Traditional Bolognese Sauce - Lidia (2024)

Put all 4 pounds of ground meat in a large mixing bowl. With your fingers, crumble and loosen it all up; then toss and crumble the beef and pork together. Pour the white wine over it, and work all the meat through your fingers again so it’s evenly moistened.

To make the pestata: Cut the bacon or pancetta into 1-inch pieces, and put them in the bowl of a food processor with the peeled garlic. Process them into a fine paste.

Pour the olive oil into a large Dutch oven, and scrape in all of the pestata. Set the pan over medium-high heat, break up the pestata, and stir it around the pan bottom to start rendering the fat. Cook until the fat is rendered, about 3 or 4 minutes.

Stir the minced onions into the fat, and cook for a couple minutes, until sizzling and starting to sweat. Stir in the celery and carrot, and cook until the vegetables are wilted and golden, stirring frequently and thoroughly, over medium-high heat, about 5 minutes or more.

Turn the heat up a notch, push the vegetables off to the side, and plop all the meat into the pan; sprinkle the salt on. Give the meat on the pan bottom a few moments to brown, then stir, spread, and toss with a sturdy spoon, mixing the meat into the vegetables and making sure every bit of meat browns and begins releasing fat and juices. Soon the meat liquid will almost cover the meat itself. Cook at high heat, stirring often, until all that liquid has disappeared, even in the bottom of the pan, about 30 to 45 minutes, depending on the heat and the width of the pan. Stir occasionally, and as the liquid level diminishes, lower the heat so the meat doesn’t burn.

Warm the broth in a medium saucepan.

When all the meat liquid has been cooked off, pour in the red wine. Cook until the wine has almost completely evaporated, about 5 minutes. Add the tomato paste into a clear space on the pan bottom. Toast a minute in the hot spot, then stir to blend it with the meat, and let it caramelize for 2 or 3 minutes. Stir in the crushed tomatoes; slosh the tomato container out with a cup of hot broth and add that. Bring the liquid to a boil, stirring the meat, and let the liquid almost boil off, 5 minutes more.

Pour in 2 cups of hot broth, stir well, and add more if needed to cover the meat. Bring it to an active simmer, cover the pan, and adjust the heat to maintain slow, steady cooking, with small bubbles perking all over the surface of the sauce. From this point, the Bolognese should cook for 3 more hours. Check the pot every 20 minutes and add hot broth as needed to cover the meat. The liquid level should be reducing by 1 1/2 to 2 cups between additions. Adjust the heat if the sauce is reducing faster than that or not as fast. Stir often to make sure the bottom doesn’t burn.

During the final interval of cooking, you want to reduce the level of the liquid- once broth, but now a highly developed sauce. At the end, the meat should no longer be covered but appear suspended in a thick, flowing medium. If the meat is still submerged in a lot of liquid, remove the cover completely to cook off moisture quickly. A few minutes before the end of cooking, taste a bit of meat and sauce, and add salt if you want. Grind 1 teaspoon of black pepper right into the sauce, stir it in, and cook about 5 minutes before removing the pan from the heat. If you’ll be using the sauce right away, spoon off the fat from the surface, or stir it in, as is done traditionally. Otherwise, let the sauce cool, then chill it thoroughly and lift off the solidified fat. Store the sauce for several days in the refrigerator, or freeze it (in measured amounts for different dishes) for use within a few months.

Traditional Bolognese Sauce - Lidia (2024)

FAQs

What are the ingredients in traditional Bolognese sauce? ›

Ingredients
  • 2 pounds ground beef.
  • 2 pounds ground pork.
  • 2 cups dry white wine.
  • 6 ounces bacon or pancetta.
  • 1/3 cup garlic cloves (about 6 fat cloves)
  • 2 tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil.
  • 2 medium onions, minced in a food processor or finely chopped.
  • 2 large celery stalks, minced in a food processor or finely chopped.

What is the difference between American and traditional bolognese? ›

Q1: What is the distinction between traditional and American Bolognese? A1: While some of the ingredients in bolognese are similar to those in American-style spaghetti meat sauce, authentic bolognese is thicker, has milk added (which is delicious), and uses far less tomato.

What was the original bolognese? ›

The first recorded reference to a meat sauce served with pasta can be traced back to the Italian cookbook "Artusi." This sauce, made with minced meat, onions, and tomatoes, was served with tagliatelle, but did not include the celery, carrots, and red wine that are typically used in modern-day Bolognese sauce.

Do Italians put milk in their bolognese? ›

It sounds unconventional to use milk in a meaty red sauce, but upon further investigation, it makes total sense why Italians swear by it. According to our Food Director Amira, not only does milk add a rich flavour to the bolognese, but it also “helps cut through the acidity of the tomatoes and red wine”.

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