Lasagna Napoletana

I'm sitting here eating what little is left over of the leftover Lasagna Napoletana Giuseppe whipped up yesterday. The favored meal of Carnevale, it is the feast before the fast if you will.

An over the top, stuff your stomach, clog your arteries kind of dish, it is chock full of all of the forbidden ingredients the faithful would forgo (and perhaps some still do) for forty days and forty nights.

Each heavenly bite after the next, the rich and melty cheeses, the tenderest of meatballs, the savory sauce, the body of the pasta that holds it all together, and I am in heaven. My quickly defunct New Years resolution has now become a distant memory. And Fat Tuesday just took on a whole new meaning for me.

Returning to reality for a moment I start to dig around in the dish looking for the hidden secret that sets this lasagna miles apart from my own version. I'm not sure I've found it yet, but I do know that a good Lasagna Napoletana requires three key ingredients: a good Sunday Ragù; le polpettine, itty, bitty meatballs that melt in your mouth; and an assortment of fresh and fabulous cheeses - ricotta, fior di latte or mozzarella, and grated parmigiana and pecorino.

And yes, a little bit of patience and a whole lot of love.

Ingredients

  • Ragù Napoletano

  • 500 Grams Ricotta Cheese

  • 500 Grams Sliced Mozzarella (we used Fior di Latte – Mozzarella made from cow’s milk)

  • 250 Grams Grated Parmigiano

  • 250 grams Grated Pecorino

  • 500 Grams Ground Pork

  • 2 Eggs

  • Bread Crumbs

  • Salt and Pepper

  • Frying Oil

  • Lasagna Sheets (fresh if you can get them otherwise you will need to pre-cook the lasagna)

Method

Make the Ragù Napoletano

Make the Polpettine

  • Put the ground pork in a large bowl and add 2 eggs

  • Generously sprinkle with about 50 grams each of grated Parmigiano and Pecorino cheeses

  • Add salt and pepper to taste

  • Mix the meat with your hands until the ingredients are well combined

  • Add bread crumbs a bit at a time until the meat mixture firms up but is not too dry - the mixture will pull away from the sides of the bowl and form a ball

  • Roll tiny bite size polpettine - meatballsLightly coat the polpettine in bread crumbsIn a large frying pan heat a generous coating of frying oil

  • Lightly fry the polpettine in batches until they are golden brown

  • Drain on paper towels

Make the Lasagna

  • Coat the bottom of a large baking dish with a layer of Ragù

  • Cover the Ragù with overlapping sheets of lasagna

  • For three layers, spread about 1/3rd of the ricotta over the lasagna noodles

  • Top with about 1/3rd of the polpettine and about 1/3rd of the sliced mozzarella

  • Sprinkle with the parmigiano and pecorino cheeses

  • Spoon on a light coating of Ragù

  • Repeat with two more layers

  • Top with a final layer of pasta

  • Cover the pasta with Ragù and add a generous sprinkling of the grated cheeses

  • Bake about 1 hour and 15 minutes at 350°F or 180°C

  • Let set about 15 minutes before serving

 Buon Appetito!

Lasagna Napoletana was first published on NapoliUnplugged.com on February 16, 2012 as part of NU’s Cooking with Giuseppe series.

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