Friday, February 3, 2012
Pink Manicotti
I'm starting to realize that 90% of the recipes I post on PGS are of the "evil" variety, i.e. they are tremendously unhealthy and are rarely cooked and consumed by me. However, if I posted recipes for what I ate as my staples, you'd be pretty bored. Plus, I'm pretty sure my readers already know how to put cottage cheese in a bowl, grab a baked chicken leg out of the fridge, wash a Granny Smith apple, put some carrots on a plate, or how to place a pool salsa attractively next to a pile of lime-flavored tortilla chips.
Half the fun of making an evil recipe is announcing it to the world. While this manicotti recipe isn't especially bad on its own, the entire stick of butter gives it some evil cred, much like the sauce in Nicolas Sparks' True Believer. I have never read a word that he's written (nor have I seen any of the movies based on his books -- no offense, but they look kinda boring), though a friend of mine did mention an interest in trying "the tomato sauce from True Believer." This is what I came up with as kind of a fancier "pink" version. I love pink sauce, but real pink sauce with tomato and cream, as opposed to "a jar of red spaghetti sauce plus a jar of alfredo sauce."You can make this recipe with or without the stick of butter.
Pink Manicotti
A classic cheese-filled manicotti in a very rich pink wine sauce with customizable spices. This recipe makes 2 pans of pink manicotti!
INGREDIENTS:
1 standard-sized box of manicotti pasta
2 28-ounce cans of Tuttorosso ground tomatoes with basil (you can use "blank" tomatoes and add your own basil, but I love Tuttorosso tomatoes!)
1 stick of butter
1/2 brick of Neufchatel cheese (4 ounces)
1/4 cup of red wine
8 ounces shredded mozarella cheese
32 oz part-skim ricotta cheese
seasonings: basil, oregano, thyme, garlic, Montreal seasoning.
1 big yellow onion or a bunch of green onions, chopped finely
OPTIONAL: 1 pound of ground turkey
Place the tomatoes, butter, onions and some herbs into the crockpot -- I like to season mine with more basil, oregano, thyme, rosemary and garlic. If you aren't sure how much you like, just do a pinch or two of each. (Mine varies depending on a multitude of factors.) Let the tomato mixture cook on High for about 3 hours. Add the neufchatel and wine, then let it melt while you boil the water for the pasta. If you're cooking ground turkey to add to your sauce, this would be a good time to brown the meat.
Cook manicotti according to al dente directions, then shock the pasta with cold water to keep it from cooking any further. Stir your sauce, coat your baking dishes with cooking spray, and then spoon a bit of the sauce into the bottom of each dish. Preheat your oven to 350.
Add some seasoning to your ricotta cheese (I keep it simple; Montreal and some basil, though sometimes I crack in an egg or some spinach), then fill the manicotti with it and add manicottis to baking dishes. Leftover ricotta can be spooned over the top of the manicotti. Browned turkey can be sprinkled randomly over the dishes.
Stir your sauce thoroughly, making sure that the neufchatel and butter are well blended. Taste and adjust seasonings if you need to, then pour the sauce over each baking dish. Top each dish with mozzarella cheese, and bake in the oven (uncovered) until the cheese gets melted and things start to brown -- it usually takes about 25 minutes. (Conversely, you can cover the dishes and put them the fridge; bake covered for 40 minutes, then uncover and give it another 10 minutes to brown that cheese.)
Let it stand for a bit, then enjoy! This is an extremely rich, decadent sauce; a nice green salad on the side can complement that.
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