My Tuscan ragù and the Florentine penne strascicate

How many meat sauces exist in Italy? In between the rich and self-indulgent Bolognese ragù, where the ground beef and the ground pork are cooked with white wine, milk and tomato paste, and the Neapolitan one, where tradition has it that there is no ground meat, but whole pieces of meat that must be cooked slowly in a rich tomato sauce, there is a glimpse of irreverence and local rivalry, of anarchy and tradition, where the Tuscan ragù is slowly simmered at home.

My Tuscan ragù

I have already talked about my family Tuscan ragù here on the blog, about my grandma’s modern version – consider that my grandma and her recipe for ragù are the same age – and about the rich battuto, the finely chopped vegetables, that is her secret.

Today I would like to talk about my family Tuscan ragù with more details, as it is time to add it to my cooking repertoire. If we want to be true to the tradition, though, rather than ragù, here in Tuscany we call it sugo di carne, meat sauce. 

It’s always handy to have a traditional sugo di carne in your cooking repertoire.

Two years ago I decided to share these recipes, staples of a Tuscan repertoire, analysing the ingredients and the process with plenty of details so that, if you want, you’ll be able to include them into your collection and make Tuscan cooking your signature style.

After the crespelle alla fiorentina and the eggplant meatballs, after the ricotta and kale gnudi, after one of the desserts you loved the most, a humble Tuscan apple olive oil cake, and the summer baked eggplants with a breadcrumb topping, I want to share with you the Tuscan ragù. 

I’m not scared by recipes that require a long cooking, they are always more forgiving, especially for beginners.

Take the carbonara, for example: it is much more likely to miss by a whisker that precise balance in between temperature, pecorino, pancetta and wrist movement, which makes the egg velvety and creamy, than you can inadvertently overcook the ragù.

Arm yourself with patiencetime – you’re not required to spend the whole morning watching the pot simmering on the stove, even though I suppose there are worse pastimes – and good ingredients: this will become one of your go-to sauces for pasta. Make a big batch, as in today’s recipe, use some of it for a bowl of tagliatelle, some for a lasagna and freeze what is left in small portions. 

These days are made for ragù: it’s cold outside, the windows in your kitchen will quickly be fogged up by the pot muttering on the stove and smell of ragù, that delicious timeless heartwarming smell, will stick to your clothes as the warmth of your grandma’s hug.

Let’t talk about the ingredients to make a Tuscan ragù

The battuto – the finely chopped carrot, celery, red onion, but sometimes also parsley, garlic or leeks – is the backbone of this meat sauce, sautéed over low heat and then stirred into the ground meat. It is also one of the best kept secrets of my grandmother, her ragù rich with vegetables and flavour. 

As for meat, traditionally at home we use both lean minced beef and minced pork. Sometimes we replace the ground pork with the same weight of fresh pork sausages. The ragù will be tastier but slightly fatter. Finely mince a thick slice of Tuscan prosciutto or spalla (the cured shoulder of the pork) and add it to the ground meat for an old fashioned, robust sauce. Opt instead for chicken livers – or rabbit livers, as my great-grandmother used to do – for a rich sauce typical of the countryside, where the courtyard animals were more common than beef and pork. 

The Tuscan ragù is cooked with red wine, poured in little by little, and with tomato purée (just tomatoes that have been peeled and blended into a sauce), even better if it is your home made tomato purée, made during the heat of summer. To give more character to the ragù and have a more rustic sauce, sometimes I prefer to replace the passata with the same weight of peeled tomatoes, roughly crushed with my hands. Do you want to know another of my grandma’s secrets? Two large tablespoons of tomato paste.

Tuscan ragù

This is the Tuscan version of a ragù, made with ground beef and ground pork, red wine and tomato sauce.  CourseSauce CuisineTuscan Keywordtomato, pork, meat, beef, ragù Prep Time10 minutes Cook Time3 hours Total Time3 hours 10 minutes

Ingredients

  • 1 red onion
  • 2 carrots
  • 3 stalks of celery
  • 1 small bunch of parsley
  • 4 tablespoons of extra virgin olive oil
  • 300 g (2/3 lb) of minced pork meat
  • 500 g (1 1/8 lb) of minced beef meat
  • salt
  • Freshly ground black pepper
  • 200 ml (3/4 cup) of red wine
  • 1,5 l (6 1/3 cup) of tomato purée
  • 2 tablespoons of tomato paste

Instructions

  • Finely chop the carrots, celery, parsley and onion. Use a good sharp knife, and reduce the vegetables in a fine mince. We call this battuto in Italy, while the French call it mirepoix. If you prefer to use a food processor – even my grandma has abandoned her cutting board and mezzaluna for a vegetable chopper – do it in several times. First chop the celery, parsley and carrot, then the onion, just enough to finely shred it. Careful not to reduce the onion in a mush.
  • Cover the bottom of a pot with extra virgin olive oil. Add the finely chopped vegetables. Add also a generous pinch of salt: this will help you to cook the vegetables without burning them, as the salt will extract the moisture from the vegetables.
  • Cook over a low heat for about ten minutes, stirring often. The battuto will be happily sizzling, do not burn it or darken it too much. Now that the battuto is stir fried in the olive oil, we call it a soffritto.
  • Move the pot over medium heat and add the ground beef and pork. Stir with a wooden spoon to break the meat into smaller pieces and mix it into the soffritto. Stir continuously and scrape the ground meat from the bottom and the sides of the pot with a wooden spoon. It will take at least 20 minutes to get to the right cooking point. The meat will release some liquid, so brown it until the liquid has been completely absorbed, and the meat is nicely browned. Now season with salt and pepper.
  • Now add the red wine gradually, and reduce it: pour the red wine in at least three times, reducing it completely before pouring more. Doing this, the wine will flavour the meat, without boiling it.
  • Now add the tomato purée and the tomato paste, stirring thoroughly. The ragù will begin to mutter. Cover the pot, and simmer slowly.
  • Stir from time to time, cooking it for at least an hour and a half, even two hours. The ragù will be ready when you will notice on the surface of the meat sauce puddles of olive oil, now red for the long cooking with the tomato sauce. Keep cooking until you do not spot them.

Tried this recipe?We love to see your creations! Snap a pic and tag @julskitchen and hashtag it #myseasonaltable!

The Florentine penne strascicate

Penne strascicate col sugo di carne is a classic Florentine dish that you often find in local trattorias, along with pappa al pomodoro, ribollita, or beans with olive oil. The penne is the shape of pasta that is almost exclusively used. I prefer the ridged ones, but in Florence they often use the smooth penne: this is one of the very few typical Tuscan dishes based on dry pasta, perhaps the only one.

At the beginning they would use leftover pasta, which needed the heat of a scorching pan and the rich flavour of the ragù to become appetising again. Nowadays, to make this recipe, I cook the penne very al dente, drain them, leaving aside some of the cooking water and toss them in a pan with the meat sauce, a few tablespoons of olive oil, a handful of grated Parmigiano Reggiano and some pasta water. This is when you have to strascicare the penne, which means to drag them in the pan, to toss them, so that they finish to cook in the sauce, absorbing the flavour. Can you imagine them?

More recipes to make your own ragù

Do you have a go-to recipe to make ragù? Does it belong to a specific tradition, or does it distance from it with pride? Has it been handed down in your family from generation to generation?

I’m quite obsessed with ragù, so here on the blog you can find many a recipe, with different ingredients, cooking methods and origins.

Sage and almond ragù. They call it a ragout, though it is as quick to make it as boiling your pasta, even quicker. It won’t require you to cook this sauce for hours as in my grandma’s ragù. It’s not even a pesto, as you won’t need to blend almonds and sage into a smooth sauce as you would do with basil and pine nuts for the classic pesto Genovese, or with my pistachio pesto, or the Tuscan kale pesto, or even a fresh pea pesto. This is just the most essential three ingredient sauce for your pasta. You’ll need almonds, better if unpeeled, as this will add colour to your sauce, fresh sage for an aromatic note and your best extra virgin olive oil.

White pork ragù. I used scamerita, pork neck, which I finely minced, as a base. A generous amount of vegetables, as this is grandmothers’ wisdom, or at least, of my nonna: you can get a rich meat sauce only if it starts with an abundant battutto. Without tomato, the acidic note comes from white wine, poured in little by little to cook the meat. I checked the flavour several times, gradually adjusting the salt. Finally, the Parmigiano Reggiano, generously grated over the tagliatelle, gives the dish a further note of acidity and savouriness.

Vegetarian lentil ragu. Thie ragu is a vegetarian sauce for pasta which won’t make you miss meat: there are lentils, the backbone of the sauce, an abundant amount of finely chopped vegetables, which is the secret of my grandmother’s classic ragout, the butternut squash, which melts into a cream, giving colour and flavour to the sauce along with a generous spoon of tomato paste, and dried porcini mushrooms, which add a depth of taste, an instant reason to celebrate.

Guinea fowl ragù. For the ragù, take your time, collect herbs and patience and you’ll be rewarded with a rustic meat sauce that perfectly represents the peasant cooking of the Tuscan countryside. Not beef nor pork, but poultry, vegetables and time are the essential ingredients here.

Sausage ragù. The sausage ragù is a quick and clever alternative to the classic meat sauce you would make on a Sunday. It requires half the cooking time of a meat sauce made following all the rules, but it will bring in your dish all the richness and flavour of an timeless dish. The homemade gnocchi, made with potato starch instead of flour, are naturally gluten-free, a soft pillow on which to rest dreams and spoonfuls of sausage ragù.

Cinta Senese Ragù. The pork shoulder and the sausages became instead a rustic meat sauce, enriched by those herbs and spices which are typical aromas in this rural area, bay leaves and juniper, also suitable for game, which are well matched to the intense flavour of the cinta senese meat. The sauce, cooked slowly on low heat, mixed with patience and love with a wooden spoon, is cooked with tomato sauce, a jar made by mum in the summer, and red wine, a Chianti of course, to remain in the same area.

Serve the Tuscan ragù with…

A bowl of pasta generously dressed with this Tuscan ragù calls for Sunday traditions, a table set with a freshly ironed tablecloth, the sun flooding your house through the window, filtered by a crochet curtain. I would build a traditional yet unpretentious menù around the penne strascicate, something that everyone would love, something that would make us feel like a family.

  • Pork roast with herbs. I crushed in a mortar all the dried herbs that I would have used along with calamint, savory and Siena tarragon, I added a few grains of black pepper and a few juniper berries to disguise a simple pork loin with game scents. It’s amazing how some dried herbs and a few juniper berries can turn one of the usual Sunday meat dishes into a roast worth of a medieval castle, juicy and flavourful, with a slight hint of wood and resin.
  • Stewed artichokes. Artichokes should be prepared with a good dose of patience, as you are supposed to clean them, removing all the tough outer leaves, and open them by hand, like a rose. Then you stuff the artichokes with a battuto made of garlic, parsley, salt, black pepper and carnesecca, as you read in the old books of Tuscan cuisine. Use two slices of pancetta and chop everything by hand, on a cutting board. I borrowed my grandma’s mezzaluna, a dual-handled knife with a half-moon blade, and I repeated her slow and confident movements. I also used her cutting board, marked by the many hours spent in the kitchen.
  • Zuppa inglese. Zuppa inglese means literally English soup and basically it is a trifle, which was made when there was sponge cake or some savoiardi, lady biscuits, an acclaimed afternoon snack, perfect for those days when you needed a boost of energy or an extra cuddle. Layers of custard and chocolate custard with savoiardi soaked in alchermes: zuppa inglese is one of the most traditional desserts.

Link Love

  • Learn more about odori, battuto and soffritto here, or listen to the second episode of our podcast, where I explain how important these tree words are for Italian cooking.
  • The pasta shape dictionary: you can explore all the different shapes of Italian pasta on this website, learn about their origins and which sauce or cooking method is better for them.
  • More about penne lisce (smooth)? Here you learn why Martelli, one of the most famous pasta producers in Tuscany, just have penne lisce