stevez wrote:I don't have any recepies for you, but it's been my experience that good ragu/Bolognese doesn't usually use ground meat. It is usually more like a "pulled" product...that is to say a meat that seems very well braised until it's falling apart. Kind of like the difference between using ground beef VS. diced beef when making chili.
Notes on Ragù alla Bolognese
All recipes that I know for
ragù alla Bolognese use (at least coarsely) ground meat and, while there certainly are Italian
ragù which do not use ground meat -- in fact, I would say most do not -- they are not
alla Bolognese. This point brings to attention a not inconsequential terminological problem.
Ragù alla Bolognese is a specific kind of
ragù, but it seems to me that when "Northern Italian" cuisine was discovered in this country (and also in Northern Europe), many restaurants decided that they needed to serve
ragù alla Bolognese. Unfortunately, in most cases, they made little or no effort to produce the dish in question, and instead simply applied this prestigious label to whatever sort of
ragù it was that they made.
As with virtually all famous Italian dishes which have a clear local origin but have subsequently been accepted into the national cuisine (insofar as it exists), there is a certain amount of variation in the recipe that one encounters-- and that's true even amongst the Bolognesi themselves. But that said, there are also well-known notions of what the limits of such variation are. To draw an analogy to another dish discussed recently in these terms on CH,
alla Matriciana may have onion, may not, may use white wine, may not, but in Italy it never has garlic.
Such variation can be seen in the recipes by three chefs of considerable stature: the ever-cited M. Hazan, Giuliano Bugialli, and Lynne Rossetto Kasper (author of a fine book on the cuisine of Emilia-Romagna). These differ in 1) the use of butter; 2) the composition of the battuto; 3) use of nutmeg; 4) nature and quantity of tomato products used; 5) the meats used. And beyond the variation seen there, there are further possibilities (e.g., including chicken livers in the meat mix). What they all pretty much agree upon is:
1) use of a battuto of aromatic vegetables, usually with a pork product (usu. unsalted fatback, pancetta, prosciutto); NO GARLIC. (Hazan omits the pork).
2) use of ground beef, sometimes also pork (Bugialli adds pork).
3) use of dry WHITE WINE, not red! (All agree.)
4) use of milk, added gradually to the gently simmering battuto/ground meat mixture.
5) use of some tomato: a) Hazan uses only peeled tomatos and insists that they not be added till after the milk has all been added and cooked into the dish; Bugialli also uses peeled tomatoes but does not use any milk (he's a Tuscan, so one could say 'what does he know!', but he's an extremely knowledgeable cook) ; Kasper uses only tomato concentrate dissolved in beef stock.
A further point of variation is the cooking time. Hazan calls for 4 hours of simmering after all is assembled, while Bugialli and Kasper think a shorter time sufficient (GB: 45 min., then add cream and 20 min. more; LRK simmers for 2 hours).
I would suggest maybe trying some of the following things to address the problems you indicated:
1) Don't fry the ground meat too vigorously, so that it seizes up and gets hard; work it over well with a wooden spoon to break it up as much as possible.
2) Experiment with the tomato product and amounts thereof that you use; perhaps you prefer the more austere version with concentrate only.
3) During the simmering stage, SKIM, SKIM and SKIM some more. Reduce the amount of fat in the dish; it will not only be healthier and more digestable, it will taste better too, and if you're adding cream (omitted by Kasper), it allows you to enjoy that indulgence without turning the dish into a lead-weight.
4) Go for very gentle simmering but I would lean toward the un-Hazanish shorter time,
especially if you follow her (and Bugialli) in using the peeled tomatoes. Tomatoes cooked for hours and hours are,
pace the caricature image of the old Italian grandma over her ever-simmering pot, not such a highly prized thing in Italian cooking as one might think and regarded as bad by many. Two hours should be plenty for the magical transformation from a bunch of ingredients to a single magical substance to work.
By the way, as JeffB says, this is an inherently rather heavy dish and that is why I think skimming off the excess fat is especially important. There will always remain enough for the flavour to stay undiminished.
It's a truly great dish for a special occasion but for me, I like equally or even prefer some of the other, nowadays often sneered-at, southern Italian
ragù preparations.
Of course, all that is assuming that it's
ragù alla Bolognese that you want to make and not some other
ragù. In any event, I hope this is of some help.
Antonius
Post-site-move character problems fixed.
Last edited by
Antonius on May 23rd, 2005, 4:54 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Alle Nerven exzitiert von dem gewürzten Wein -- Anwandlung von Todesahndungen -- Doppeltgänger --
- aus dem Tagebuch E.T.A. Hoffmanns, 6. Januar 1804.
________
Na sir is na seachain an cath.