I decided
to show you this failed dish because the idea was a good one and it was my
cooking to blame for the outcome. I am
going to try it again but need a smaller dish and more filling – it was my
proportions of pasta to filling that was all wrong.
My first
suggestion is to consider the dish you are going to use to bake the cannelloni
in first – you need one that is tall enough to allow you to stand the
cannelloni up but not so large that you have to put more cannelloni in than
desirable – my dish was too big and so I ended up using 2 whole packets of
cannelloni but in the meantime I had carefully made enough meat sauce and white
sauce for about half that amount!
Meat Sauce
You will no
doubt have a favourite meat sauce for pasta.
I think the key to a good one is letting it simmer slowly for a long
time and adding the liquid in stages as it starts to evaporate.
Ingredients
– mince (ground beef), slice of ham, finely diced carrot, diced courgette
(zucchini), 2 large mushrooms (chopped), small tin of tomatoes, passata, ginger
water, red wine (shiraz), salt, pepper, Worcestershire sauce, bay leaf, oil for
frying (I used a mix of garlic oil and chilli oil). Most meat sauces will have onion in them but
I can't tolerate it – love the flavour but they don't love me back!
Fry off you
carrot first, followed by the minced beef.
Then add your courgette and mushroom.
Then your finely diced ham and the bay leaf. Season with salt pepper and Worcestershire
sauce.
When it is
all browned a bit, add your liquids – gradually alternating them until the
mixture has absorbed it all and it isn't too sloppy. A bit of a labour of love, I'm afraid.
White Sauce
I cheated
with the white sauce. I used a store
bought cheese sauce as a base and then added cream, cream cheese, cayenne
pepper and salt and pepper to it. It
tasted quite nice.
Assembling the dish
I greased
the dish and then put some of the meat sauce on the bottom. On reflection I put too much on the bottom –
I thought it would help the cannelloni stand up but it didn't make any difference. Get your cannelloni into the dish and then
pour just under half your meat sauce into the tubes – this is a bit fiddly but
it is important that the tubes are filled – I found this out the hard way.
Then pour
in your white sauce (reserving a little for pouring in a swirl over the top if
you fancy that sort of thing). Then
finish off with your meat sauce – my cannelloni were only just over half full.
I tried to
make up for this by putting grated cheese on top.
So the end
result was a nice pasta dish where the tubes were filled and horrible dried
pasta where they weren't. The pics make
the dish look better than it was.
Thanks for sharing this. I love learning about what *not* to do. The idea of the dish sounds great, and I'm grateful for the warning about what happens to the pasta if the tubes aren't filled.
ReplyDeleteThis is definitely a great idea. Thanks for sharing your recipe and process and tips to make this one work!
ReplyDeleteNo mistakes, just learning experiences :) I mostly use left-over crepes for my cannelloni, but this is an interesting idea. Don't know what sort of dish I could make it in. Small around, yet tall enough.
ReplyDeleteIt sure looks pretty! I've never tried filling tubes.
ReplyDeleteI LOVE the idea... but for a family of two, I'm thinking this is not something I would try unless all the kids are in town.
ReplyDeleteVery fiddly indeed! Wondering what the advantage to standing the tubes up is? Is it for presentation? I don't like a lot of sauce on pasta and I love the crunchy edges of pasta, so your failure doesn't sound so bad to me! lol (I have been known to nibble on uncooked dry spaghetti and elbow macaroni.)
ReplyDeleteI'm glad you shared this. It's all about learning what what works & what does not. Great idea though.
ReplyDelete