Matt's simple bolognese
Serves 4-6
Preparation time: 15 minutes
Cooking time: 30 minutes or as long as possible
Ingredients
Olive oil40g butter
To make soffritto
2 medium carrots, diced small
3 medium brown onions, diced small
4 bacon rashers cut into fingernail size tiles
2 celery sticks, diced small
1 tbsp soft brown sugar
4 cloves garlic, peeled, chopped and crushed
3 tbsp tomato paste
1kg beef mince
1 lemon
500ml red wine
3 bay leaves
Splash Worcestershire sauce
2 cans tinned tomatoes
500ml beef stock
1 large pack of egg tagliatelle the curly nesty ones are nicest
150g Italian parmesan cheese
1 loaf crusty bread and a green salad for serving
Method
1. Place a large pot on the heat.
2. Throw the onions, carrots, celery, bacon rashers into the food processor and blitz until diced small.
3. Pour in 2 tablespoons of olive oil and 40g butter into the hot pan. When the butter is melted and the oil hot, throw in the carrots, onion, celery and bacon. Cook until veg is soft and going translucent at the edges (about 10mins).
4. Sprinkle over 1 tbsp of brown sugar and stir through.
5. Add garlic and tomato paste. Move this all round the pan to cook out for three minutes.
Scrape the tomatoey soffritto into a bowl.
6. Splash in some more olive oil. When it is hot, throw in the mince and cook until browned. Stir the meat the whole time so it cooks evenly. (Depending on the size of your pot, you may find it easier to do this in two batches.)
7. Cut a 4cm long ribbon of lemon peel (without pith) and cut the lemon in half.
8. Scrape meat into the soffritto bowl.
9. Turn up the heat and deglaze using the red wine.
10. When the wine has reduced by half, add back in meat, soffritto, bay leaves, a couple of good dashes of Worcestershire sauce, lemon peel, tomatoes and stock. Stir.
11. Season with salt and a good squeeze of lemon juice from one half of the lemon. Reserve the rest.
12. Bring to the boil covered, then remove lid and turn the heat right down. Cook very gently for up to four hours. Stir occasionally to ensure the sauce doesn't stick and burn. (If the sauce gets too thick, add some more stock and stir it in.)
13. The sauce is ready when it smells irresistible, wonderfully thick, and is a dark red, glossy colour.
14. Taste and season with a little more salt and lemon juice as required. You can now either serve it straight away or cool it and refrigerate before using the next day.
15. Cook the tagliatelle in plenty of salted boiling water in a large pan. When the pasta is cooked but still a little firm to the bite, carefully scoop out a cup of the starchy cooking liquid and drain the pasta.
16. Put a generous ladle of the bolognese sauce in the pasta pot (about two cups) and toss through the pasta. Moisten the combination with a little of the reserved pasta water so it isn't clumpy.
17. Feel free to use as little or as much sauce as you like we've got lots of plans for the sauce that's left over.
18. Serve it with grated parmesan over the tagliatelle, bread for mopping up the leftover sauce and crisp green salad.
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