Ravioli Bolognese with beef or quorn. Ravioli Lasagna with Beef & Pork Bolognese Sauce from Costco and delivered straight to my dorm by Instacart. This Quorn speghetti bolognese recipe is suitable for both vegetarians and those who just love Quorn! Drain the spaghetti, spoon the bolognese sauce over the top and serve, sprinkle with some basil leaves and Parmesan or vegetarian Italian hard cheese shavings.
Quorn spaghetti bolognese is a tasty vegetarian version of the traditional meat based Italian classic. Making quorn spaghetti bolognese isn't any different from making a traditional bolognese. It's just that we substitute beef mince with quorn mince instead. You can have Ravioli Bolognese with beef or quorn using 17 ingredients and 19 steps. Here is how you cook it.
Ingredients of Ravioli Bolognese with beef or quorn
- Prepare of Pasta:.
- You need of 00 flour or bread flour.
- You need of olive oil.
- You need of egg.
- You need of warm water.
- Prepare of Bolognese filling:.
- It's of olive oil.
- You need of onion, chopped finely.
- You need of garlic - optional.
- You need of minced beef or quorn mince.
- It's of dried basil.
- Prepare of red wine - optional.
- You need of or half a large tin of chopped tomatoes, drained.
- You need of tomato paste.
- You need of beef stock cube.
- Prepare of seasoning.
- Prepare of parmesan cheese to sprinkle over your finished ravioli.
My sister prepared bolognese before and substituted beef mince with Quorn. I couldn't tell the difference until she told me. My kids reckon they can't tell the difference but I tend to 'marinade' the quorn in the bolognese or whatever sauce so it absorbs the flavour. Browning ground beef, opening a jar, a can and packaged food barely qualifies as cooking and certainly doesn't require a recipe.
Ravioli Bolognese with beef or quorn instructions
- First make the pasta dough. In a kitchen mixer with the dough hook or by hand.
- Put the flour into the bowl, crack in the egg, add the oil and start the mixer, make sure you keep pushing down any flour that rises up the bowl.
- Start adding the water a little at a time and allow it to be worked into the dough fully before adding more. The dough should be very soft and pliable and even stick to the sides of the bowl a little, but be easy to roll off again..
- Once the dough has reached this stage knead it for a few minutes in the machine or a 10 minutes by hand until it is smooth and elastic (kneading activates the gluten and makes the dough stretchy).
- Your dough is ready to be made into sheets for the ravioli (or lasagne - if you just want the pasta).
- Twist off half the dough and start feeding it through your pasta machine on the thickest setting - if it looks over stretched, lay out on your board and rub flour into the sheet turn over and do again on the other side the fold over and put through again..
- If you're doing this by hand then roll out on a floured surface until about 5mm thick the fold into thirds (take hold of one end and fold over leaving one third exposed, then fold that end over the top).
- Whichever route you take, you hope to achieve a very workable dough, so you may have to fold, turn and roll several times.
- With the machine, decrease the thickness each time until you achieve about 2mm thick strips. By hand roll as thin as possible..
- Next step depends if you have a ravioli tin or not. Flour your tin. Cut strips of dough to fit the tin and fill the holes with your filling of choice or place spoonfuls of filling an inch/2½cm apart..
- Repeat with other half of dough - makes 20 large ravioli. At this point my daughter rolled the remaining pasta using powdered sugar instead of flour then filled with a mixture of chocolate pieces, peanut butter and strawberry jam to make sweet ravioli (she served it with a light chocolate sauce on the side).
- Cover with a second sheet, pressing the dough firmly between each spoonful of filling. Use your roller on the tin to cut between the pieces, or use a pastry crimper or knife to cut between the pieces of ravioli on your work surface..
- You should drop your pieces of ravioli into a pan of boiling water and cook for 3-4 minutes, drain then serve. (Make sure you brush off all the loose flour or the pasta will get too sticky).
- Make the Bolognese filling. This filling is quite intense in flavour and must be thick not watery..
- Add oil and onion to a small pan then gently fry over a medium heat until onion becomes transparent, then add garlic if using. Turn the heat up and add the beef - stir quickly until cooked through..
- Add the basil and stir in then the red wine (if using) cooking on high to reduce the wine..
- When the wine has reduced by at least half, add all of the other ingredients..
- Lower the heat and let the Bolognese simmer, crush down any large pieces of tomato..
- Taste before seasoning. Cool before adding to your pasta. Serve the ravioli with a sprinkling of parmesan cheese and a chunk of garlic bread.
Used two bags of the mini ravioli no extra tomato and some ricotta with a little chopped garlic between the layers. While pasta is cooking, in a saucepan or skillet, heat olive oil. Add ground beef, onion and garlic; cook until beef is browned. Add tomatoes, wine or broth, mushrooms, basil and oregano/thyme. Open a can and Open Wide.