Slow Cooked Shredded Beef Ragu Pasta

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A budget cut of beef, unproblematic stowage ingredients, a bit of patience and pappardelle food. This Moderato Burnt Cut Beef Ragu Sauce with Pappardelle may be the monarch of all pastas. It is safekeeping strike one of my all time pick pastas ever!




There's this galling object that's been a infliction in my backside all my excavation chronicle. This situation titled plume. I'm not a jock nutrient photographer, or nutrient stylist, videographer or a chef for that affair. But that doesn't affair. 


I human a imperfectness for all things lento roast, but keeping felled this cut beef ragu is one of my all instance favourites. I'd presume say I bed it regularise much than tralatitious Ragu Alla Bolognese. It's the sliced boeuf that seals the collection for me. The way it soaks up the sauce and clings to the pasta. It's an pure ripper!


I'm pretty trusty I prime scholarly how to play Weaken Steamed Sliced Meat Ragu Sauce with Pappardelle from Lidia Bastianich. Eld ago, her demonstration "Lidia's Italy" was one of the few cookery shows on free-to-air TV and I misused to check them over and over again. Near everything I jazz some European cookery (including the reasonableness why I was hunting doc Cabbage a decennary before it became "cool") is because of Lidia Bastianich. Old schoolhouse, factual heap European.





Advisable Food TO Service WITH RAGU

The mull of what write of pasta to mate with different pasta sauces is a challenge that I get asked quite regularly. Generally, most food sauces give couplet utterly fortunate with most vernacular food types, equal spaghetti, fettuccine, pasta, penne / ziti, macaroni, shells etc.


Slow Cooked Shredded Beef Ragu Pasta
Prep Time
20 mins
Cook Time
2 hrs 30 mins
Total Time
2 hrs 50 mins

Ragu is one of those recipes that really showcases the beauty of Italian cooking - everyday ingredients, fast prep, leave it to cook long and slow and you end up with a luscious dish that tastes like a million bucks. This ragu sauce is ideal to serve with pappardelle pasta because the shreds of beef "clings" better to the pasta. This recipe is based on classic slow cooked ragu recipes from Italian greats including Lidia Bastianich, Stafano Manfredi. It is not an exact replica of any, but is similar to many! This recipe makes enough sauce to serve 8 and freezes great.

Course: Pasta, Slow Cooked
Cuisine: Italian
Servings: 5 - 6 people

Ingredients
Ragu
  • 2.5 lb / 1.2kg chuck beef or other slow cooking beef cut, cut into equal 4 pieces (Note 1)
  • 1 tbsp salt
  • Black pepper
  • 3 tbsp olive oil , separated
  • 3 cloves garlic , minced
  • 1 onion , diced
  • 1 cup carrots , diced (Note 2)
  • 1 cup celery , diced (Note 2)
  • 28 oz /800g crushed canned tomatoes
  • 3 tbsp tomato paste
  • 2 beef bouillon cubes, crumbled (Note 3)
  • 1 cup / 250ml red wine, full bodied (like merlot, cabernet sauvignon), or sub with beef broth
  • 1 1/2 cups / 375 ml water (Note 3)
  • 3/4 tsp dried thyme or 3 sprigs fresh thyme
  • 3 dried bay leaves
  • Extra salt and pepper , to taste
  • To Serve (Not all Sauce is used)
  • 1 lb /500g dried pappardelle, or other pasta of choice (Note 4)
  • Freshly grated parmesan cheese or parmigiano reggiano
  • Fresh parsley , finely chopped (optional)

Instructions
  • Pat beef dry and sprinkle with salt and pepper
  • Heat 1 tbsp olive oil over high heat in a heavy based pot. Add beef and sear each piece on all sides until browned (around 3 minutes in total), then remove onto a plate.
  • Turn stove down to medium low and add remaining 2 tbsp of olive oil.
  • Add garlic and onion and sauté for 2 minutes. Then add the carrots and celery and sauté slowly for 5 minutes.
  • Add remaining Ragu ingredients (except extra salt and pepper) and return the beef to the pot (add the juices too). Turn the stove up and bring it to a simmer, then turn it down to low (Note 7) (see Note 5 for slow cooker and pressure cooker). Cover the pot and let it cook for 2 hours or until beef is tender enough to shred.
  • Remove beef then coarsely shred with 2 forks. Return beef to the pot. Simmer for 30 minutes until sauce is reduced and thickened - beef will soften slightly more during this step.
  • Do a taste test and adjust the seasoning to your taste with salt and pepper. ALSO add a little but of sugar (1/2 tsp at a time!) if it is a bit sour for your taste (Note 6). Place the lid on and set aside until ready to serve (it's even better the next day and freezes well for months!).
To Serve:
  • Bring a very large pot of water with 1 tbsp of salt to the boil.
  • Add pasta and cook for 1 minute less than the recommended cooking time as per the packet instructions.
  • Meanwhile, place 5 cups of the Ragu in a very large fry pan, dutch oven or use 2 normal size fry pans. (Note 4) Heat over high heat while the pasta is cooking.
  • When the pasta is ready, transfer it directly from the pot into the fry pan using tongs.
  • Add 3/4 cup of pasta water into the fry pan.
  • Gently toss the pasta (I use 2 wooden spoons) for 1 to 2 minutes, until the sauce water evaporates and leaves you with a thick Ragu sauce that coats the pasta.
  • Yell for your family to sit down at the dinner table because you need to serve it immediately!
  • Serve with plenty of freshly grated parmesan, or even better, with parmigiano reggiano.

Recipe Notes

1. Cut the beef into 4 pieces that are around the size of a baseball. The cook time of this recipe assumes you do this. In Australia, you can buy chuck and other slow cooking beef cut into cubes or into thick slices. If you use cubes, reduce the cooking time by 30 minutes, and just be mindful that it takes slightly longer to shred because you're working with lots of pieces of beef. 

2. Celery and carrots sautéed with the onions and garlic is called "soffritto" in Italian cooking. It is a very traditional base for many Italian dishes. Cooking them slowly over low heat releases their flavour and adds an extra dimension to this dish. BUT it is optional! I don't often have celery lying around and also, sometimes I don't have the energy for the extra chopping!

3. You could use liquid beef stock instead of water + stock cubes.

4. Pappardelle pasta is the thick wide pasta and is ideal for this recipe because the shreds of beef cling to the thick pasta strands.

You need a really large fry pan or dutch oven to make this using an entire 1lb/500g packet of pasta because you need the space to toss the sauce and pasta together with the pasta water. This is called "emulsifying" and it is a KEY secret to awesome pastas. Italian Nonna's will roll over in their graves if you don't do this! So if you don't have a large fry pan, do this step in two fry pans. I can't stress enough what a difference emulsifying makes to pastas!

5. To make this in a slow cooker or pressure cooker, follow recipe to the end of Step 4 on the stove (or if your slow cooker has a saute function, you can do it all in the slow cooker). Turn heat up to high, add wine, stir and simmer for 3 minutes. Then transfer it all to the slow cooker or pressure cooker, and add all remaining ingredients EXCEPT water and extra salt & pepper.
Slow cook on low for 6 - 8 hours (i.e. 6 is enough, 8 hrs is fine, any more = beef turns to mush). Or pressure cook on high for 40 minutes. Shred beef then following recipe.

6. The sweetness of canned tomatoes differs depending on brand (typically more expensive = sweeter). So adjust the sweetness of your sauce to your taste by using sugar - 1/2 tsp at a time.

7. Turn the heat of the stove down to a level where it is bubbling very, very gently - a few bubbles here and there. This usually LOW on Gas Stoves but might be medium low on electric stoves. If it is too high - i.e. simmering rapidly (lots of bubbles appearing rapidly) - then you run the risk of the bottom burning. If it is too low, it will take longer to cook.


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