. When I followed this recipe, it was the best Baked Ziti I
ever made. Usually mine always came dry.
Baked Ziti
Ziti al Forno
Ziti al Forno
serves: 6-8
Ingredients
kosher salt
1 pound ziti (I like the ziti rigatti (the one with lines). Holds the sauce better.
1 pound fresh ricotta , drained
9 fresh basil leaves
1 pound low-moisture mozzarella, cut in 1-inch cubes (not fresh)
1 cup shredded provola (provolone)
5 cups Marinara sauce (See online recipe)
directions
Ingredients
kosher salt
1 pound ziti (I like the ziti rigatti (the one with lines). Holds the sauce better.
1 pound fresh ricotta , drained
9 fresh basil leaves
1 pound low-moisture mozzarella, cut in 1-inch cubes (not fresh)
1 cup shredded provola (provolone)
5 cups Marinara sauce (See online recipe)
directions
Preheat oven to 400 degrees F. Bring a large pot of salted water
to boil and add ziti. Cook the ziti until just al dente, about 10 to 12
minutes, and drain. (I usually cook at least 2 minutes less than box
instructions).
Meanwhile, bring the marinara sauce to simmer in a large skillet. Stir in the ricotta and basil leaves.
Spread ½ cup of the sauce in the bottom of a 15-by-10-inch Pyrex baking dish. Layer half of the ziti on top of the sauce. Sprinkle with half the mozzarella cubes and half of the provola. Pour 2 cups of the sauce over the cheese, and spread in an even layer. Top with the rest of the pasta, and spread 2 cups sauce over that layer of pasta. Sprinkle with the remaining cheeses, and dollop with the remaining ½ cup of sauce.
Place the dish in the oven and bake, uncovered, until browned and bubbly, about 30 minutes. Let rest 5 minutes before cutting. (If you want to assemble this ahead of time, bake for 15 minutes covered with foil, then, when ready to serve, uncover and bake for an additional 20 minutes.)
Meanwhile, bring the marinara sauce to simmer in a large skillet. Stir in the ricotta and basil leaves.
Spread ½ cup of the sauce in the bottom of a 15-by-10-inch Pyrex baking dish. Layer half of the ziti on top of the sauce. Sprinkle with half the mozzarella cubes and half of the provola. Pour 2 cups of the sauce over the cheese, and spread in an even layer. Top with the rest of the pasta, and spread 2 cups sauce over that layer of pasta. Sprinkle with the remaining cheeses, and dollop with the remaining ½ cup of sauce.
Place the dish in the oven and bake, uncovered, until browned and bubbly, about 30 minutes. Let rest 5 minutes before cutting. (If you want to assemble this ahead of time, bake for 15 minutes covered with foil, then, when ready to serve, uncover and bake for an additional 20 minutes.)
As always, Bon Appetite!!!
This is basically the one that I follow. As
for the meatballs, I vary it. My husband is not a great fan of broken up meat
in lasagna or baked ziti, so sometimes I do break up the meat (mostly for a
large crowd) and sometimes I make it without the meat and serve the
meatballs/sausage on the side. I have used marinara sauce when I don't
have any of my regular sauce made. And because my husband likes it
cheesy, I use 1 1/2 lbs ricotta per pound of mac. Here goes:
1
pound ziti
1
container (1 lb) ricotta
1/4
pound mozzarella, diced (make it small or shred)
1/2
cup grated Parmesan or Romano cheese
1
egg
3/4
tsp salt
1/4
teaspoon sauce (I use only homemade)
1.
Cook ziti and drain
2.
While ziti is cooking, combine ricotta, mozzarella, Parmesan/Romano, egg, salt,
and pepper
3.
Layer ziti, filling, and sauce in 13x9x2 baking dish, starting and ending with
meat sauce
4.
Bake in moderate over (350) 40 minutes till hot and bubbly.
All
that being said, let it be known that I am basically a lazy bitch and will take
faster means. After I mix the cheese, etc. and drain the macaroni, I run
cold water over the macaroni. I cook it in a big pot because I need the
room at this point to begin adding some of the cheese mixture (broken meat if
using) and some sauce. I stir it gently, then add more cheese mixture and
sauce, continuing till it's all combined. Then I just dump it into the
baking dish, sometimes adding a bit more sauce as I go along. I finish
with sauce on the top and some extra mozzarella. For my OCD mine, it's
easier than trying to be sure I have the same amount of the cheese mixture
between layers. I never make only one pound; if I'm going to do it I just
double everything and freeze some. I bake what I need for the day/occasion and
freeze the rest unbaked. It might not sound possible, but I have served a
LOT of people using 3 times the recipe. You'll be surprised.
Enjoy!
xoxo
Andrea
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