Showing posts with label lasagna. Show all posts
Showing posts with label lasagna. Show all posts

Sunday, March 22, 2009

Roasted Vegetable Lasagna

Last month, I spoke to a group of teenage girls at a goal setting kick-off activity at church. The name of the activity is New Beginnings-which I love. I need a new beginning quite often, and frankly January first doesn't come often enough. I also love setting goals, which in my opinion is quite different than actually reaching goals, which makes me tired because it sounds like a lot of hard work. Anyway, the theme for the evening was Recipe for Success, and I spoke about the metaphoric connection between creating a recipe and making a success of yourself. People who are much more creative and talented than I am made these adorable little recipe books to hand out. Each girl in attendance created one of her favorite recipes which were printed on little cards and passed out to include in the recipe books. Instead of concentrating on making an intelligent presentation, I started leafing my way through the recipes. This one-Jeni's roasted vegetable lasagna" caught my eye, and not just because it was on flourescent orange paper.
Roasted vegetables, lasagna noodles, homemade tomato sauce, lots of mozzarella--hey wait a minute!-there was no ricotta in this recipe. No bechamel sauce either. I knew I had to try it. It was easy, but time consuming, just like all properly made lasagnas; the silver lining is that it can all be made ahead of time and refrigerated until ready to bake. If the only thing the girls got out of New Beginnings was this fantastic lasagna recipe, I'd say they got the recipe for success. My talk was fine, but the lasagna is truly divine.
Money Saving Tips:
Only use vegetables that are in season to keep the price down. Asparagus could easily be switched for the zuchinni if you can find some on sale. Chopped, bottled artichokes would also work well without any roasting at all. I also reduced the amount of cheese by 2 cups for health and pecuniary sensibility. Stock up on mozzarella when you catch it on sale; it keeps for a good long time. If you don't have time for homemade sauce, Barilla's tomato basil sauce is nice. You can also use the no boil noodles, but you'll have to cover the lasagna with foil and increase the bake time to 1 hour. This makes a huge lasagna, so either invite friends for dinner or pack up the leftovers for lunch.
Jeni's Roasted Vegetable Lasagna for 12
Estimated Cost: $15.00
Notes: Make a double batch of sauce for spaghetti on another night.
For Tomato Sauce:
cooking spray
1 small onion, chopped
2 tablespoons garlic, finely chopped
2 (28 ounce) cans crushed tomatoes, undrained
6 tablespoons each chopped fresh basil and oregano
(or subsitute 2 tablespoons each dried)
2 teaspoons sugar
1 teaspoon salt
For Lasagna:
10 lasagna noodles
1 medium bell pepper, coarsely chopped
1 medium onion, coarsely chopped
2 small zuchinni, sliced (I left these out)
8 ounces sliced mushrooms
1/2 teaspoon salt
1/4 teaspoon pepper
6 cups shredded mozzarella cheese (I used 4 cups)
1 cup shredded parmesan cheese
Coat non stick pot with cooking spray. Cook garlic and onion over medium high heat for two minutes, stirring often. Stir in remaining ingredients. Heat to boiling, reduce heat and simmer 15-20 minutes. Meanwhile, boil the water and cook the noodles. Preheat oven to 450. Coat foil lined cookie sheet with no stick cooking spray. Place pepper, onion, zuchinni, and mushrooms on cookie sheet and sprinkle with salt and pepper and coat with spray. Roast for about 20 minutes, or until vegetables are tender. Reduce oven temperature to 400 if you are planning to bake your lasagna right away. Coat a 9 by 13 inch baking pan with cooking spray. Spread some of tomato sauce on the bottom; top with three noodles, more sauce, vegetables and cheese. Repeat layering two more times. (Can be made up to two days and kept covered and refrigerated until baking time.) Bake uncovered for 20 to 25 minutes.
Up Next:
Tuesdays with Dorie
Blueberry Crumb Mini Cakes

Monday, January 5, 2009

It's Still Christmas in Italy and Make One/Freeze One Lasagna

Happy New Year; but don't finish celebrating quite yet....
If you're an Italian, then you are still celebrating the Christmas season. If you are an American than you are already on a diet and your full trash can is by the curb. But what do you do when you're both????
In Italy, the festivities begin on Christmas Eve with a family fast, solemn gathering around the nativity set, an evening at church, and fast breaking feast. In the morning, families return to church, and continue to attend for the next twelve days, stretching the holiday well into January. On January 6, the Epiphany, a good witch comes bringing gifts. It is said that "La Befana" lost her way when trying to visit the Christ Child, so instead delivers gifts to well-behaved little children on the very day of the Three Kings. My two little charges are always happy to receive a last little Christmas present from the kind Italian witch, and I'm always happy that I could buy that little Christmas present at an After Christmas Sale.
In our house, we eat Italian food through the holiday season. It looks so festive on the plate to be eating tomato sauces with fresh basil and oregano, deep red and lively green. For Christmas Eve dinner, as I mentioned, we feasted on bruschetta, lasagna, fettucini alfredo, salad and Italian bread. I'm dismayed to realize that I didn't take a single picture. Sometimes as the hostess, all of your time and attention are needed to make the party a success. And sometimes you are a forgetful little twit. What happens when you are both???( I have so many New Year's Resolutions to make this year. I should have saved my last year's list. I'm still working on the same things. )
Thank goodness that I had these lasagna photos in my archives. This is not my grand "Christmas Eve Sausage and Four Cheese" version of lasagna, but my weeknight version of lasagna, a kinder, gentler recipe for January. Let it be known that not many Italians would really be having lasagna for Christmas Eve dinner. Traditional meals center around eel and panettone, but my Italian family-like most Italians I know-have their own ideas about how things should be done. Why let tradition stand in the way? Since there are only four for January weeknight dinners at my house, I make a quickie version of lasagna in a loaf pan. The no cook noodles from Barilla fit perfectly. And while I'm at it, I make another loaf pan to freeze.
Buon Natale and may your holiday season last throughout 2009!
Money Saving Tips: If you have leftover cooked pasta, skip the lasagna noodles and follow the recipe to make a layered pasta dish instead. If you are short on loaf pans, line the pan with tinfoil with a large overhang. Freeze the lasagna, remove it from the pan and wrap it tightly in foil. Make a big batch of your own marinara from the big economical cans of tomatoes and freeze it in zip top bags for future dinners.
Make one Freeze One Lower-Fat Weeknight Lasagna
Estimated Cost for 2 loaf pans: $7.50
Tips: Add cooked, crumbled sausage to the top of ricotta layers, if desired, for a heartier dish.
2 cups part skim ricotta cheese
1/2 cup parmesan cheese
1 egg
1 teaspoon each dried basil and pepper
1/4 teaspoon salt
3 and 1/2 cups part skim mozzarella, divided
4 cups Tomato and Basil Marinara Sauce, from a jar or your favorite recipe
6 no boil lasagna noodles, (I use Barilla)
In a small bowl, combine ricotta, parmesan, egg, basil, salt and pepper. Coat a loaf pan with no stick cooking spray. Spread bottom with 1/2 cup marinara sauce. Top with one noodle. Spread thinly with heaping 1/2 cup ricotta mixture. Sprinkle with 1/2 cup mozzarella. Top with 1/2 cup marinara sauce, another noodles, 1/2 cup ricotta mixture and 1/2 cup mozzarella. Top with 1/2 cup marinara sauce, another noodle and 1/2 cup more marinara sauce. Sprinkle with 3/4 cup mozzarella. Coat a sheet of tin foil with no stick cooking spray. Place on top of pan. Repeat process for another lasagna. Bake for 40 minutes at 400 degrees. Remove foil and bake an additional ten minutes. (Thaw frozen lasagna completely before baking.)
Coming Tomorrow:
Tuesdays with Dorie FANTASTIC Pear and Almond Cream Tart

Sunday, October 19, 2008

Butternut Squash Lasagna with Rosemary and Garlic

Oh, mama. When I spotted this gorgeous fall lasagna recipe on the ever-inspiring Proud Italian Cook's blog, I had to make it post haste. This is Proud Italian's gorgeous photo below. See why I was so impatient to make this one?Sweet roasted butternut squash is layered with pasta noodles and savory parmesan cheese, then smothered with a creamy roasted garlic and rosemary bechamel sauce. I made a half batch in a loaf pan- the perfect size for sheets of no-boil noodles. This was unforgettable straight out of the oven and mouhwatering the next day too. I would have even had it for breakfast if the Quiet Man hadn't packed up the last of it and taken it for a work lunch. How often do you fight over leftovers? This makes one delightful family weeknight dinner, but it's also elegant enough for an adult dinner party-if you can stand to share it. Thanks, Proud Italian Cook! Money Saving Tips: Instead of oven roasting, I used my slowcooker for the butternut squash and garlic. Place wedges of unpeeled squash in your slow cooker and cook on high for about 4 hours. Wrap the garlic in foil and place in the slow cooker on top of the squash. It only costs about 25 cents or electricity to use your slow cooker for 6 hours. Proud Italian Cooks Recipe for a Full Batch of Butternut Squash Lasagna
Estimated Cost: $7.00 for a half batch
Notes: I used the lesser amount of butter suggested and 2 percent milk.
FULL BATCH INGREDIENTS:
About 3lbs. of peeled, seeded, squash in 1/2 in. slices
2 Heads of Roasted Garlic
1 Box of No-Boil Lasagna
Parmesan Cheese around 1 1/2 cups
Bechemal Sauce
First, you need to roast your squash in a hot oven at 425 degrees. till tender. Make sure you drizzle it with olive oil, salt and pepper. It will probably take about 25 mins.
In the meantime make a pot of bechemel by melting 1/4 to 1/2 cup of butter and then mixing in 1/4 to 1/2 cup of flour, keep whisking, then squeeze in your roasted garlic, add salt and black pepper.
Pour about 5 cups of milk in and whisk till thick. When squash is cooked, stir it into the sauce along with the rosemary ( about 1 tbl.) and half of the Parmesan cheese.
Reduce oven temp to 375. Layer it like you would any lasagna. Spray your baking dish, layer the noodles, and spread the sauce mixture all over, and sprinkle with cheese. Continue layering till done. Sprinkle more cheese on top. Cover with foil. Bake around 35 to 40 mins. Uncover and cook till golden brown.

Marie of a Year at Oak Cottage and Anduviya of A Little Bit More (Thanks!) have both tagged me for a lucky 7 meme with accompanying award... I'm not sure you want to know this much about me. I'm not as interesting as all of you, so I'm tagging 7 more of you and bestowing the award down below. You can skip to the bottom, unless you're as nosey as I am.

7 things I did before
1. Make overs for Lancome Cosmetics
2. Legal Research for a patent attorney
3. Translated for Spanish speakers at an OB/GYN clinic
4. created ads for the college newspaper
5. wrote blog entries for Rachel Ray's website
6. teacher training in early literacy
7. telephone market research in Spanish-I lasted one week

7 things I do now
1. Serve on the school Board for a K-8 charter school
2. Run every morning, even when I don't feel like it
3. Teach Humanities part time at a state college
4. homeschool my two little charges (and myself in the meantime)
5. solve the Crossword puzzle
6. Read and try to memorize poetry every morning
7. Get up way too early

7 things I want to do
1. Learn to play the harp
2. Brush up on my French and learn Latin
3. Read the entire Sherlock Holmes collection plus all of Shakespeare
4. Memorize "The Midnight Ride of Paul Revere"
5. Learn to play Sleigh Ride and Maple Leaf Rag very well on the piano
6. Solve the NY times Saturday Crossword puzzle with no blanks
7. Do a better job remembering birthdays

7 things that attract me about the opposite sex
1. A love of reading-even better if he's good at Jeapordy
2. Postive attitude
3. Integrity
4. Kindness and playfulness with children
5. Old Fashioned Gentlemanly habits
6. Enjoys sports and outdoors
7. Must love good quality food. Lots of it. And of course being gorgeous never hurts. But that would be number 8.


7 Favorite Foods
1. Taquitos and Guacamole
2. Homemade Chocolate Buttermilk Brownies with Toasted Pecans
3. Penne a la Vodka
4. Kung Pao Chicken
5. Berry Pie with Vanilla Bean Ice Cream
6. Mashed Potatoes and Gravy
7. Crusty Whole Grain Bread and Good Cheese

7 things I say Most Often:
1. Oh, mama...
2. Ay, mamacita
3. If you two don't hurry up, we're going to be late.
4. Now we're going to be late.
5. Go ask your father.
6. I wish the day was longer.
7. Yawn. Tonight I'm really going to bed early.
7 Tags (and award too; pick one up)
1. Cathy at Tortefeasor
2. Matt of Matt's Kitchen
3. Lori of Rice and Beans
4. Grace of A Southern Grace
7.Natalie at Hot Garlic
Coming at the First Light of Tuesday
Tuesdays with Dorie
Whole Wheat Pumpkin Maple Muffins