How to Make the ULTIMATE Meat Sauce | Ragù alla Napoletana Recipe

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  • Опубликовано: 11 янв 2025

Комментарии • 1 тыс.

  • @PastaGrammar
    @PastaGrammar  Год назад +70

    Happy Sunday! If Mamma Rosa asked YOU what you would like to eat for Sunday lunch, what would your answer be?

    • @killianmmmoore
      @killianmmmoore Год назад +5

      Fileja pasta with Nduja are incredible
      But have heard there is also Calabrian ragu? If so would love to see

    • @Jean2235177
      @Jean2235177 Год назад +3

      Definitely ragú!

    • @ragazzotexano
      @ragazzotexano Год назад +2

      A bollito misto is similarly easy to prepare and also takes a good bit of time to cook. It is also shockingly decadent.
      From a different corner of the world, a good seafood gumbo has that religious-experience quality to it.

    • @TheShamrocKing
      @TheShamrocKing Год назад +2

      For sure Ragu!! Sunday =Ragu day❤

    • @joshuaglaude1549
      @joshuaglaude1549 Год назад +1

      I like lasagna.

  • @dannylionsmom
    @dannylionsmom Год назад +156

    Memories. My mom passed 11 months ago. This went deep in my heart. Every Sunday of my entire life. The entire neighborhood could smell her Ragu. ❤️ I miss you mom. More than words could ever say.

    • @steveh1460
      @steveh1460 Год назад +1

      🙏

    • @joecutro7318
      @joecutro7318 Год назад +1

    • @deniseg812
      @deniseg812 Год назад +4

      I can't say Ragu. Keep thinking of that slop in the jar. I grew up with sauce.

    • @mariannebecker5132
      @mariannebecker5132 Год назад +3

      So sorry for your loss. I hope this ragu brings comfort to your heart.

    • @ccrccr3907
      @ccrccr3907 Год назад +3

      My calàbrian grandmother made ragu every Sunday also. But she sauteed meatballs made with pork and beef and added them to the pot with ribs, saugsage, and sometimes braciole as well. When we entered her home the smell carried us to the huge pot simmering on the stove. We would try to dunk bread into the pot and she would tap our wrist with her wooden spoon and say, "just a looka no toucha!" We would beg to set the table because we couldn't wait too long to eat.

  • @jpp7783
    @jpp7783 Год назад +68

    I love how this wasn’t just a cooking lesson, it was history, art, poetry, all merged.

    • @susanjsnook7826
      @susanjsnook7826 11 месяцев назад +1

      YES!! A complete gift of Love to serve to those you Love. I’m from a Sicilian family so speak with absolute wonderful memories growing up.

  • @lioninwinter9316
    @lioninwinter9316 Год назад +132

    Loved the "You can use olive oil, but it won't be the same." Mother in law was a good cook. People would ask for recipes but say "Mine never tastes as good as yours." She realized this was because people would substitute things. Those people were then shocked when the dish turned out differently. 😂

    • @anton1949
      @anton1949 Год назад +4

      We use salt pork, gives that special taste similar to her recipe.

    • @deniseg812
      @deniseg812 Год назад +6

      I think a lot of times it's the taste in a person's hand and the inner clock that knows when to stop adding.

    • @WILLNEVERCONFORM
      @WILLNEVERCONFORM Год назад +1

      ​@@deniseg812 perfectly said

    • @tarantellalarouge7632
      @tarantellalarouge7632 11 месяцев назад +3

      Absolutely : some stuff cannot be substituted, they are mandatory ! i

    • @KenS1267
      @KenS1267 6 месяцев назад +8

      People act like lard is bad for them when it actually is no worse than most other cooking fats and the taste is simply unmatched. If you make biscuits with lard you'll never go back.

  • @marykoufalis7666
    @marykoufalis7666 Год назад +69

    Eva holding her mom in such high regard is a beautiful thing to watch even though Harper tried to compliment her.

  • @trackstick
    @trackstick 11 месяцев назад +7

    È completamente folle! Vivo al confine tra Germania e Austria. L'Italia è a meno di 3 ore da qui. Andiamo regolarmente in vacanza in Italia e qui abbiamo uno o due buoni ristoranti italiani e molti negozi che vendono cibo italiano.
    Ma alla fine è una donna italiana che vive negli Stati Uniti ad aprirmi gli occhi su ciò che conta davvero nella cucina italiana. Grazie per questo!

  • @MichaelJOlson
    @MichaelJOlson Год назад +22

    Eva saying that "you need to taste it before you taste it with your love' is the most Italian thing I've ever heard in my life love it!

    • @aris1956
      @aris1956 Год назад +1

      These are things that can only come out of a true and authentic Italian, those who truly love what they do in the kitchen, because it is truly done with love and not just to fill their bellies.

  • @mayoindy9744
    @mayoindy9744 Год назад +25

    I had a Neapolitan Ragu in Naples last summer (first time visiting Italy) and I literally cried tears of joy - that's how amazing it was

    • @TheGeenat
      @TheGeenat 4 дня назад

      😮‍💨…. I actually felt that. And I’m afraid that experiencing this for myself will change the direction of my life. Sounds crazy, but at the very least I need to visit and just go from there.

  • @futuredirected
    @futuredirected Год назад +26

    Ragú is a Mamma’s (or Nonna’s or Zia’s) Love, on a plate. Thank You for demonstrating that Love, Eva e Harper! ❤

  • @tony_25or6to4
    @tony_25or6to4 Год назад +11

    Growing up, most of the time, the older generation called it gravy. I asked my Calabrian grandmother the difference. She said, "if there's meat in the sauce, its gravy". Sunday gravy is famous.
    The best is sneak dipping a chunk of good Italian/Sicilian into the gravy

  • @lindaa2437
    @lindaa2437 9 месяцев назад +5

    I love rigatoni and ricotta cavatelli with this meat sauce (Americans have labled it as Sunday sauce) 😋😋😋😋
    For those of you who are not familiar, ricotta cavatelli are homemade cavatelli where ricotta is an ingredient used in making the pasta dough. The resulting pasta is as light as a fluffy cloud.

  • @jasonkaye4490
    @jasonkaye4490 Год назад +22

    My family was fortunate to have an Italian cook from
    Abruzzi and when Eva said Sunday Ragusa starts at 5am brought me back to that wonderful aroma filling the kitchen. She would start at 5am the off to church at 8 and the ragu was on a low simmer for 2pm lunch..
    Thank you for the memories.
    Ragusa on next Sunday menu...

    • @foofghtr
      @foofghtr 11 месяцев назад +2

      My grandparents on my mother’s side are from Roseto in Abruzzi, my grandmother was born 1886 and she brought all those recipes here with her and my mother learned all of it.
      Yeah the gravy is made a little different here these days, the meat we use are the meatballs, made from beef pork and veal and Italian sausage.
      Also here we eat way larger portions than in Italy, and a fresh Italian hard bread to clean the dish off is mandatory for me…
      My fathers side is from Naples, my grandmother Mary on that side was a good cook but no where close to my grandmother Elisa..

  • @anco865
    @anco865 Год назад +31

    Eva, I can relate to being awaken by the awesome scent of my mom's ragu sauce on Sunday mornings too. My mom would make meatballs to add to her ragu Occasionally I woke early enough and would be able to flatten the meatballs in the frying pan and put a few aside before she added them to the sauce. Always delicious. I still do it to this day when I make my ragu. Thanks for the flashback. Cheers.

  • @happytosti7715
    @happytosti7715 Год назад +44

    It’s been 11 years since my father past away. His “secret” ingredient was pork chops. This reminds me of him. I would also add making this is also a way to remember those family members that have passed. I am going to make this to honor my late father.

    • @asdfds6752
      @asdfds6752 Год назад +3

      Thank you for sharing this beautiful memory!

    • @dannylionsmom
      @dannylionsmom Год назад

      ❤❤❤❤❤

    • @steveh1460
      @steveh1460 Год назад

      🙏

    • @axsheldon
      @axsheldon Год назад +4

      Because the pork with a bone always makes it delicious!

    • @SunnyCarnivore
      @SunnyCarnivore 11 месяцев назад +3

      My family did neck bones because we couldn't afford anything more but it was so good!

  • @annamariaayyad2891
    @annamariaayyad2891 Год назад +18

    Thank you Eva and Harper for bringing back my childhood memory of running home from church on Sundays to be at the table on time for my mom's wonderful ragu. She would start very early using various meats on the bone, home-made sausage and ribs. Woe to anyone who was late to Sunday lunch. One sunday I was running so fast, worried I would be late, that my shoe flew off and I had to go back and get it. Lol, I lost my shoe for the ragu.

  • @carmelaburrone5029
    @carmelaburrone5029 Год назад +10

    Happy Sunday everyone! I'm 63 yrs old and grew up to the smell of Ragu cooking every Sunday when I was growing up. It was a familt tradition I followed until my now, 34 yr old son, left for college. It was my favorite meal of all time(with a side salad & Fresh Italian bread) and still is...

  • @phyllisnicholas2603
    @phyllisnicholas2603 Год назад +8

    My family is from Isola delle Femmina in Sicily. Every Sunday at 2:00 we met for the very large family dinner. I miss those days. We had the meat ragu or couscous with fish, and a lovely fish brodo. We live on the coast, and my nonno was a commercial fisherman, so seafood was usually included. I still occasionally prepare these meals, but it’s not the same without the large family gathering around the table. Watching this video is quite nostalgic for me. Thank you for sharing this.

  • @blackflagqwerty
    @blackflagqwerty Год назад +5

    That woman is so right about not being precise when it comes cooking a dish like this, it's an artform that you have to look, feel, touch and taste to get the balance just right. Baking on the other hand is straight up science.

    • @ocdtechtalk
      @ocdtechtalk 26 дней назад

      If I wanted to measure I'd be a baker. I'm a cook.

  • @comodoregoatknuckle6301
    @comodoregoatknuckle6301 Год назад +14

    OK, two things about this fantastic video: firstly, I know exactly what Eva means when she says that the meat has a lot of moisture and sounds different when seared. It doesn't sound crispy, it actually sounds like there's a little stream running somewhere in the flat. Yes, I know it sounds crazy, but I can't explain it any other way.
    Secondly, my mum and grandma used to cook big meals on Sundays and I always wondered why. For some time now, I've realised how clever that was. With the leftovers and a few modifications, you could easily feed the family for two more days without having to cook elaborately every day. I have now adopted this tradition.

    • @tuberNunya
      @tuberNunya 3 месяца назад

      Pro tip. Leave the meat uncovered in the frig for 2-5 days uncovered and the water will escape.

    • @judyjohnson9610
      @judyjohnson9610 25 дней назад

      I don't know how far this tradition goes, but Monday was often laundry day, which is often a big undertaking. Then Tuesday was ironing. Makes perfect sense to make Sunday dinner go for an extra couple of days.

  • @Sparkplug4712
    @Sparkplug4712 11 месяцев назад +4

    Every Sunday, my Nonna made this dinner just like this with fresh homemade pasta. Then after pasta she would serve the meat with roasted potatoes and vegetables and antipasto side dishes. She always served way too much food with so much love ❤️
    My family from Naples

  • @vickitucker9930
    @vickitucker9930 Год назад +20

    I love so much how Eva describes the whole cooking process of this Ragu as such an act of love. She has raised my level of cooking for my family far beyond just putting food the table - it brings special meaning to it, it’s an act of love. ❤️

  • @carmelasortino8979
    @carmelasortino8979 Год назад +16

    I remember waking up to the smell of ragu on sundays as a young girl. This was sunday in my house. My mom got up early and made the ragu so it would be ready for 1 oclock in the afternoon. Those were the days. I try to carry on the traditions but its just not the same.

    • @expo1706
      @expo1706 Месяц назад

      În Italia?

    • @carmelasortino8979
      @carmelasortino8979 Месяц назад

      No. My parents immigrated to toronto, canada in 1956. But they kept and taught us all the traditions of their heritage. To this day I try to carry on the same traditions.

  • @billkelly8222
    @billkelly8222 Год назад +7

    For those wondering about the various spellings (ragu, ragù, ragú, ragout), the standard modern Italian spelling is _ragù_ (using the grave accent mark) rather than _ragú_ (using the acute accent mark). The mark indicates that the second syllable of the word gets the stress. In Italian words that end with stressed -a, -i, or -u are marked with the grave accent. Other Italian words using the grave accent mark to indicate stress are, for example, _città_ (city) and _così_ (thus, so).
    (Italian words that end with stressed -e or -o may bear either an acute accent or a grave accent, depending on whether the final e or o sound is closed or open.)
    The word _ragout_ is an English spelling of the French word _ragoût_ (which uses the circumflex accent mark). The French word refers to various meat and vegetable stews, most of them quite unlike the Neapolitan ragù.
    Although the word _ragout_ appears in most English dictionaries, the word _ragu_ as an English spelling of _ragù_ is not as “official” -- but of course it is convenient when writing in English about the Italian dish.

    • @pawel198812
      @pawel198812 11 месяцев назад

      The Italian word is a French borrowing, so it makes sense to spell it the French way in English.
      What I wonder about is whether the various types of ragù are all inspired by the French dish(es) or if the French word replaced some older native term (like 'cattle' replacing 'fee', 'flour' replacing 'meal' etc.)

  • @gizmo7877
    @gizmo7877 Год назад +28

    Harper, you lucky so and so! You hit the jackpot with Ava. She never rushes her cooking, each step is full of love ❤️ hence the delishness of each dish shines through. I can tell you for a fact, when I make my cookies at Christmas time, if I’m depressed or in a bad mood, if the planets are not lined up, all my cookies are a failure. Love ❤️ IS the secret ingredient! I’d like to know what brand your chef’s knife is and do you sharpen your own? Also, my choice of pasta is a meaty one, thick and solid. The more bite, the better.

    • @steveh1460
      @steveh1460 Год назад +3

      What a blessing. Love the dynamic of you two!❤

    • @PastaGrammar
      @PastaGrammar  Год назад +7

      Love is the key! And the knife set we use most is made by Victorinox.

  • @mantistoboggan2676
    @mantistoboggan2676 Год назад +17

    Harper getting on Eva’s case about the amount of wine and her response is perfect haha. Cooking is more art than science.

  • @Jean2235177
    @Jean2235177 Год назад +44

    I add a lamb shank to my pork and beef. And it’s soooo yummy in the sauce! I love a good ragú! I also make it a day ahead so it gets nice and happy. 😊

    • @29Fiorello
      @29Fiorello Год назад +6

      WOW - I am stunned - I thought that my Sicilian grandma was the only one who added a lamb shank! ANd it is sooo rich - there is nothing like it.

    • @soxandpats2004
      @soxandpats2004 Год назад +2

      I add a lamb shank as well. It brings it to another level!

    • @krisy-in-italy
      @krisy-in-italy Год назад +1

      My MIL always added this! It’s called “Castrato” here. It was always lamb which has been castrated. I haven’t seen this at the butchers in years.

    • @krisy-in-italy
      @krisy-in-italy Год назад +2

      Every Sunday we had lunch at the MIL’s and she made Sugo di Castrato. Sometimes Saige’s were added or pork ribs and/or involtini. Sort of depended what was available. Always added at the very last were her raw horse meat meatballs added to the bubbling sugo. I can still smell that. She is 94 now and has slowed down a lot but she is still very loved and cherished. 💜

    • @xavariusquest4603
      @xavariusquest4603 11 дней назад

      Absolutely....ALWAYS FEEL FREE TO USE LAMB OR MUTTON. I even use goat. Yes....goat. the EARTHY quality is a great change of intensity

  • @juliabobbin4165
    @juliabobbin4165 Год назад +9

    oooffff this one hit me right in the feels. Here I am, watching the video for little tips and tricks to improve my ragù, and next thing you know, Eva is making me cry with her talk of family, tradition, love and home. You guys are so wonderful, thank you!

  • @doreestone4487
    @doreestone4487 7 месяцев назад +5

    My maiden name was Parella. My grandfather was Italian. My grandmother learned to cook this for him. I’m 74 and I still remember her serving this over spaghetti. The meats were each served in separate bowls and passed around. She also added chicken, meatballs, and sausage. My father was the youngest of nine, so dinner was huge. Memories ❤

  • @jhbrown1010
    @jhbrown1010 Год назад +9

    My mother from Sicily also used garlic, bay leaf and dried oregano. We ate a lot rigatoni, spaghetti, and Mafalda. 🍝

  • @UrsoL7bbyidc
    @UrsoL7bbyidc Год назад +13

    The moment in which you both tasted and described the taste almost brought me to tears. This is love! ❤️🇮🇹

  • @apsaraa8209
    @apsaraa8209 7 месяцев назад +3

    Holy cow guys!! Its 108 here where I live so there will be NO cooking hot food...only big salads, but I am off to the store to get the fixins for this to make in a couple of months when I can cook again. I have been wanting to find a REAL ITALIAN channel that makes real unAmerican traditional dishes. I found it!!! Thank you guys...Thank you Thank you Thank you. I am subbed and binge watching while it's baking outside.

  • @Ziggimomspal68
    @Ziggimomspal68 11 месяцев назад +3

    This takes me back to my childhood. New York Italians from Naples call it sauce or ragu. My mother was cooking in the wee hours Sunday morning, my sister & I getting ready for Mass, my dad in his suit taking us to church but picking up some other kids and loading them all in the Impala. Thank you for the memories.

  • @elizabethparkhurst2824
    @elizabethparkhurst2824 6 дней назад +1

    I lived in Naples for 2 years and Roma for 2 years from 16 till 20 years old. I ate everything in sight and too much of it! It took me 2 years to realize I would eat again the next day. I gradually lost the 20 pounds that I gained. The ladies in the dress shops In Napoli said to me, “ ciao Elisabetta Ma Sei in grassATA”. Oh, hi Elizabeth, you’ve gained weight! I would cry. They thought it was a compliment. My heart will always be in Naples. What a beautiful city. Everyone MUST watch the movie PASSIONE. Fabulous

  • @forza-e-honore
    @forza-e-honore Год назад +4

    My parents were Calabrese so ragu was a way of life. The aroma always brings back happy memories. America has excellent meat but the excess water always vexed my mom. Well done!

  • @IamHerbie
    @IamHerbie Год назад +4

    "Dream how it will be in your mouth" Love this!

  • @YonFromDaSouthOfX
    @YonFromDaSouthOfX Год назад +5

    This is my first viewing. I am Cajun (French and Creole heritage in south Louisiana) and I love to cook, especially Cajun and Creole dishes. This format and presentation of yours is delightful and has spawned in me an interest in your style of Italian cuisine. Will be a regular visitor from now on. Thanks to both of you.

  • @amyfu2047
    @amyfu2047 3 месяца назад +3

    I swear grocery stores in US and Canada add water to the meat to make it look better and also to make it a bit heavier so they can charge more.

  • @smooflarkin
    @smooflarkin Год назад +4

    My great great grandfather immigrated to the United States from Cosenza. I am sure this was part of his Sunday when he was younger. These videos make me feel a bit closer to my ancestors.

  • @xavariusquest4603
    @xavariusquest4603 11 дней назад

    At 5:15....there is nothing better and more therapeutic then cooking a big lavish meal for others and watching them enjoy it. It's a feedback that fills the soul. I dont have an external locus....but I am still human. Watching people devour what you lovingly cared to make is a source of joy.

  • @raysouth1952
    @raysouth1952 Год назад +4

    Wonderful! I met someone years ago, the daughter of Italian immigrants, and her ‘quick’ pasta sauce was onions fried to golden, a strip of pork belly added and lightly caramelised then a small tin of tomatoes plus salt, pepper and little extra water. This was cooked until the pork was well cooked, maybe 30 minutes. Sauce was added to pasta and the pork eaten separately. Seems a lot like ragù though with such a short cooking time I’m sure it wouldn’t have the same depth of flavour. Still, it was pretty tasty.

    • @seaslife60
      @seaslife60 Год назад +1

      Same here. My father is from the Veneto region and that was his way of preparing the simple pasta sauce. 😊

  • @watcher63034
    @watcher63034 11 месяцев назад +1

    I wish I had understood in my youth, the expression of love when you cook for people who mean so much to you. I feel that cooking alone, I always make shortcuts with the cheese (canned), patsa, using dried basil instead of real basil, ground beef instead of good cuts of meat and so on. When I cook for others, I put my all into making sure that everything is the best including the setting, conversations, laughter, and background music.
    Thank you for reminding me of the love my mother had when she laboured to provide delicious meals for her family.

  • @slam854
    @slam854 Год назад +10

    I made your Zaeti Polenta cookies. They were to die for. Owner of my Italian market-deli received 15 cookies which she shared with the staff. Anette is a great cook and she said I outdid her on this one. Making more soon. Ragu is next.

  • @thomasbrown9063
    @thomasbrown9063 28 дней назад

    @9:30 Use low heat. "we need to give the time that the wine AVAporate, not just the alcohol...." Luv listening to her explain methods. My FAV, she makes me smile. Always learning.

  • @aris1956
    @aris1956 Год назад +5

    This is the real ragout of Sunday, of the best day of the week when the whole classic Italian family gathers around a table over a nice plate of pasta with a beautiful Ragù alla Napoletana.

  • @brittanyleeful
    @brittanyleeful 11 дней назад

    Beautiful. I miss going to my nana's house every Sunday and having ragu. Everyone crammed into their tiny kitchen in Long Island, N.Y. . I had a great childhood with my Italian grandparents living so close to us. I miss them terribly. Thank you for the great video.

  • @thomasgordon2179
    @thomasgordon2179 Год назад +4

    Thank you for this video! It took me back to my childhood! Every Sunday I’d wake up to the smell of ragu being made by my Italian mother. We’d sit down to an amazing meal after coming home from the noon mass at church. Can’t wait to see what you’re going to make with the leftover ragu!

  • @Percykap
    @Percykap Год назад +4

    I just finished breakfast and now I’m starving for this ragu! Wow!

  • @blugoose86
    @blugoose86 Год назад +9

    Yummy, after years, I still can't get the flavor as good as my grandma's. I defiantly will give this as go. Thanks to you both!

  • @algini12
    @algini12 Год назад +24

    Outside of the lard, this is the Ragu my Nona brought from Sarnano, Marche in 1906. So hers is 117 years old from the recipes' arrival in America. She used spare ribs. No other meat. I still make it, and I never let myself run out. God only knows HOW much older it really is in my family, while still in Italy. 200 years or more??😯
    She taught it to my mom, and it continues on through the generations. Thanks Eva, this was a real treat to watch! 🙂😋

    • @ascendant95
      @ascendant95 Год назад +3

      Only spare ribs huh? I should try that sometime to see how that tastes without the competing flavors of sausage and meatballs or chunks of beef chuck, etc. I noticed Eva didn't really add much in the way of herbs. I forget if she put some basil in or not. What kind of herbs do you use if it's just spare ribs? Sorry for being so inquisitive but I'm trying to become more versatile with my sauces. :)

    • @algini12
      @algini12 Год назад

      @@ascendant95 I've tried it with other meats and pork cuts. For some reason, the unique flavor of my family's sauce, can only be gotten with spare ribs. I can speculate why lets say baby back ribs or pork chops lessons the flavor for me. Or when beef is added with the spare ribs. I think it's the fat content, but I can't be sure. What I can also say though, is that after 5 hours that spare rib meat is falling off the bone and tastes better to me than Barbecue ribs. It's an amazing flavor explosion to me. And yes, those herbs are not needed.

    • @ascendant95
      @ascendant95 Год назад +1

      @@algini12 Thanks so much for responding I'm very grateful. I'm gonna switch it up and try something similar to what you're doing. Wish me luck! I pulled a single serving of my last batch out of the freezer and had it with some fusilli last night. It was very good, but it can be better!

    • @algini12
      @algini12 Год назад +1

      @@ascendant95 Your Welcome! One of the secrets to this sauce, is having great canned tomatoes. That's harder to find than people think. It's the reason the herbs aren't necessary. San Marazano is what's needed if you can find it. No need for sugar if you can find this. But it's expensive, and I do 5 big cans and 2 and 1/2 full slabs of spare ribs ( I always do a lot to freeze). Funny that Eva calls it liquid gold, because I've always called it that myself.

    • @audreyparks7719
      @audreyparks7719 11 месяцев назад +1

      Love this family recipe! Do you eat the meat as is for second course or does it need to be char grilled or have sauce added?

  • @RUTC01
    @RUTC01 Год назад +4

    There is nothing like waking up on Sunday morning to the aroma of ragu on the stove.

  • @arthurboehm
    @arthurboehm Год назад +3

    In my house, this ragu--AKA Sunday sauce--was served only on New Year's Eve. A perfect way to welcome the new year!

  • @richardengelhardt582
    @richardengelhardt582 Год назад +5

    Eva is an amazingly good teacher.😊

  • @allabilitieshomestead
    @allabilitieshomestead Год назад +7

    My Sunday tradition is every Sunday morning I go to Italy. Pasta Grammar and then Nicki Positano

  • @Critter145
    @Critter145 7 месяцев назад +7

    Does Eva ever do videos completely in Italian? Her Italian is beautiful.

  • @subliminalphish
    @subliminalphish Год назад +2

    It has been awhile since I've done a ragi but I do enjoy both it's making and flavor. Taking all that time makes you happy of it's being made. I do enjoy it. Now that all my kids are grown there's just not as many opportunities to make it as much.

  • @mrmikev1
    @mrmikev1 Год назад +3

    Thank you been waiting for a specific video on this. The lard instead of olive oil, and water out of the meat are steps I never thought of. THANKS!

  • @denbo74
    @denbo74 5 дней назад

    I’m Calabrese on both sides and grew up eating this almost every week! The scene of you dishing it out with the rigatoni made me tear up. Memories of my great aunts and grandmothers plating it exactly like this when I was a boy. This was the only pasta sauce my family made. I’m 50 and they are all gone. I miss them so much!

  • @adamb5612
    @adamb5612 Год назад +9

    Good timing, I was actually thinking about trying to cook this sauce literally 2 days ago. Was in need of a good recipe, thank you!

    • @pattiwhite9575
      @pattiwhite9575 Год назад

      Are you a wine drinker? I am not. And I've found the taste of the wine makes it taste different. I op out of the wine addition now. I hope you enjoy a big pot of some either way.

  • @camillethompson6686
    @camillethompson6686 Год назад +2

    That is exactly the way my family makes a ragu, but I have never had it with pork belly. Can't wait to try it. Brava, brava!!!

  • @iwasfixin2b
    @iwasfixin2b Год назад +4

    Your channel is superb and I want to say it is also unique in its approach, production and the way you both pour your personalities into the "sauce". I also want to tell you both how wonderful your website is and how much I appreciate that you take the time to provide even more information about the food and culture that you obviously love - above and beyond a 'recipe' site.

  • @jpiazzola
    @jpiazzola Год назад +2

    I feel about food like you do, This video brought tears to my eyes because I remember having rage as a child too. Took all day but worth the wait. Love your videos.

  • @mariaboccia3810
    @mariaboccia3810 Год назад +15

    Sunday lunch was always an occasion and Ragu was a big part of it. but my family always included bracciole, sausage, and meatball. and if my mom could find pork skin, she made a bracciole with that as well as the beef bracciole. I have been planning to make one this month, and am looking for pork skin to do the whole thing "right"!

    • @rraddena
      @rraddena Год назад +3

      YES!!!!! It was a plethora of things in my mother's "gravy"

    • @ems194
      @ems194 Год назад +2

      Yes! My grandmother’s “Sunday sauce” was a veritable symphony of meats, from pork ribs and bracciole to meatballs and sausage, and the rolled pork skin that nobody would eat but her and my dad (which, of course, forever cemented his status as her favorite son-in-law).

    • @thestickerfarm1254
      @thestickerfarm1254 4 месяца назад

      My local Mexican market sells pork skin, if you have on in your area.

  • @jonlilley2832
    @jonlilley2832 Год назад +3

    I make Ragù when I have the time and plan ahead, but I've never tried such a simple version. Tante grazie per tutto!

  • @LM-ed1op
    @LM-ed1op Месяц назад +1

    Same as here in Oz, but our Sunday lunch tradition is a roast with all the trimmings. Love your channel ❤

  • @dianamorrison9453
    @dianamorrison9453 Год назад +8

    La Chamba cookware is perfect for this kind of cooking, just FYI. It's made from black clay, I think from Colombia? I first found it in Santa Fe where it's used a lot in the regional cooking there. Fantastic cookware as a replacement for Italian terracotta cookware. Great video by the way! I love learning authentic Italian cooking as it has been my favorite country to visit for many years.

    • @professoraviva4628
      @professoraviva4628 Год назад +2

      I bought one of those for a friend for her wedding a couple years ago. (You're right -- they're Colombian). I always meant to get one for myself, but have completely forgotten to do it! I'm glad to be reminded of it. I have other earthenware cooking vessels (two tagines), and -- yes -- they add subtleties that I don't think I'd get with stainless steel or enamel coated dutch ovens.

    • @giancolabird
      @giancolabird Год назад +1

      Thank you. I’m checking into it

    • @JoJo-JoJo-JoJo
      @JoJo-JoJo-JoJo Год назад +1

      Wow that cookware is beautiful! I just checked it out at ancientcookware

  • @karenmar1529
    @karenmar1529 Год назад +3

    Delicious doesn't even come close to how amazing that Ragu looked. My mouth was watering. 😋

  • @markturneymusic8294
    @markturneymusic8294 Год назад +8

    My Nigerian wife is really looking forward to learning to cook Italian food when she gets here. You guys are my GO TO Master Chef instructors.

  • @PhilFry-gj6xq
    @PhilFry-gj6xq 11 месяцев назад

    Beautiful! The Ragu too! My grandmother made very similar when I was young (1970's). She would only make for Sunday and as a child I never really understood. My children are adults now, our Sunday afternoon meals with so many wonderful dishes shows the impact of wisdom from her teachings all those years. Her legacy continues, and will continue as I've given all I know to the next gen, hoping it's never lost.

  • @jeannamcgregor9967
    @jeannamcgregor9967 Год назад +3

    "Shining face of happiness"! Eva is a food poet...what a way to describe the fat on top of the ragu. ❤❤❤

    • @ps5801
      @ps5801 Год назад

      @jeannamcgregor9967 Ooooh! Food poet! And a good one at that. And she's married to Pasta Jesus.

  • @innovationgroupofsouthflor4744
    @innovationgroupofsouthflor4744 9 месяцев назад +1

    Thank you for the great video!

  • @Rochesterhome
    @Rochesterhome Год назад +3

    The memory of the aroma of simmering sauce my Mom or Grandma made on Sunday's lingers in my mind every Sunday. They would give my brother and me a meatball and a fresh riped piece of fresh Italian bread to wipe up the delicious sauce. Both of them would tells us; "Only one dish so we don't spoil our dinner. I can tell you, my dinner was never spoiled.

  • @dianarider7712
    @dianarider7712 Месяц назад

    OMG, I have just discovered you two and I am loving it! I don't know much about my Northern Italian grandmother's cooking because nothing was ever written down. My mother's recipe cards just list the ingredients, no measurements, so I especially love the "you have to feel it" thing. This is so familiar to me as it reminds me of my grandmother's (from Tuscany) kitchen in San Francisco and there were always pots of something on the stove, even for the dog. Keep the cooking videos coming! I recently got my dual Italian citizenship and am trying to absorb all things Italian! Grazie mille!

  • @jvkew
    @jvkew Год назад +2

    I appreciate when you explain why yo do a particular thing. I would never have considered the moisture in the meat,

  • @keppela1
    @keppela1 11 месяцев назад

    "Dream how it will be in your mouth" ... may be the most elegant and inspired words ever uttered in a cooking video.

  • @ZoeMetro
    @ZoeMetro Год назад +3

    Oh my goodness, I want to jump off my sofa and make this delicious ragu for everyone I love. Thank you so much for sharing this beautiful tradition with us.

  • @comeantani3813
    @comeantani3813 Год назад +1

    Bravissima, raramente si vede tanta cura e ricerca della ricetta veramente autentica come hai tu❤

  • @rivox1009
    @rivox1009 Год назад +5

    Dovresti provare a fare alcune di queste ricette a lunga cottura con la pentola a pressione. Io la uso spesso e riduce veramente i tempi, da 5 ore a magari un'ora e mezza o due ore. Insomma la differenza tra alzarsi alle 5 e alzarsi alle 8 la domenica mattina. Ho fatto ragù bolognese, brasati e genovese in pentola a pressione e sono venuti sempre benissimo.
    È anche più ecologico se ci pensi (ed economico)

    • @ilarya8463
      @ilarya8463 Год назад +1

      Puoi farlo il giorno prima. Il ragù deve far evaporare l acqua e diventare denso

  • @maggiefrancis4194
    @maggiefrancis4194 11 месяцев назад

    Trying it right now! I’m in heaven. It really brings out my Italian roots. Thank you for sharing the recipe.

  • @lulumoon6942
    @lulumoon6942 Год назад +4

    Eva's tip about not cooking with red wine if you're *NOT* used to drinking it explains so much! THANK YOU! 👍😎

    • @ascendant95
      @ascendant95 Год назад +1

      I didn't catch that part. So if I don't drink wine at all and just cook with it....................I should only be cooking with white wine? That is something I would like to know if it's true. :)

    • @lulumoon6942
      @lulumoon6942 Год назад +1

      @@ascendant95 Not exactly sure what she meant, but from my experience red wine, whether by the glass or cooked, is too acidic for me. Can't speak to white wine.

    • @NicoleM_radiantbaby
      @NicoleM_radiantbaby 11 месяцев назад

      @@ascendant95 Was wondering that too (I also don't usually drink wine)

    • @GigiStar01
      @GigiStar01 9 месяцев назад

      I think that she meant cook with a quality wine that you would drink. So you could still cook with a red wine, even if you only drink white wine (or if you don't drink wine at all), but make sure that it is a good quality wine.

    • @judyjohnson9610
      @judyjohnson9610 25 дней назад

      The flavour of wine intensifies in the pot. That's one reason to make sure that you use a good wine

  • @myriamnapolitano4934
    @myriamnapolitano4934 5 месяцев назад

    I have binge-watched so many episodes today. I so love you guys... and Eva, you are maravillosa.

  • @markestes570
    @markestes570 Год назад +3

    Excellent video! It cleared up a lot of questions for me. I love cooking Italian and will definitely try this. Can you give some suggestions for what to serve with the meat for the second course?

  • @bradleymcwhorter1753
    @bradleymcwhorter1753 6 месяцев назад +1

    Oh my gosh I made this yesterday I will never buy Ragu in a jar it was so easy and tasted better better than anything I ever had 8 hours cooked to perfection thank you

  • @ascendant95
    @ascendant95 Год назад +7

    I thought Italian-American "Sunday sauce" or "Sunday gravy" was essentially the same thing as Neapolitan Ragu. I was mistaken. I plan on making this version and saving the sauce for next week's video. :) It will be interesting to see what kind of notes are in the flavor from the lard. Also without the presence of garlic. Naturally my grandparents recipe starts with lots of minced garlic in the olive oil. Grandfather was from Isola Del Liri (between Naples and Rome) and grandmother was from Cosenza (yayyyy Calabria!).

    • @matthewackermanaski9687
      @matthewackermanaski9687 9 месяцев назад

      Technically it is, is just recipes differ from family to family, region to region and so there isn't a fixed recipe

  • @ilarya8463
    @ilarya8463 Год назад +2

    Puppuliare! I wanted write it yesterday! Just the mimic was so perfect to describe ragù making 😆

  • @paulwood5803
    @paulwood5803 Год назад +3

    I love a recipe where it is all done by feel and personal judgement rather than precise amounts. Even a recipe that gives me precise amounts I will tend to adjust according to my taste.

    • @ilarya8463
      @ilarya8463 Год назад

      This is bcs in italy every family has their specific recipe with few little changes.

  • @lavaunjohns7796
    @lavaunjohns7796 7 месяцев назад

    What makes watching you two so special is how you incorporate the passion and emotion into your cooking. I can smell the wonderful scents and picture what it was like awaking to this on Sunday morning. Your faces say it all in the end. Love it!

  • @isimerias
    @isimerias Год назад +4

    My family does our Ragu with pork ribs, veal, and meatballs. This last time we made it we didn’t have the pork ribs and let me say, you definitely tasted its absence. I’m sure it’s about having those delicious flavours from the bones in your sauce too!

    • @pamelapacific943
      @pamelapacific943 Год назад +1

      Sausage or pepperoni is good added to any ragu!❤

    • @ascendant95
      @ascendant95 Год назад

      I recently bought a bag of soup bones from the health food store and have been using them for the last few batches instead of a mini slab of pork ribs...............and I think I prefer the pork ribs. I'm always trying new things hoping to hit the jackpot. One guy was saying non-smoked ham hocks were the ticket. I tracked some down (a challenge to find)..........and I disagree. I'm gonna come up with the perfect recipe one of these days lol.

    • @isimerias
      @isimerias Год назад

      @@pamelapacific943 We used to do Italian sausage too, but I think I kinda prefer it without it 🤷🏻‍♂️ it’s not bad though!

    • @isimerias
      @isimerias Год назад

      @@ascendant95 maybe it depends what bones you were getting. Anyway you’ll definitely never go wrong with pork ribs and some type of beef. Like Eva said, it’s up to you which meats you like but we’ve done great by including both.

  • @Susan.I
    @Susan.I 4 месяца назад

    I watched my aunts cook Sunday dinner and learned some of what you are doing!

  • @sooz9433
    @sooz9433 Год назад +2

    Thank you Eva and Harper for another inspiring video. I cant wait til next week!!❤

    • @killianmmmoore
      @killianmmmoore Год назад +1

      My guess is they might re explore Neapolitan lasagna

  • @Fariah-e3x
    @Fariah-e3x Год назад +1

    Sei un mondo di gioia. Grazie.

  • @madhavyu
    @madhavyu Год назад +3

    I make Sunday gravy all the time and i can honestly say it is better than my grandmother´s. Mainly because she is a vegetarian and Mexican and has never cooked ragu in her life.

  • @tinastrendycrochet5107
    @tinastrendycrochet5107 5 месяцев назад

    I love how she describes the frying sound of the meat ❤. The first thing I thought of was the sound of sizzling compared to the sound of boiling. New subscriber and I absolutely adore you guys. I have been saving many recipes from your channel to make for my family. Thank you so so much and please keep them coming

  • @boogiedaddy3434
    @boogiedaddy3434 Год назад +2

    This looks amazing. I'm going to have to try this. Thank you for sharing!

  • @Bob-um6nj
    @Bob-um6nj Год назад +4

    Looks great Eva, us Italian Americans have been making this for years😊 out east we call it Sunday Gravy!

    • @dfb8854
      @dfb8854 Год назад

      We call it Sunday Gravy in Chicago too! 😊

    • @WinstonSmithGPT
      @WinstonSmithGPT Год назад

      Speak for yourself. We called it sauce.

    • @ilarya8463
      @ilarya8463 Год назад +1

      If you call yourself italian you should call ragù. She is right: it's not gravy nor sauce.

    • @1ACL
      @1ACL Год назад

      They are Italian-Americans, and when they immigrated here, and we're committed to learning English, "Gravy" is the word in the English language that most fits what ragu is. Every Italian-American I know calls it gravy. Nothing wrong with that.

    • @ilarya8463
      @ilarya8463 Год назад

      @@1ACL if you use the word pizza or others (bad) like gnocchi, bruschetta, latte, i don't understand why not Ragù

  • @leeball4585
    @leeball4585 11 месяцев назад +1

    As an Englishman, it's so good to see Italians also appreciating lard!

  • @skakee
    @skakee Год назад +13

    My Sunday tradition is to to be the first PastaGrammar viewer, so I have more time to make the dish! ❤️

    • @killianmmmoore
      @killianmmmoore Год назад +1

      They are the best Sunday relaxer

    • @marcobiagioli3905
      @marcobiagioli3905 Год назад +1

      Bene,ma oggi non è possibile!

    • @skakee
      @skakee Год назад +1

      @@marcobiagioli3905 With love, all things are possible. And like Eva said, ragù is love.

    • @marcobiagioli3905
      @marcobiagioli3905 Год назад

      Nessuno mette in dubbio l'amore, ma deve bollire,piano piano almeno 5 ore, lo mangi domani.

  • @Givemeliberty30
    @Givemeliberty30 Год назад +2

    I got choked up a little bit when they were tasting their food. Eating good food can be an emotional experience.

  • @jeanlalonde629
    @jeanlalonde629 Год назад +3

    Ava try cooking the tomato paste in the wine while its reducing. then add the tomatoes. It makes a huge difference in the Richness of the sauce. My family is from Calabria and nap!es, this sauce is in my DNA.

  • @arthureaks3591
    @arthureaks3591 11 месяцев назад

    Eva, thank you for the great recipe and the only cook on you-tube to use a food mill, the best kitchen tool I ever found.

  • @marcobiagioli3905
    @marcobiagioli3905 Год назад +3

    Per ulteriori informazioni sul ragù vedasi "Natale in casa Cupiello" di Eduardo DeFilippo.