I do not cook my pasta
sheets beforehand when making lasagna; there, I've said it. No, I do not, and have
various reasons for it; not just out of convenience. Now there are folks out
there who will cry "Blasphemy!", but there will be others who will
sigh in relief that they're not the only ones. Then there are those who have
never made lasagna, and rely on the frozen variety. Poor souls, they thought it was too difficult,
especially the part about manipulating long sheets of pasta without creating
chaos. Dear friends, consider yourselves
saved; saved from freezer burn and microwave lasagna.
Making lasagna is artwork;
creation of a beautifully tasty dish using vegetarian, meat, tomato, or Alfredo
sauce of your choice; cheeses of ricotta, mozzarella, parmesan, provolone, and
even cottage cheese. Or be truly
adventurous with a variety of seafood, or vegetables, using thin slices of
zucchini instead of a grain pasta. For
those who like cheddar cheese within their Italian dishes, including pizza; I
slap you with my glove and cry out, “Infidels, have you no respect!” Keep the cheddar cheese for macaroni and
cheese dishes, keep it out of Italian cuisine!
Place one sheet over the sauce and press down slightly. See that space at the ends of the sheet; this is going to allow the liquids in the sauce to simmer up the sides, be absorbed by the sheets and cook them to tender perfection. The sauce will thicken up with the absorption of the excess liquid. By the way, for the 9" x 5" loaf pans, each layer will have one sheet of pasta, while the larger pans will have 3 sheets, side by side, for each layer.
From the cheese mixture in
the large bowl, spread a thickness of between 1/4" and 1/2" over the
pasta sheet only. Spread a half cup of
sauce over the cheese as evenly as possible. Now we begin to repeat the
layering process with a pasta sheet over the sauce; press down slightly; spread
cheese, sauce, sheet, cheese, sauce, sheet, (however a slight change) sauce,
sheet. We will end up with three layers of cheese filling total; and a top
layer of sauce only between the sheets. Now
that final pasta sheet you laid down; spread sauce evenly over it, but do not
fill in the sides of the pan. Remember, the liquids from the sauce need that
space to move around in; not enough free space and you'll have an overflow onto
your oven floor. Bake the lasagnas for
one hour; spread the remaining Mozzarella and Provolone mixture over the tops
of each and return to the oven for 20 minutes. Beautiful works of art!
Let the lasagna rest for 15
minutes before cutting into squares; the longer you wait, the firmer the
servings will become. While I may have patience in creating this most
outstanding meal, I have none with waiting to eat it! The longer you wait
though, the cooler it is becoming also; so your big decision is do you want it
pretty, but cold; or hot, messy and absolutely out of this world delicious? Stop thinking, start eating!
Mary Cokenour

