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Ragù di Agnello (Lamb)

4.6

(3)

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Ragù di Agnello (Lamb)Gentl & Hyers

One whiff of this hearty, fragrant sauce bubbling on your stove and you'll think you've just parachuted into the Apennines right in front of a trattoria, in sheep country. The mountains of central Italy—notably in the Abruzzo and Molise regions—have always been populated by shepherds. Consequently, lamb is the basic meat, and the cheeses are made from sheep's milk.

Shoulder would be our cut of choice, but really any lamb stew meat will do. Even though the recipe calls for boneless meat, if you have some lamb on the bone, throw it in. The bones will add flavor and will be easy to remove once the sauce is cooked. Lamb is fatty, so the sauce will benefit from overnight chilling and subsequent degreasing. But if you can't bear to throw away that yummy lamb fat, roast some potatoes Italian style—cut up in small pieces with lots of rosemary—and use the lamb fat instead of olive oil.

Cooks' Note

Pasta shapes: This sauce goes with both flour-and-water and egg pasta : tagliatelle , conchiglie, rigatoni, sedani, tortiglioni, fregnacce, fettuccine, lagane, pappardelle, or paglia e fieno. It's also perfect with gnocchi di patate.

Wine suggestion: Montepulciano d'Abruzzo

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