Ragù
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Origin | |
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Place of origin | Italy |
Details | |
Type | Sauce |
Main ingredient(s) | Meat, vegetables |
Variations | Bolognese sauce, Neapolitan ragù |
In Italian cuisine, ragù (pronounced [raˈɡu]) is a meat-based sauce that is commonly served with pasta. The Italian gastronomic society l'Accademia Italiana della Cucina documented fourteen recipes of ragù.[1]
The recipes' common characteristics are the presence of meat and the fact that all are sauces for pasta. The most typical are ragù alla bolognese (Bolognese sauce), ragù alla napoletana (Neapolitan ragù), and ragù alla Barese (sometimes made with horse meat).
In northern Italy regions, ragù typically uses minced, chopped or ground meat, cooked with sauteed vegetables in a liquid. The meats may include one or more of beef, chicken, pork, duck, goose, lamb, mutton, veal, or game, including their offal. The liquids can be broth, stock, water, wine, milk, cream or tomato, often in combination. If tomatoes are included, they are typically limited relative to the meat, making it a meat stew rather than a tomato sauce with added meat.
In southern Italian regions, especially Campania, ragù is often prepared from substantial quantities of large, whole cuts of beef and pork, and sometimes regional sausages, cooked with vegetables and tomatoes. After a long braise (or simmer), the meats are removed and may be served as a separate course without pasta. Examples of these dishes are ragù alla Napoletana (Neapolitan ragù) and carne a ragù.[2]
Contents
History
Ragù likely arose from the influence of French ragoûts in the region of Emilia-Romagna in the late 18th century, following Napoleon's 1796 invasion and occupation of those northern regions.[3][page needed] Prior to that time, peninsula cuisine had a long history of meat stews going back to the Renaissance period. However, they were neither known as 'ragù' nor is there any record of pairing them with pasta. Since the 16th century, it was not uncommon for pasta to be cooked in and served with a meat broth, often like a simple soup, from which the meat was removed and served separately, if eaten at all.
The first documented recipe for a meat sauce, in which the cooked meat was an integral part of the sauce served with pasta, dates from the end of the 18th century. The first ragù as a sauce, ragù for maccheroni, was prepared and recorded by Alberto Alvisi, the cook to the Cardinal of Imola (at the time maccheroni was a general term for pasta, both dried and fresh). The recipe was replicated and published as The Cardinal's Ragù.[3][4]
After the early 1830s, recipes for ragù appear frequently in cookbooks from the Emilia-Romagna region. By the late 19th century, the use of heavy meat sauces on pasta was common on both feast days and Sundays with the wealthier classes (only, given the expense of meat and past) of the newly unified Italy.[5][page needed]
Independent research by Kasper[3] and De Vita[5] indicates that, while ragù with pasta gained popularity through the 19th century, it was largely eaten by the wealthy. However, technological advances that came with the industrial revolution at the end of the 19th century made pasta flour more affordable for the less affluent. The adoption of pasta by the common classes further expanded in the period of economic prosperity that followed World War II. De Vita noted that, before World War II, 80% of the Italian rural population ate a diet based on plants; pasta was reserved for special feast days and was then often served in a legume soup.
See also
References
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External links
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Look up ragù in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. |
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