COOKING ITALIAN

Venetian Pasta with Duck Ragu Recipe – author Daniel Bellino

 



BIGOLI with DUCK RAGU all VENENZIANA


BIGOLI in SALSA
BIGOLI with DUCK RAGU






PASTA with DUCK RAGU


Duck ragu with bigoli is a traditional dish here in Veneto where I live. In fact, if you visit the region you are bound to find it in many restaurants. It is also often cooked by the Venetians on holidays or feast days.

Bigoli looks like a very thick spaghetti and is often eaten with various fat-rich sauces; the most well-known bigoli recipe is with duck ragu. In the past, the traditional recipe for this dish involved cooking the pasta in a fatty broth in which a young duck had been boiled. 

The Venetians then made a sauce with flavored butter and the offal of the duck, which they ate with the bigoli. The duck itself was eaten after.


DUCK RAGU Recipe :

Ingredients :

1 whole Duck

5 Tablespoons Olive Oil, and 1 tablespoons Butter

1 Carrot & 2 Clery Stalks, and 1 small Onion

2 Bay Leaves and I bunch fresh Sage

3 tablespoons Tomato Paste, and 1 cup Tomato Pasta (puree)

3/4 teaspoon Salt, and 3/4 teaspoon ground Black Pepper

3/4 cup dry Red Wine

1 pound fresh Bigoli Pasta, or Spaghetti or Bucatini 


Cut the Duck into 4 pieces, and place on a large baking pan. Season with a little salt and black Pepper. Place in a 350 degree oven and roast for 16 minutes.

Take the Duck out of the oven and pour off excess fat that has rendered out of the duck. You can save the fate to use for roasting potatoes at another time.

Place the duck back in the oven to cook more.

Place the olive oil, carrots, onions, and Celery in a large pot and cook on medium heat for 4 minutes. Sprinkle on a little Salt and Black Pepper, and continue cooking on low heat for 7 minutes.

Add the Tomato Paste to pot and cook on high heat for 4 minutes. Add the wine, and cook on high heat for 7 minutes, until the wine half reduced by half its original volume.

Add the tomato paste and sage and cook on medium heat until the tomatoes start to bubble.

Remove the Duck from the oven after it has cooked for a total of 30 to 35 minutes. Drain the fat off the Duck.

Place the Duck pieces in the pot with the Tomatoes. Cook on low heat for about 1 and 15 minutes. Make you stir the bottom of the pot from time to time with a wooden spoon, to keep the sauce from burning on the bottom.

Remove the Duck from the pot and let it cool for about 15 minutes. Also remove the burn of Sage and Bay Leaves from the pot and discard.

Once the Duck has cooled, remove the meat from the bones. Place the duck meat back into the sauce pot and cook on a very low flame for 20 minutes.

Cook your pasta of choice as the duck is simmering.

Take a half cup of pasta water from the pot and set aside. When the pasta is finished cooking, drain the pasta in a colander. Place the pasta back in the pot it cooked in, add about 2 cups of the Duck Ragu to the pot, with a knob of butter and 1 tablespoon of olive oil and mix. 

Divide the pasta among 4 to 6 plates, in equal portions. Add about 3 tablespoons of the Duck Ragu on top of each portion of pasta and serve.

Serve with grated Prmigiano Reggiano or Grana Padano Cheese on the side.

Enjoy !



RECIPE by Daniel Bellino Zwicke

SUNDAY SAUCE

AMERICA’S FAVORITE ITALIAN COOKBOOK

Daniel Bellino Zwicke


GOING to ITALY ?
HOTELS – EUROPE

And WORLDWIDE

When Nonna Makes Sauce – Sunday Sauce Gravy Recipe

 


NONNA GINA PETITTI

NONNA Makes SAUCE

NONNA GINA Makes SUNDAY SAUCE

Recipe – Nonna Gina

MEATBALLS :

2 lbs. Ground Beef
2 Extra Large Eggs
1/2 cup chopped Fresh Parsley
1 teaspoon Salt
1/4 teaspoon powdered Garlic
1/2 cup grated Pecorino Cheese
1/2 teaspoon Black Pepper
1/2 cup Bread Crumbs

Sauce/Gravy:
3 quarts Tomato Puree
1/4 cup Fresh Basil
1/4 cup Fresh Parsley (optional)
Olive Oil
1/2 cup sliced Onion
2 cloves Garlic
4-6 Pork Neck Bones
4-6 Pork Ribs
6 Sweet Italian Pork Sausage
Meatballs (from above)
Salt & Pepper to taste
NONNA GINA PETITTI
Gina Petitti was born in 1935 in Faeto, Italy. Her family ran a farm in Italy and she met her husband, Vito, in the same town. In 1970 Gina, Vito, and her 4 children immigrated to America. Gina’s husband passed away in 2012, but she is surrounded by a large family, which includes 9 grandchildren, and lives 5 minutes away from her eldest daughter in New Jersey. Gina spends her time cooking, gardening, and being an active member of her local Church.







Some More GREAT SAUCE !!!


SUNDAY SAUCE

alla BELLINO alla PACINO

CLEMENZA’S GODFATHER SAUCE

JOE DiMAGGIO’S Mom’s GRAVY

MEATBALLS – BRACIOLE

And MUCH MORE

AMERICA’S FAVORITE ITALIAN COOKBOOK

SUNDAY SAUCE by DANIEL BELLINO



Sauce or Gravy – What do You Call It – Red Sauce Debate

 

“GRAVY” !!!

Or is it SUNDAY SAUCE ???

Whatever You Call It ???

Do You call it “REDSAUCE” ?

It’s The Most SUPREME DISH of ITALIAN-AMERICA

And The ITALIAN-AMERICAN Peoples






SUNDAY SAUCE

The DEFINING BOOK on The SUBJECT

The SUBJECT of SUNDAY SAUCE

“SOME CALL IT GRAVY”
SAUCE, GRAVY, SUNDAY SAUCE, “RED SAUCE” or SUGO ? What is it. It can be a couple different things. It depends on who you are talking to, if they are Italian-American or not, where their family comes from in Italy, and what Italian Enclave in America they grew up in : New York City, Boston, New Jersey, Baltimore, Cleveland, Chicago, or wherever?

Some, when they say Sauce, Sugo, or Gravy, they can be talking about a Tomato Sauce that was cooked with or without meat in it. They can be talking about a Tomato Sauce that was cooked with Meat in it, and the Sauce is served, dressing Maccheroni, but with the Sauce removed, for the Meat ( or Meats) to be served later in the meal, or put aside, refrigerated and served at another time.

Usually, when someone says  “Gravy” they are referring to a sauce made with Tomatoes that meats, such as Italian Sausages, Braciola, Pork Ribs, Meatballs, and or Pork or Beef Neck, maybe chicken parts, Beef Chuck, or veal, in which the sauce is cooked with any combination of some of these meats mentioned, and possibly other meats, such as Lamb or Beef Short Ribs, whatever?

There is no one right answer to what is Italian-American Gravy, “Sauce” Sunday Gravy, Sugo, or Sunday Sauce. Again, it just depends on who is talking and their family background and history. There is now one standard answer, “No Right or Wrong.” The main and  most important thing is that the dish taste good.


CLEMENZA SHOWS MICHAEL

HOW to MAKE SAUCE for a BUNCH of GUYS

RICHARD CASTELLANO as PETER CLEMENZA

And AL PACINO as MICHAEL CORLEONE

In FRANCIS FORD COPPOLA’S The GODFATHER

An ITALIAN- AMERICAN CLASSIC





LEARN HOW to MAKE SUNDAY SAUCE – GRAVY

by Daniel Bellino “Z”

Jersey Shore Crab Sauce Recipe

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JERSEY SHORE CRAB SAUCE

 

There are plenty of Maryland Blue Crabs down on the Jersey Shore, as well as plenty of Italian-Americans. The two go together, and this Crab Sauce for pasta is a specialty of Jersey Italians who love seafood, along with their Brooklyn and New York neighbors. They all love it! So will you. 

RECIPE 

12 Hard Shell Blue Crabs

12 tablespoons Olive Oil

12 Cloves Garlic

1 for each Crab, peeled and chopped

1 Small Onion, peeled and chopped fine 

 1 teaspoon Red Pepper Flakes 
 1 – 28 oz. can whole San Marzano Tomatoes

1 – 28 oz. can Crushed Tomatoes 

 1- 16 oz. can Tomato Puree 
 ½ teaspoon dry Basil 
 ¼ cup chopped fresh Italian Parsley 
 1 pound Lump Crab-Meat, fresh frozen or canned 
 1 pound imported Italian Spaghetti or Linguine 


 Put olive oil in a large pot and heat to high. 

Place the Crabs in the pot and sauté at high heat for 10 minutes. 

 After browning the crabs, remove from pan and set aside. 

 Put onions in pan and cook on medium heat for 5 minutes. 

 Add the garlic and red pepper to pan and cook on low heat for 3 minutes. 

Add whole tomatoes to pan and cook on high heat for 4 minutes whole stirring with a wooden spoon. Add crushed tomatoes and tomato puree. 

Add the Crabs back to the pot. Cook for 90 minutes on low heat. 

 Remove the crabs from pan and let cool on the side. 

Remove all the meat from the crabs and discard the shells. 

Add crab-meat to sauce with your extra pound of lump crab-meat and simmer on low heat for 10 minutes. 

Cook pasta according to directions on package. 

Drain pasta and put back in the pot it cooked in with 8 tablespoons of reserved pasta cooking water. 

Sprinkle pasta with a little olive oil and mix. 

Add 2 cups of crab sauce and half the parsley to pasta and mix. 

Plate the pasta with sauce on 4 plates in equal portions and top with some more sauce and some parsley. 


 Notes: Do not serve with cheese! Italians never have cheese with Seafood Pasta. This is enough sauce for 2 to 3 pound of pasta, or about 12 portions, so after you make this Pasta with Crab Sauce with 1 pound of pasta, you still have plenty left over for another day.
 



The Finished Sauce



“Yummm” !!!



 
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Pasta with Jersey Shore Crab Sauce







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JERSEY CRAB SHORE SAUCE


and Other Great Recipes
in
SEGRETO ITALIANO





by Daniel Bellino Z

.