Meat Lasagna

Here is a very easy recipe for lasagna.  There’s nothing fancy here, just good home-made taste!

Now that I am doing menu planning I like to cook a double batch of whatever I’m making and put it in the freezer for future use.

Things like enchiladas, chile verde and lasagna make great freezer meals. I wrap the meal well and label with the date. Then take it out a couple of days ahead to thaw. Great for those busy days when you just don’t feel like cooking at night – and everyone still gets a home cooked meal instead of take out!

This recipe is for two full size lasagnas ( 9″ x 13″ casserole pans). You could make just one, but why make one lasagna when you can make two with the same amount of effort. All you need is an extra pan. I like to use disposable foil pans for the freezer so my regular casserole dishes are available for other things.

This is an extra-meaty lasagna because I had thawed a large package of ground beef.  You could easily cut the beef down to 2 lbs and still have enough for two lasagnas.

Ingredients:

16 dry lasagna noodles (one package)

3 lbs ground beef

1 TBSP coarse ground garlic powder

1 TBSP Italian Seasoning

2 tsp black pepper

1 tsp salt

1 extra large container of spaghetti sauce (about 3 regular size jars)

2 15 oz containers of ricotta cheese

2 large eggs

1/2 cup grated parmesan or Roman cheese

2 TBSP dried parsley

6 cups grated mozzarella cheese

 

Here’s how to put it all together:

1. Brown the ground beef over medium heat. Add Italian seasoning, garlic, salt and pepper. Drain excess fat.

2. Add spaghetti sauce and simmer on low for 10-15 minutes.

Extra meaty sauce!

3. Meanwhile, boil water and cook noodles according to package instructions.

4. In a medium bowl mix ricotta, egg, parm or Romano and dried parsley

The ricotta cheese mix. Use fresh parsley if you have it on hand.

5. Drain noodles. Remove meat sauce from heat.

6. Begin layering by putting a small amount of sauce in the bottom of the pan. Just enough to keep the noodles from sticking.

7. Place 3-4 noodles in the bottom of the pan, overlapping a little is good. (Do each step for both pans if you are doing two lasagnas)

Smear a little sauce in the bottom of the pan (right) then layer noodles (left).

8. Spread a thin layer of ricotta cheese mix over the noodles.

Spreading the ricotta can be tricky--just go slowly.

9. Next a layer of meat sauce.

Layer with a generous amount of meat sauce.

10. Then a layer of mozzarella cheese.

Mozzarella on top. Then repeat layers.

11. Repeat steps 7-10 for second layer. Top with additional grated parm or Romano. Cook uncovered at 375° F for 30-40 minutes.

The extra lasagna should be wrapped tightly in foil before placing in the freezer. Be sure the label it with the date.

To use frozen lasagna remove from freezer one day prior to thaw and bake with foil loosely covered for 45 minutes, removing cover after 30 minutes. To bake from frozen cook at 375° for approximately an hour, or until center is heated to 160° when check with a food thermometer.

 

Related posts:


Menu plan for May 2012

I have found that if I take the time (just 30 minutes or so) to plan out our dinners for two or more weeks it helps so much! Not only does it prevent the 4:00 pm stress of what’s for dinner, it also keeps my grocery bill in check. I’m not running to the store every few days which prevents those impulse purchases.

I plan meals around what meats I can get on sale and what I already have in the freezer and pantry. So here’s my list for the month. I don’t plan a meal for each night because we will have leftovers from some recipes. We also have Mother’s Day, our anniversary and Memorial Day weekend this month, so those are not planned.

  1. Tri-tip Sandwiches (using up left-over tri-tip)
  2. Chef Salads
  3. Beef stir-fry
  4. Appetizer Night – bruschetta, salami & cheese, veggies & dips
  5. Carne Asada tacos and Mexican rice
  6. BBQ chicken breasts, oven roasted potatoes, broccolini
  7. Tamales, leftover rice
  8. Spinach Salads
  9. Hamburgers & fries – on Homemade Buns!
  10. Pulled Pork sandwiches
  11. Pesto Pizza
  12. Beef Tacos/burritos
  13. Lasagna (double batch for freezing)
  14. Corned Beef
  15. Chicken Enchiladas (from the freezer)
  16. Breakfast for Dinner

I’ve included links for the recipes I’ve already made, and will update as we work through the month.

Related posts:


Roasted Chicken becomes Chicken Enchiladas…

image

I started doing this after reading Kathi Lipp’s book, The “What’s for Dinner?” Solution. She suggests lots of ways to plan ahead, including having leftovers on purpose.

I like to do roasted chickens once a month. I usually roast two now, because roasting two is just as easy as one, and then you have lots of leftovers. We don’t even eat one whole chicken between the four of us. (My kids are still small so they don’t eat much.)  That leaves plenty of beautiful cooked chicken to make chicken salad sandwiches and enchiladas.

I had one and a half chickens left over this time (about half of a gallon Ziploc bag full of shredded meat) so I was able to make 16 chicken enchiladas. I also had about a pound of ground beef that needed to be cooked. I got 14 beef enchiladas out of that. I put one pan in the fridge for tonight and everything else went into the freezer!

Related posts:


Two-week Meal Plan

OK, I made the big Costco run on Sunday, but I didn’t get to the regular grocery store yet. Today I’m making up my meal plan for the rest of the two-week period. (And showing what I already made the past few days.)

Monday: Pizza

Tuesday: Stir Fry

Wednesday: Tacos

Tonight (Thursday): Chicken Marsala

Friday: Charred Tomato Soup; Grilled Cheese Sandwiches

Saturday: Lasagna

Sunday: Enchiladas (already made in the freezer!)

Monday: Leftovers

Tuesday: Italian Sausage Stew w/ polenta

Wednesday: Lemon Chicken w/ Basmati rice

Thursday: Burritos

Friday: Chicken Stir-fry w/ fried rice (leftover rice from Wednesday)

Saturday: Spaghetti & Meatballs

In making my plan, I’m considering what activities we have going on, which fresh ingredients I need to use up, and getting a variety of meal types.

My next step is to look at the recipes to see which ingredients I need to pick up at the grocery.  It will be a quick and inexpensive trip since I did my bulk shopping at Costco a week ago.

Related posts:


Making Bulk Shopping Work

One thing that stuck with me from Kathi’s book was keeping a well-stocked pantry. When I don’t plan ahead I find myself running to the store every few days to get things.

The new strategy I’m going to try is planning meals for two weeks at a time. I will start off the month by planning the meals, then making a Costco run and fill in with trip to the grocery store. It would save me a huge amount of time and money to only be shopping twice a month.

In preparation for this plan I’ve started a spreadsheet to figure out what kinds of things I need to stock up on at Costco, what the package size is, and how much it costs.  This lets me figure the cost per unit so I can know if it’s a deal or not.  I used my past few receipts to get my list started.  I’ll print it out and take with me to fill in the things I don’t know yet.

The trick to making this work is to buy things that last forever (dried pasta, sugar) and the things we use a ton of on a regular basis (4 lb bag of shredded cheese, anyone?).  I have to be careful about things like giant tubs of sour cream, fresh veggies etc, that although a good buy, will probably expire before I use them all. I found out the hard way with a three pound bag of broccoli. What was I thinking? I made broccoli soup, to try to use some of it up.

I will still buy most of my fresh produce at the regular store, and things that I need in small quantities. It will be a change to plan ahead but I think it will really help make my days run smoothly. I’ll let you all know how it goes, and of course post my menus/recipes to share!

 

Related posts: