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Lasagna
Lasagna noodles are thick, wide noodles about 2 to 3 inches wide (5 to 7 cm). The edges can be either ruffled or smooth. They are used for making baked pasta with.


No-cook Lasagna Noodles
These have actually already been cooked for you.

Still, they have to absorb moisture from somewhere, and where they absorb it from is the tomato sauce and the cheese, so make the lasagne a bit more runnier going into the oven than you would otherwise by using more sauce or adding a bit of water to the sauce.

Though normally you would be careful anyway to cover all the noodles with sauce and filling, with these you need to be particularly so, or they will just remain dry.



Lasagne al forno
This is the classic pasta dish made with lasagna noodles. The noodles are used to separate layers of food, such as cheese, sauce and meat (though some modern versions use vegetables). The dish is baked in the oven.

Southern Italian traditions will use tomato sauce with ricotta (Sicilican version) and / or meatballs. Most North Americans tend to make a combination of the Bolognese version and the Sicilian version, by substituting the bechamel sauce with ricotta or cottage cheese.

Some regional variations:

AbruzzoMade with pecorino and scamorza cheese.
Emilia RomagnaUsually made in winter, with a Bolognese (meat) sauce, bechamel sauce and grated cheese (often referred to as a Bolognese version of lasagne.)
LazioMade with bacon and broccoli.
LiguriaConsidered a summer dish. Made with pesto sauce and parmesan, often with bechamel sauce as well.
LombardyMade with Gorgonzola and pine nuts. Portofino, in south-east Liguria, reputedly gets so many tourists from Lombardy, that a version there has evolved which combines the Ligurian lasagne style -- using pesto -- with the Lombard habit of using gorgonzola.
MarcheMade with chicken liver and white truffles.
PugliaMade with broccoli and red peppers.
SardiniaMade with artichokes and pecorino sardo.
SicilyMade with eggplant and ricotta.
TrentinoMushrooms and Asiago cheese.
TuscanyBolognese version (i.e. same as for Emilia Romagna.)
UmbriaVegetables and black truffles.
VenetoRadicchio and red wine.


History
Etruscan paintings of banquets show the guests eating something like lasagne. The Romans had wide noodles they called lagunae / laganum, though you could only really call these lasagna noodles if you called every wide a noodle "lasagna", as the Romans used theirs in soup. Wealthy Romans would have fresh lagunae noodles made with eggs; normal people would have dried versions made without egg. That much, at least, hasn't changed.

Language Notes
The noodle is called "lasagna". The dish is called "lasagne" (plural), as it uses many noodles.

Also called: Lasagnes (French) Lasagne (German) Lasagna, Lasagne al forno (Italian) Lasaña (Spanish)


See Also
Laganum, Pane Frattau

Other entries for Pasta for Baking
Casareccia Pasta, Gnocchi, Lasagna, Lumaconi, Manicotti, Mostaccioli Pasta, Rigatoni

Other entries for Pasta
Black Pasta, Chitarra, Egg Pasta, Fideos, Noodles, Pasta for Salads, Pasta for Sauce, Pasta for Soup, Pasta for Stuffing, Pasta Liscia, Pasta Rigata, Stuffed Pasta

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