Wednesday, July 30, 2008
Stuffed Shells with Marinara
OK, I'm a pasta junkie. Although it was invented somewhere in Asia, nothing is better than a big fattening italian dish. With that being said, here's an awesome stuffed shells recipe. It serves four, but I was serving 8 so while the amounts are for a single recipe, the pictures are of a double recipe.
First start by making the marinara. You'll need the following:
3 tablespoons olive oil
1 large onion
6 garlic cloves
1 pound fresh mushrooms
1/2 teaspoon dried crushed red pepper
1 28-ounce can tomatoes, chopped, juices reserved
1 15-ounce can tomato sauce
1 teaspoon sugar
1 1/2 teaspoons dried basil
3/4 teaspoon dried oregano
For the shells you will need:
One box of jumbo pasta shells
3 tablespoons butter
2 ounces prosciutto
2 large shallots
8 ounces cremini or button mushrooms (about 3 cups)
1/2 cup ricotta cheese
1 tablespoon dried basil, crumbled
Step 1:
Picture of shell ingredients:
Step 2:
First, prep your fresh ingredients. I like the garlic in thick slices, since it simmers for awhile and it will be nice and soft. Slice up your mushrooms and finely chop your onion. Then wish you had a food processor. It made this whole step take about 2 minutes, if that.
Step 3:
I've heard before that you should never use tomatoes in a cast iron skillet, but I don't care. I've been doing it for years, and the Lodge website even has tons of tomato recipes for use in their skillets. You can use a regular skillet, though.
Step 4:
Saute your onion in your olive oil over medium heat for about 5-10 minutes until soft and very oniony. Then add your garlic and cook for about a minute more. You should be stirring your ingredients around this whole time.
Step 5:
Add your mushrooms and crushed red pepper. It will seem like a lot, until they start to cook down. Cook like this for about 5 minutes, or until it looks like the second picture.
Step 6:
Second picture showing it cooked down:
Step 7:
Add that big can of tomatoes and it's juices, and stir around. Cover, and let cook on low for 15 minutes. If your skillet is like mine and doesn't have a lid, a cookie sheet works wonders.
Step 8:
Cookie sheet instead of a lid:
Step 9:
Uncover, and add your can of tomato sauce, sugar, basil and oregano.
Step 10:
We're reaching a critical mass here! I had to do the only logical thing after it started dripping down the side:
Step 11:
Cover again, and cook for another 15 minutes. Uncover, and season with some salt and pepper. I like kosher salt, but table salt is fine. Let simmer for about 5 minutes uncovered, until it's thickened up some. About this time, you should start boiling some water, and add your jumbo shells.
So now you have your shells in the water, and your marinara simmering to thick greatness.
Boil the shells according to the boxed direction, and drain. Throw them back in the pot to keep warm and flexible, and set aside while you make your stuffing.
Step 12:
Chop your shallots, mushrooms and prosciutto. The prosciutto will want to stick together, but it will seperate as it cooks.
Heat your butter in a skillet over medium-high heat and toss your shallots and prosciutto in. Cook, stirring the whole time, for about 4-5 minutes.
Step 13:
After 4-5 minutes it will look like this:
Step 14:
Toss in your mushrooms and cook until most of the mushroom juices have evaporated, about 8-10 minutes.
Step 15:
In a large bowl, mix the previous with your ricotta and basil.
Step 16:
If you plan on making this now, preheat your oven to 350F. If you plan on stuffing them now and baking later, that's fine, too. They can sit for about a day before baking. Regardless of how you're doing it, pour most of your marinara into your baking dish, and stuff your shells thusly:
Step 17:
Repeat until full:
Step 18:
Top with some parmesian, and bake for about 15-20 minutes, until your cheese is melted. Serve with some more marinara spooned over and some nice crusty garlic bread. Nummy.
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