longer. Make sure the sauce is still bubbling very gently (you should be able to see bubbles appearing in the sauce; if not, the heat is too low and the beef will take a lot longer to cook).

Which cut of beef is best for slow cooking? ›

Here are the very best beef cuts to keep on hand to slow cook:
  • Chuck steak.
  • Round steak.
  • Blade steak.
  • Topside.
  • Silverside.
  • Skirt steak.
  • Shin (gravy) beef.
  • Sausages.

What is the best cut of beef for Bolognese sauce? ›

Marcella Hazan wrote that any cook can achieve a great ragù by being careful about a few basic points. First, the meat should not be from too lean a cut; the more marbled it is, the richer the ragù it makes. The most desirable cut of beef is the neck portion of the chuck.

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