What Is Bolognese Sauce?: Featured Video
What Is Bolognese Sauce?: Featured Video
The meat adds body and umami, but you don’t need
meat for a beautiful Bolognese.
In this vegetarian version, while not the same as a traditional Bolognese, roasted cauliflower and mushrooms provide every bit as
much flavor and texture as the meat version. Serve it over spaghetti, fettuccini, linguine, or pappardelle noodles, and you’ll enjoy a
satisfying, filling dinner full of robust roasted vegetable flavors.
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The process of making this is not a slam-dunk in terms of time, but it does provide cooking therapy. When the steps occupy your
mind, you can begin to focus on the moment, a good thing when times are challenging.
The cauliflower and mushrooms roast in the oven while you start the sauce. Roasting concentrates and deepens their flavor while
you get going on the next few steps on the stovetop.
Typically, it starts with a soffritto (finely chopped carrots, celery, and onions) gently cooked in butter. Milk or cream, white wine,
and a small amount of tomato enrich the sauce.
The ingredients are added in stages, with each ingredient taking time to cook before adding the next ingredient. When they are all
in the pot, the sauce simmers for three to four hours to produce a finished product that is more meat than tomatoes, with a very
rich and luscious texture.
Sally Vargas
While the meat version includes a soffritto, ground meat, milk, and wine added in stages to deepen the flavors, the vegetable
version uses a few other tricks to coax out hearty flavors from the vegetables.
These are:
These little moves take your sauce from just so-so to so, so delicious. Lentils add protein and thicken the sauce, giving it a similar
consistency to meat sauce.
Ingredient Substitutions
If you don’t have every ingredient for this recipe, it’s easiest to contemplate substitutions when you know purpose they serve.
Cauliflower: Has a neutral flavor that merges seamlessly into the tomato sauce. When chopped into small pieces, it gives
the sauce thickness with texture. You could use crumbled textured vegetable protein , small cubes of firm tofu, or roasted
chopped carrots and celery.
Mushrooms: Add an umami flavor and could be substituted by the above ingredients or crumbled seitan. Seitan, made from
fermented soybeans or whole grains, has a nutty taste.
Depending on the type you choose, you may need to adjust the cooking time. Also, since the sauce is made in a wide skillet or
sauté pan, more water or vegetable stock may be required, because the liquid in the wide skillet evaporates during longer
cooking. You are looking for a consistency that is not soupy, but at the same time, not so thick that it is not pourable. Like, for
example, meaty Bolognese sauce!
Red or yellow lentils will be tender after 15 to 20 minutes of cooking, and I prefer the red variety primarily for speedier
preparation.
You could use French green (puy) lentils and black lentils. They hold their shape in cooking but take longer to soften.