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Lasagne

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jennyjoan | 14:27 Thu 28th Feb 2019 | Food & Drink
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When you make your lasagne - what cheese do you top it with.

I made one yesterday and used Extra Strong Mature Cheese and it was too strong for me. But my visitors thought it lovely - next time I make it I want to get a milder cheese. Would it be morrezzla(sp)
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I bet the Italian friend didn't use a tub of bought so-called "fresh" sauce which is full of additives, stabilisers etc etc. If you've got a microwave, a plastic or Pyrex jug and a whisk you can make bechamel much better than any ready-made sauce.
Tell me how, diddlydo, please.
You just add smoked pancetta to the ragu whilst cooking Jenny. I even once experimented with smoked cheese in the Béchamel but it was not an improvement.
I'd also say that authentic lasagne doesn't have cheese in at all.
Prudie, not in it, but shaved cheese on top.
Ditto Danny.^^ It was the Americans(who else) that substituted the Béchamel with Ricotta cheese. Why would you do that?
diddlydo....fresh sauce with no additives, stabilizers etc etc...not difficult to find...

https://www.waitrose.com/ecom/products/waitrose-cooks-ingredients-bechamel-sauce/808002-673847-673848
Thank you, Danny and Margo. I might give it a go.

I think a lasagne is what you want it to be. I think we could quibble all day about the authenticity. What I cook is what I like the taste of. I don't really mind if it's not the real McCoy. We like it, so that's fine.
Tilly, one of the joys of cooking is to adapt a recipe to suit your own taste.
Tilly....absolutely agree. Ask 10 Italians to make a lasagne and you'll get ten different versions - same as moussaka and the Greeks and Scouse and Liverpudlians!
Exactly Tilly, I like a little Gruyere cheese on mine, probably frowned on, but we like it.
Just another little fact. I am pretty sure that originally the Italians used sago flour to make the Béchamel, but corn flour suits me. Sago flour is harder to source for a sauce.
// Togo

Ditto Danny.^^ It was the Americans(who else) that substituted the Béchamel with Ricotta cheese. Why would you do that? //

According to wiki, there are many regional variations. This I discovered when comparing the Naples version made by my mum, with the totally different version an Italian friend made. She told me that it was originally a celebratory meal with many variations. Obviously the neopolitan version became the "American lasagne" because most Italian immigrants were from the south.

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lasagne
Tilly - microwave bechamel. Heaped desertspoonful flour in jug, whisk in milk, add big knob of butter + salt and pepper. Heat, whisk, heat, whisk until desired consistency (add more milk if too thick). Child's play. Same method to make cheese sauce, parsley sauce etc etc.
Thank you for that, DD. You make it seem so simple. I will give it a go.

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