Pasta With Rich and Hearty Mushroom Bolognese Recipe (2024)

Why It Works

  • Adding parsley and basil in two stages—to the soffritto as well as at the end of cooking—infuses the ragù with nuanced cooked-herb notes as well as a more intense fresh-herb flavor.
  • Frying chopped mushrooms in olive oil until they are chewy and reduced to a quarter of their original volume concentrates their flavor and gives them a texture that is a good stand-in for the ground meat usually found in Bolognese.
  • Miso paste, soy sauce, and a mix of mushrooms give the ragù a complex savory flavor.
  • Adding finely chopped roasted eggplant thickens the ragù, giving it a glossy, rich texture.

I've got to admit it. As much as I love vegan food, there's one thing I do miss about winter: the smell of a slow-cooked Bolognese sauce filling the apartment on a cold day. It's one of my favorite parts of the season. It's not that I love the meatinessper se. It's not necessarily about the contrast between the cold outside and the warmth within. It's not even really about getting to eat the sauce that evening. What it's about is that smell being a constant reminder to you that you are in the middle of a project, the middle of creating something great. It's a good feeling to have, knowing that you're being productive.

Bolognese is one of my favorite sauces to make, and I've been doing it with regularity and precision for the last 12 years. I'm pretty damn good at it. I make it so often that I believe I have a built-in correlation in my mind between the scent of Bolognese sauce and that feeling of productivity. It's to the point that even if I smell someoneelsemaking it, I feel like I've accomplished something. My goal with this vegan version is to create a 100% meat-free sauce that benefits from a long, slow braise, and produces an end result that is every bit as rich, hearty, a deeply flavorful asmy own Bolognese recipe.

The Base

There were a few big hurdles to tackle here. How would I pack rich flavor into an intense sauce made only with vegetables? What techniques could I use to bump that flavor up? What about nailing the texture of the finished sauce? It must be thick and rich enough to coat pasta, and have a variation of textures ranging from creamy to chewy. I dealt with each problem as it came up, using some of the techniques I've learned from my standard Bolognese sauce as the jumping-off point.

Pasta With Rich and Hearty Mushroom Bolognese Recipe (1)

My traditional Bolognese sauce starts out with a traditional Italiansoffrittoof carrots, onions, and celery (the equivalent of the Frenchmirepoix), gently cooked in really good olive oil. The goal is to soften the vegetables without actually browning them so that their raw edge goes away but they don't become overly sweet.

Pasta With Rich and Hearty Mushroom Bolognese Recipe (2)

While those vegetables soften, I chop my herbs.

Pasta With Rich and Hearty Mushroom Bolognese Recipe (3)

Many chefs recommend not adding delicate herbs like basil and parsley until the very end of cooking, because they're at their most flavorful when completely fresh. And those chefs are right, at least about the flavor bit. But here's the thing: cooked herb flavor might not be as intense as fresh herb flavor, but it'sdifferent, and desirable in its own way.

Pasta With Rich and Hearty Mushroom Bolognese Recipe (4)

That's why I almost always add my herbs in two stages: first during cooking to develop and permeate the dish with cooked herb flavors, and then again towards the end to add some fresh herb flavor.

With hearty herbs like sage, rosemary, or thyme, you can get away with only adding them towards the beginning (they can be overpoweringly strong if added at the end).

Pasta With Rich and Hearty Mushroom Bolognese Recipe (5)

Next up: red wine. Wine adds a few things to the sauce. Primarily, it's a source of acidity, giving the sauce brightness and balancing out the richer flavors we're going to add later. It's also a good source of glutamates, the molecules responsible for bolstering the savoriness of a dish. With a meaty ragù, it makes the meat taste meatier. In a vegan ragù, it's even more important.

Reducing the wine separately is important for optimal flavor development (read up on that science here). I let the wine reduce along with a few bay leaves until it's nearly dry, creating an intensely flavorful base for the sauce.

The mixture all gets transferred to a large saucepan where it waits for friends to join it.

So far, the method is identical to what I'd do for a standard Bolognese sauce. Time to mix things up.

Adding Texture

Almost every recipe I've come across for vegan Bolognese sauce relies on a product like tempeh, textured vegetable protein, or firm tofu to add texture to the sauce in place of meat. I personally find TVP and tempeh to be lacking in flavor, and tofu's texture doesn't make it the best meat replacement. Besides, why try and replicate the flavor and texture of meat when there are so many other delicious options out there?

I turned to a technique I've gotten great success with in the past: frying mushrooms until well-browned and chewy.

Pasta With Rich and Hearty Mushroom Bolognese Recipe (6)

The method worked wonderfully with myvegan mapo tofuandvegan dan dan noodles. No reason it shouldn't work now, right?

To chop mushrooms, I start by squeezing them between my fingertips and thumb to break them down into mid-sized chunks.

Pasta With Rich and Hearty Mushroom Bolognese Recipe (8)

From there, I take a knife to 'em and chop until the pieces are no larger than 1/4-inch.

Pasta With Rich and Hearty Mushroom Bolognese Recipe (9)

Using a blend of mushrooms—in this case buttons and shiitakes—can add complexity to the dish.

Pasta With Rich and Hearty Mushroom Bolognese Recipe (10)

A full pan of mushrooms cooked in olive oil should reduce down to about a quarter of its starting volume, once the mushrooms are nice and browned.

Tomato products perform a role very similar to wine in a Bolognese sauce, adding acidity and savoriness. Tomato paste is also great for adding body to a sauce. To get the best flavor out of it, you should add it to a hot pan slicked with nothing but oil. Like a Thai curry paste or an Indian spice powder, frying the paste in oil will help you develop sweet, complex flavors that otherwise would never come forward.

Pasta With Rich and Hearty Mushroom Bolognese Recipe (11)

I knew that my sauce was going to need all the help it could get in the savory flavor department, so I also added a dollop of miso paste and a drizzle of soy sauce; both ingredients are glutamate bombs.

Adding Richness and Body

After adding the mushroom mixture to my cooked-down soffritto and a can of tomatoes that I crushed by hand, I noticed one major thing: The sauce was still pretty thin. I let the whole thing simmer down for an hour, hoping that it would tighten up. It never really did. The liquid element reduced, but it didn't get much thicker or richer, while the chunks of mushroom stayed completely intact. The sauce was simply not integrated as a whole.

What could I add to produce a binding texture that wouldn't weigh the sauce down or make it blander?

Pasta With Rich and Hearty Mushroom Bolognese Recipe (12)

I thought back to a recipe forturkey burgersI developed several years ago. In that recipe, I used the chopped flesh from a roasted eggplant to bind my meat, adding moisture and a tender texture. I figured with my pasta sauce, a similar trick would work.

Pasta With Rich and Hearty Mushroom Bolognese Recipe (13)

I roasted an eggplant in a foil pouch until completely tender inside, then scraped out the flesh with a spoon.

Pasta With Rich and Hearty Mushroom Bolognese Recipe (14)

I chopped it up into a fine purée, then stirred it into a new batch of sauce, letting it simmer just a bit.

The trick worked like a charm, adding a glossy richness to the sauce while simultaneously giving it a bit of eggplant's signature lightly smoky aroma.

I'm not a big nut milk drinker—they all taste a little too sweet and chalky to me—but a dash of it stirred into the sauce as it reduces was perfect for aiding in good emulsification of the olive oil and liquids, without detracting anything from the flavor department.

After an hour of simmering, this is about what you get:

Now doesn't that look like something worth waiting for? Your kitchen should smellawesomeby this point. Breathe that accomplishment in deeply, you deserve it. Now taste the sauce. Feel its texture on your tongue: creamy, with vegetable pieces of varying degrees of firmness and chewiness rolling across your tongue. Taste the flavors, rich, deep, well-developed, and, above all, balanced. It should taste like a sauce that someone took their time with because, well, it is.

The final key to serving the sauce is to make sure to finish your pasta in it for a few minutes. I like to serve a rich ragù like this with either wide pasta like tagliatelle or pappardelle, or with short tubular pasta like rigatoni, penne, or these cute littlecrestos di gallos(co*ck's combs). I cook the pasta until it's notquiteal dente, then add it to the sauce along with a half cup or so of its starchy cooking liquid before simmering the whole lot over high heat.

Pasta With Rich and Hearty Mushroom Bolognese Recipe (16)

As the sauce reduces, the pasta finishes cooking, absorbing its flavor while simultaneously getting fully coated.

When you serve pasta with sauce, it should look integrated, the sauce and the pasta an inseparable unit. If you lift your pasta and the sauce runs off, leaving you with bare noodle, it needs to be reduced a little more!

Pasta With Rich and Hearty Mushroom Bolognese Recipe (17)

The journey might already be the destination in this case, but that won't stop you from enjoying your reward. Your rich, lip-smackingly delicious, meat-free reward.

February 2014

Recipe Details

Pasta With Rich and Hearty Mushroom Bolognese Recipe

Active45 mins

Total2 hrs

Serves6 servings

Ingredients

  • 1 medium eggplant

  • 1/2 cup extra-virgin olive oil, divided, plus more for serving

  • Kosher salt and freshly ground black pepper

  • 1 medium onion, finely diced (about 1 cup)

  • 2 medium carrots, finely diced (about 1 cup)

  • 2 large ribs celery, finely diced (about 1 cup)

  • 1/4 cupfinely chopped fresh sage leaves

  • 1/4 cupfinely chopped fresh parsley leaves

  • 1/4 cup finelychopped fresh basil leaves

  • 4 medium cloves garlic, minced

  • 2 cups dry red wine

  • 3 bay leaves

  • 1 pound button mushrooms, finely chopped (see notes)

  • 12 ounces shiitake mushrooms, stems discarded, caps finely chopped

  • 1/4 cup tomato paste

  • 2 tablespoons white or redmiso paste

  • 1 (28-ounce) can whole peeled tomatoes packed in juice, crushed roughly by hand or with a potato masher

  • 2 tablespoons soy sauce

  • 3/4 cup almond milk

  • 1 pound short, tubular pasta like penne or rigatoni, or long wide pasta like pappardelle

Directions

  1. Adjust oven rack to center position and preheat oven to 375°F (190°C). Lay eggplant on a large sheet of aluminum foil. Drizzle with 1 teaspoon oil and season with salt and pepper. Wrap loosely in foil and transfer to a rimmed baking sheet. Roast until eggplant is completely softened, 45 minutes to 1 hour.

  2. While eggplant roasts, prepare sauce. Heat 3 tablespoons olive oil in a large skillet over medium heat until simmering. Add onions, carrots, and celery and cook, stirring occasionally, until completely softened but not browned, about 10 minutes. Add sage, half of parsley, half of basil, and garlic, and cook, stirring frequently, until aromatic, about 2 minutes. Add red wine and bay leaves. Increase heat to medium-high and simmer until wine is reduced to nearly dry (you should be able to see the bottom of the pan easily), about 5 minutes. Transfer mixture to a large saucepan and wipe out skillet.

    Pasta With Rich and Hearty Mushroom Bolognese Recipe (18)

  3. Add remaining oil to skillet and set over medium-high heat until shimmering. Add button mushrooms and shiitake and cook, stirring occasionally, until mushroom liquid completely evaporates and mushrooms are well-browned all over, about 20 minutes. Add tomato paste and miso and stir to combine. Pastes will leave a light residue on the bottom of the pan. This is ok.

    Pasta With Rich and Hearty Mushroom Bolognese Recipe (19)

  4. Add canned tomatoes and cook, scraping up the browned bits on the bottom of the pan with a wooden spoon. Add mixture to pot with vegetables and reduced wine. Add soy sauce and almond milk.

    Pasta With Rich and Hearty Mushroom Bolognese Recipe (20)

  5. When eggplant is cooked, remove from oven and let rest until cool enough to handle. Slit skin of eggplant and scrape out softened flesh gently with a spoon. Chop eggplant flesh into a fine puréeand add to pot with sauce. Stir sauce to combine, bring to a bare simmer, reduce heat to lowest setting, and cover with lid slightly ajar. Cook, stirring occasionally, until sauce is rich and thick and flavors have fully developed, about 1 hour. Season to taste with salt and pepper.

  6. To serve, cook pasta according to package directions in salted water. Drain, reserving 1/2 cup of cooking liquid. Add pasta and cooking liquid to mushroom sauce. Add remaining chopped parsley and basil (reserving a little for garnish, if desired). Cook over high heat, stirring, until sauce is rich and thick and coats every piece of pasta. Transfer to a serving bowl or individual bowls, drizzle with more extra-virgin olive oil, and serve immediately.

Special Equipment

Large skillet, large saucepan

Notes

To chop button mushrooms in the food processor, roughly chop by hand, then pulse in food processor until chopped, about 8 short pulses. To chop by hand, start by breaking up the mushrooms with your fingers, crushing them and tearing apart the caps. Chop finely with a chef's knife.

To chop shiitake mushrooms, cut each cap lengthwise into 1/4-inch strips, then rotate 90° and cut into fine dice.

Read More

  • Sunday Dinner: No-Holds-Barred Lasagna Bolognese
  • The Best Slow-Cooked Bolognese Sauce
  • Vegan Dan Dan Noodles
  • The Best Vegan Mapo Tofu
Pasta With Rich and Hearty Mushroom Bolognese Recipe (2024)

FAQs

How do you get rich flavor in bolognese? ›

The best tip for intensifying the flavour of your sauce is just to cook it slowly on a low heat for a long time. This reduces the sauce and intensifies the flavours – four hours is not uncommon for my bolognese.

What kind of pasta is best for bolognese sauce? ›

The Italians traditionally eat the Bolognese with tagliatelle, a flat strand egg pasta similar to fettuccine. You can use other flat ribbon pasta like papardelle or tripoline. I personally use this sauce with any and all pastas though. And I love mixing it with tube pastas like rigatoni or penne.

What can I add to bolognese to make it richer? ›

I find it's most convenient to make bolognese with a 50/50 blend of ground beef & ground pork, which has a great amount of fat & flavor to help develop the flavors of the sauce. I love adding a bit of pancetta to the mix for extra rich flavor.

Should bolognese be mixed with pasta? ›

The pasta should offset the flavour of the sauce, in a format that allows you to choose the correct ratio of one to the other. Mixing pasta into bolognese sauce is like baking sandwich ingredients into bread. By design, it prevents you finding a satisfying balance between the two.

What is the missing ingredient in bolognese sauce? ›

If you are missing an umami note, it's possible you are missing a very common ingredient in bolognese - chicken livers. These give a meaty, almost sweet flavour. Soak them in water for a few minutes, then finely chop or pulse in a food processor. I use minced (ground) pork, beef and chicken livers.

What pasta do Italians use for bolognese? ›

Traditional service and use

In Bologna ragù is traditionally paired and served with tagliatelle made with eggs and northern Italy's soft wheat flour. Acceptable alternatives to fresh tagliatelle include other broad flat pasta shapes, such as pappardelle or fettuccine, and tube shapes, such as rigatoni and penne.

How does Gordon Ramsay make the best spaghetti bolognese? ›

Recipe For Gordon Ramsay's Spaghetti Bolognese
  1. Meat. • 1/2 lb Ground beef.
  2. Produce. • 1 Carrot. • 2 cloves Garlic. • 1 Onion. ...
  3. Canned Goods. • 2 tbsp Tomato puree.
  4. Baking & Spices. • 1 tsp Black pepper. • 1 tsp Salt.
  5. Oils & Vinegars. • 2 tbsp Oil.
  6. Dairy. • 1/2 cup Whole milk.
  7. Beer, Wine & Liquor. • 2 tbsp Red wine.

Do Italians put cheese on spaghetti bolognese? ›

Do Italians put cheese on pasta before sauce? First, Italians does not use sauce on pasta. You cook the pasta, then you toss it with something lik a ragu, butter fried mushrooms or whatever. Then the pasta is served and only then do they offer to grate some Parmigiano or Pecorino on top.

How to make bolognese extra tasty? ›

"A splash of whole milk sounds odd but is authentic, and actually does make it taste better." "Brown sugar, tomato ketchup, porcini." "I have a friend who has been adding a cup of freshly-brewed coffee to a big batch of Bolognese sauce and she swears by it!" "I add a teaspoon of Marmite to mine."

Should I add milk or butter to Bolognese? ›

Did you know that classic bolognese should always be made with milk.

Why add vinegar to Bolognese? ›

And as an added bonus, both the plums and the vinegar have some great benefits for digestion, energy, and as an antibacterial boost. Umeboshi vinegar is a deep reddish purple. Perfect for adding both the depth of flavour and colour into our bolognese sauce!

What kind of pasta goes with bolognese? ›

For Meat Sauces

Known as Bolognese in Italy, these classic slow-simmered sauces are often a Sunday treat at Nonna's house. If you want to best capture these hearty sauces, serve them with traditional tube-shaped pasta—like Rigatoni and Tortiglioni—or deep scoopable shapes like Shells and Orecchiette.

Do Italians put carrots in bolognese? ›

There are some classic Italian versions and some more westernised ones. My preference leans towards one of the Italian classics. Ragu Bolognese is of the region of Bologna as the name implies. This version of the sauce uses fresh vegetables, such as the sweetness of carrots instead of using sugar.

Why put milk in spaghetti bolognese? ›

Milk is a magical ingredient when it comes to bolognese. First, the lactic acid and calcium in milk help to tenderize the meat. More than that, though, milk balances the wine and tomato, creates a creamier texture and adds richness (similar to how butter or yogurt add more richness and flavor to dishes).

What can I add to bolognese for extra flavour? ›

Just add seasoning and the flavour will be completely different from what you're used to. You can add various herbs, too. Try a teaspoon of dried Italian mixed herbs (added at the start) or a tablespoon of fresh, chopped oregano (added towards the end) in the meat sauce.

How do you add richness to spaghetti sauce? ›

You make foods richer by adding fat to them. For a tomato sauce you could begin include bacon, pancetta, sausage or another meat to the sauce. I like to braise beef shanks in tomato sauce, shred the tender meat and mix it into the sauce. You could also simmer beef or chicken bones in the stock as if making a stock.

How do you make sauce taste richer? ›

To make your sauce rich and luxurious, finish it with a pat of butter, a splash of cream or coconut cream, or a spoonful of yogurt, crème fraîche, or sour cream. 13. Swirl in some high-quality olive oil Adding a glug to the sauce just before serving gives it a similar richness and shine to butter without adding dairy.

Does bolognese taste better the longer you cook it? ›

Like most recipes the longer you leave it to slowly cook the better the flavour will be but this can also be knocked up with in an hour.

References

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Sen. Ignacio Ratke

Last Updated:

Views: 6371

Rating: 4.6 / 5 (76 voted)

Reviews: 91% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Sen. Ignacio Ratke

Birthday: 1999-05-27

Address: Apt. 171 8116 Bailey Via, Roberthaven, GA 58289

Phone: +2585395768220

Job: Lead Liaison

Hobby: Lockpicking, LARPing, Lego building, Lapidary, Macrame, Book restoration, Bodybuilding

Introduction: My name is Sen. Ignacio Ratke, I am a adventurous, zealous, outstanding, agreeable, precious, excited, gifted person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.