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  2. Bolognese sauce - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bolognese_sauce

    The earliest documented recipe for a ragù served with pasta dates back to the end of the 18th century in Imola, near Bologna, from Alberto Alvisi, cook of the local Cardinal [7] Barnaba Chiaramonti, later Pope Pius VII. In 1891, Pellegrino Artusi published a recipe for a ragù characterized as bolognese in his cookbook. [8]

  3. I made Ina Garten's cheesy baked pasta with ragu sauce, and ...

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  4. Uruguayan cuisine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uruguayan_cuisine

    All three are necessary pasta sauces among other foreign pasta sauces. Salsa Caruso was made in honor of the opera singer Enrico Caruso and became a popular sauce (especially for its main dish 'cappelettis a la Caruso'); estofado is a stewed version of ragu made from steaks and sometimes eaten alone; tuco, when it is with chopped meat ...

  5. Ragù - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ragù

    By the late 19th century the cost of meat saw the use of heavy meat sauces on pasta reserved to feast days and Sundays, and only among the wealthier classes of the newly unified Italy. [ 7 ] Independent research by Kasper [ 4 ] and De Vita [ 7 ] indicates that, while ragù with pasta gained popularity through the 19th century, it was largely ...

  6. List of pasta dishes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_pasta_dishes

    A dish of spaghetti alla chitarra, a long egg pasta with a square cross-section (about 2–3 mm thick), whose name comes from the tool (the so-called chitarra, literally "guitar") this pasta is produced with, a tool which gives spaghetti its name, shape and a porous texture that allows pasta sauce to adhere well. The chitarra is a frame with a ...

  7. Neapolitan ragù - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neapolitan_ragù

    Two distinctive features are the type of meat and how it is used, as well as the amount of tomato in the sauce. Bolognese versions use very finely chopped meat, while Neapolitan versions use whole meat, taking it from the casserole when cooked and serving it as a second course or with pasta. Preferences for ingredients also differ.

  8. Neapolitan sauce - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neapolitan_sauce

    Neapolitan sauce is the collective name given (outside Italy) to various basic tomato-based sauces derived from Italian cuisine, often served over or alongside pasta.. In Naples, Neapolitan sauce is simply referred to as salsa, which literally translates to 'sauce'.

  9. Ragú - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ragú

    The Ragú pasta sauce line consists of smooth Old World Style sauces, [6] Chunky sauces, [5] bold Robusto! sauces, [7] as well as organic and light pasta sauces. While most well known for selling jarred pasta sauce, Ragú also purveys a pizza sauce [ 8 ] and an Alfredo sauce .