Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My cookbook has the "miracle lasagna" recipe that I make. It is only two layers so you don't need to boil OP. But, your question is a good one. For multiple layers, I would boil.
I am lazy so I make miracle lasagna. I line the bottom of the pan with tomato sauce. Then add three noodles. I top that with cheese and cottage cheese. Then, I add another layer of sauce. Then, I top with three more noodles and do the sauce and cheese again. I cook at 375 degrees for 35 minutes. I top with foil while cooking. Since only my DH eats it, when it is cooked, I cut it up into 9 squares and make 4 servings (3 have 2 sets of the layers and the 4th square has the extra set making it 3 layers).
It really has nothing to do with how many layers you have. It's entirely about the ratio of noodles to sauce. You need enough liquid to ensure the noodles will cook without pre-boiling.
Anonymous wrote:Boil, but it is a bitch trying to separate them after they're done. After you drain the water, lay them flat on a cookie sheet.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Don’t use those noodles! They come out crunchy. Use the ones you have to boil. I learned this the hard way...
+1 Yes, boil them.
Anonymous wrote:yes!
Anonymous wrote:My cookbook has the "miracle lasagna" recipe that I make. It is only two layers so you don't need to boil OP. But, your question is a good one. For multiple layers, I would boil.
I am lazy so I make miracle lasagna. I line the bottom of the pan with tomato sauce. Then add three noodles. I top that with cheese and cottage cheese. Then, I add another layer of sauce. Then, I top with three more noodles and do the sauce and cheese again. I cook at 375 degrees for 35 minutes. I top with foil while cooking. Since only my DH eats it, when it is cooked, I cut it up into 9 squares and make 4 servings (3 have 2 sets of the layers and the 4th square has the extra set making it 3 layers).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I've never boiled mine. I just make sure the noodles are covered in sauce and tightly covered with foil before baking.
+1 add about a cup more of sauce than recommended
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you do not boil, or if you boil and leave them al dente, your noodles then make sure you have a lot of moisture in your sauce and/or cheese mixture. The pasta sops up moisture like Bounty sops up water. It is better to have too much moisture rather than too little. As you cook and the lasagna looks done but you think it might by too soppy (usually not going to happen btw) then let it set for a half hour or so tightly covered on the top of the stove. This will help any potential extra moisture get absorbed by the noodles.
If, on the other hand, you don't have enough moisture, then serve some of the sauce on the side. If you are out of the tomato sauce then either whip up some more really quickly or make a fast béchamel sauce that you can serve on the side. It is a little "different" to have béchamel on a tomato-based lasagna but it is better than being too dry and it actually can be pretty yummy!
Luckily lasagna is one of those dishes where there is a lot of room for forgiveness so it will be pretty hard to mess up! Hope you love your lasagna!
This is actually very common in Europe. I'm from Germany, but my Italian relatives also make it that way (not with béchamel on the side as you suggest, but as the white sauce layered with the bolognese between the noodles). I've never had lasagna with ricotta until I came to the US.
With a layering of bolognese and béchamel, you really don't need to boil the noodles. Just make sure everything is nicely submerged.
Huh, I'm the FP and I never knew that. I had to do it once because the lasagna was looking dry and then we found that we liked it that way. Good to know there is some sort of precedence. I will make it with the béchamel instead of the ricotta mixture next time and I bet we like it a lot! Thank you for sharing!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you do not boil, or if you boil and leave them al dente, your noodles then make sure you have a lot of moisture in your sauce and/or cheese mixture. The pasta sops up moisture like Bounty sops up water. It is better to have too much moisture rather than too little. As you cook and the lasagna looks done but you think it might by too soppy (usually not going to happen btw) then let it set for a half hour or so tightly covered on the top of the stove. This will help any potential extra moisture get absorbed by the noodles.
If, on the other hand, you don't have enough moisture, then serve some of the sauce on the side. If you are out of the tomato sauce then either whip up some more really quickly or make a fast béchamel sauce that you can serve on the side. It is a little "different" to have béchamel on a tomato-based lasagna but it is better than being too dry and it actually can be pretty yummy!
Luckily lasagna is one of those dishes where there is a lot of room for forgiveness so it will be pretty hard to mess up! Hope you love your lasagna!
This is actually very common in Europe. I'm from Germany, but my Italian relatives also make it that way (not with béchamel on the side as you suggest, but as the white sauce layered with the bolognese between the noodles). I've never had lasagna with ricotta until I came to the US.
With a layering of bolognese and béchamel, you really don't need to boil the noodles. Just make sure everything is nicely submerged.
Anonymous wrote:If you do not boil, or if you boil and leave them al dente, your noodles then make sure you have a lot of moisture in your sauce and/or cheese mixture. The pasta sops up moisture like Bounty sops up water. It is better to have too much moisture rather than too little. As you cook and the lasagna looks done but you think it might by too soppy (usually not going to happen btw) then let it set for a half hour or so tightly covered on the top of the stove. This will help any potential extra moisture get absorbed by the noodles.
If, on the other hand, you don't have enough moisture, then serve some of the sauce on the side. If you are out of the tomato sauce then either whip up some more really quickly or make a fast béchamel sauce that you can serve on the side. It is a little "different" to have béchamel on a tomato-based lasagna but it is better than being too dry and it actually can be pretty yummy!
Luckily lasagna is one of those dishes where there is a lot of room for forgiveness so it will be pretty hard to mess up! Hope you love your lasagna!
Anonymous wrote:Boil, but it is a bitch trying to separate them after they're done. After you drain the water, lay them flat on a cookie sheet.