 Today's world food you can prepare at home is a familiar one to many
people. Baked Ziti comes in a myriad of styles and interpretations.
That's because it's good and everyone takes their own angle at it. For
many of my Italian friends it is one of their favorite comfort foods.
I'm
not going to stretch the truth here, the recipe below is a little
involved, but not really complicated, nor does it demand any special
talents or tools. It's a large recipe that is suitable for a family
dinner or even a party. Generally, this dish will get my family through
three days worth of dinners. Correction: three days worth of welcome
dinners!
Leftovers can make some folks groan, but there's a way
around that kind of resistance. One restaurant trick I suggest using
with this dish, or similar ones like lasagna or chicken or eggplant
parmesan, is having a quantity of hot marinara sauce reserved for
dressing the dish while placing it on individual serving plates. Sure,
this may be common sense for a lot of home cooks, but I cannot count
how many times I've been served similar dishes without the benefit of
some fresh sauce! That's the reason I suggest the extra marinara first
in the ingredients below.
Three-Cheese Baked Ziti with Italian Sausage
1 quantity of Sun-Dried Tomato Marinara Sauce 2 1 lb. boxes of ziti 3 TBS olive oil 4 cloves garlic (crushed) 1 lb. Italian sausage (skin peeled off) 1 lb. ground beef 1 28 oz. can roasted tomatoes (I use Muir Glenn Fire Roasted, see link at top of page.) 1-1/2 cups tomato sauce 1 cup chicken stock 1/2 tsp ground fennel 1 bay leaf Salt and pepper (to taste) 2 TBS sweet butter 1 lb. ricotta cheese 3/4 lb. mozzarella cheese (shredded) 1/3 cup parmesan-reggiano cheese (grated) 1 large tomato (thinly sliced) 1/4 cup Italian breadcrumbs
Preheat the oven to 400°F.
Make the Sun Dried Marinara Sauce and keep it on a low simmer on your stove while you prepare the other ingredients.
Place
a large sauce pan or dutch oven over medium-high heat. Add the olive
oil and when it begins to shimmer add the crushed garlic and cook it
until it browns and softens. Remove the garlic and allow it to cool,
then mash it into a paste and set aside.
Add the Italian sausage and ground beef to the oil and cook until crumbly and well browned.
Add
the roasted tomatoes, tomato sauce, chicken stock, fennel, bay leaf,
mashed garlic, salt and pepper to the sausage and ground beef mixture.
Mix well, raise to a boil, lower to a healthy simmer and continue
cooking for 30 minutes stirring occasionally. You want it to reduce and
thicken.
While the sauce simmers cook the ziti in the normal way
being sure to keep it al dente. When the pasta finishes cooking, drain
it and pour it into a large bowl. Gently mix in the butter to coat the
ziti.
When the sauce is done, check for seasoning and adjust,
remove it from the heat. Add the finished sauce to the ziti and blend
it well.
Take a 10 x 14 baking dish and spread the ziti and
sauce mixture evenly within the pan. Take spoonfuls of the ricotta and
slip the ricotta under the ziti at regular intervals throughout the
ziti. Now firmly level and press the ziti into the pan. You are looking
to get it to pack a little so it will hold it's shape like lasagna
after baking and cooling.
Sprinkle the mozzarella evenly over
the top of the ziti, followed by the parmesan-reggiano. Then take the
tomato slices and lay them out over the top of the mixture. Finally,
sprinkle the bread crumbs over the mix and pop the pan into the oven
for 35 to 45 minutes. You're looking for the top to get golden and
bubbly here.
Remove from the oven and allow it to cool and set for at least 20 minutes.
Take
your serving plates and spoon a generous portion of the marinara onto
it. Carefully cut and remove a block of baked ziti and place it on the
plate. Then add more marinara to the top. Serve with a sprinkle of
cheese and perhaps some basil.
Red wine, crusty bread - HEAVEN!
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