Beautiful and delicious! Made with artichokes and chopped spinach.
Ingredients for Sauce:
1 1/2 Large Onions, diced
4 Medium Stalks of Celery, diced
3 Carrots, diced
1 1/2 Red Bell Peppers, diced
1 Tablespoon Extra Virgin Olive Oil
2 pounds 90/10 Fresh Ground Beef
1 pound Ground Pork
1 pound Ground Veal
3 – 28 oz cans of Crushed Tomatoes. (I prefer Italian San Marzano tomatoes which are marketed under several brand names, but if you have a special brand you prefer that is fine.)
4 Garlic Cloves, crushed
2 Tablespoons of Oregano
1 Tablespoon of Thyme
1 Tablespoon of Basil
2 teaspoons of Marjoram
1/2 bunch of flat leaf Italian Parsley leaves, chopped
1 Tablespoon salt and freshly ground pepper
2 Tablespoons Chile Powder
1 Cup Red Wine
Directions:
In a large sauce pot (mine is 7 quarts) on medium high heat, add the Olive Oil .
Add the diced Onions (they should sizzle when they hit the oil) and stir in 2 teaspoons each of Salt and Pepper. Let the Onions cook until translucent, about 8 to 10 minutes, stirring occasionally.
Stir in the Celery, Carrots, and Bell Pepper and cook until heated through, another 5 minutes or so.
**Side note: Two parts onion to one part carrot and celery is referred to by the French name Mirepoix, which is the base flavor of numerous soups, stews and sauces. If you substitute Bell Pepper for the Carrots, it becomes the Holy Trinity, the foundation for American Creole food. As you can see, I take great liberty with both.**
Now you can throw in all the Meat. If you like, you can place all the meat in a big bowl first and mix it all together with your hands, but I just throw it all in the pot and mix it together with a big wooden spoon. Seems to work just as well and it keeps my hands clean.
Important step here. You need to season the meat with the same Herbs you put into your sauce. I have found out the hard way that meat does not absorb the flavor of the sauce and ends up tasting very bland. Add half of the Herbs, Oregano, Thyme, Basil and Marjoram and mix thoroughly into the meat. Pour the Herbs into the palm of your hand and rub your hands together, crushing the Herbs as you add them to the meat. Adds a huge amount of flavor, plus it makes your hands smell good, like you have been out in the garden picking them fresh.
Cook the Meat until brown overall. It does not have to be cooked completely as it will finish cooking while simmering in the sauce.
Now the Canned Tomatoes go in. If you are using San Marzano tomatoes, they will be peeled but whole and you need to break them up. I just stick my hand in the pot and crush them between my fingers. but you have to be a little bit careful to keep the sides of your hand pointed inside the pot. I speak from experience when I say the juices will fly a long, long way if you don’t. If you are not that brave, you can put the tomatoes in another large pot or bowl and crush them with a potato masher or similar device before you add them to the meat. Three or four pulses in a blender works too.
Add half of the remaining Herbs, Salt, Pepper and Chile Powder, plus the crushed Garlic, chopped Parsley and cup of Dry Red Wine.
Bring to a boil then reduce to simmer leaving the lid off to let the sauce reduce by at least a third. If you leave the lid on, the steam will run back into the sauce making it very watery. The sauce is going to be spooned onto individual lasagna noodles so it needs to be thick enough to stay in place, so count on 4 to 5 hours of simmer time.
Taste the sauce often and continue to add the remaining Herbs or Salt and Pepper as needed to maintain that perfect flavor.
If you are in a hurry, grab a bottle of ready made spaghetti sauce, add one cooked hamburger, half cup of red wine and garlic powder. Quick and easy.
Ingredients for Artichoke Filling:
2 pound container of Ricotta Cheese. ( Better yet make your own. It’s really simple and you can find the recipe right here under Cheese)
3 Tablespoons Cream Cheese
2 Tablespoons Pesto
1 teaspoon Thyme
1 teaspoon Oregano
1/4 teaspoon Cayenne
Salt and Pepper to taste
2 boxes chopped frozen spinach drained or the equivalent of fresh. (I like to use fresh…I use three big handfulls…I know…I’m working on getting those exact measurements down.)
14 oz can Artichoke Hearts
Mozzarella slices (one slice on top of each roll)
Mozzarella grated (one cup to sprinkle over the rolls)
Directions:
Add the ingredients in the blender and pulse until everything is combined.
Add a layer on top of a cooked lasagna noodle.
Spoon the Spaghetti sauce over the artichoke mixture and sprinkle with mozzarella.
The Artichoke mixture in a separate bowl.
Here is the first roll finished. I did add a small amount of sauce to the bottom of the pan to prevent sticking and roll up and repeat.
Top each roll with one slice of mozzarella.
Add some extra sauce and sprinkle with shredded mozzarella. Bake at 350 for 45 minutes.
My mother is a fantastic cook, and I wouldn’t want to change one little ingredient in her wonderful Lasagna…so to have my own twist on the same dish. I needed to come up with something totally different, of my own, and we came up with these wonderful lasagna rolls with a savory artichoke filling.
It is such a pretty dish, and one roll comes out of the baking dish beautifully. Much easier than trying to cut a square of lasagna. Each person gets one roll…at least one at a time.
One roll is also perfect to freeze and will serve one person.