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1 cup onion, diced. ½ cup celery, diced. ½ cup carrot, diced. 5 cloves garlic, chopped. 1 tablespoon tomato paste. 1 ½ jars Carbone marinara sauce. ¾ cup red wine
The rest of the ingredients include mostly pantry staples: olive oil, dry red wine, crushed tomatoes, tomato paste, nutmeg, fresh basil, heavy cream, Parmesan cheese and orecchiette pasta.
COOK and stir onions in dressing in large skillet on medium heat 5 min. or until crisp-tender. Add meat; cook on medium-high heat until evenly browned, stirring frequently.
In 1891, Pellegrino Artusi published a recipe for a ragù characterized as bolognese in his cookbook. [8] Artusi's recipe, which he called maccheroni alla bolognese, is thought to derive from the mid-19th century, when he spent considerable time in Bologna (maccheroni being a generic term for pasta, both dried and fresh [9]).
An imaginative recipe was created on the tables of the poor, where the expensive shellfishes were missing: spaghetti, dressed with cherry tomatoes sauce, garlic, oil and parsley are called spaghetti alle vongole fujute, where clams are present only in the imagination of the people eating the dish.
The amount of tomato in authenic bolognese is very small: maybe a 1/4 cup of tomato sauce or a couple of tablespoons of tomato paste. tilthouse 18:43, 14 November 2005 (UTC) I have also removed the garlic since this is not present in the recipe: for a recipe very close to the tradition see the it:Ragù bolognese.
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a quick-cooking, sometimes spicy tomato sauce without meat served on pasta. Salsa al pomodoro is the usual Italian name. Bolognese sauce: a meat-based sauce originating from Bologna, Italy Sunday sauce: a meat-infused tomato sauce commonly made on Sundays and special occasions; derived from the Italian ragù napoletano.