Italian Meat Sauce With Half the Meat Recipe (2024)

By Martha Rose Shulman

Italian Meat Sauce With Half the Meat Recipe (1)

Total Time
30 to 35 minutes
Rating
4(277)
Notes
Read community notes

It’s been a long time since I have made tomato sauce with meat, and this one transported me back to the first recipe I learned to make. I called it spaghetti sauce, and it was a simple tomato sauce with ground beef. It didn’t taste that much different from this sauce, which has only a quarter pound of meat in it – but that is all it needs to have a rich flavor and a meaty texture. The mushroom base is a perfect stand-in for half the meat; you could double the amount for a vegetarian sauce.

Featured in: Cutting Out the Meat With Mushrooms

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Ingredients

Yield:3 cups, or enough for 9 pasta servings

  • 1tablespoon extra virgin olive oil
  • ½yellow or red onion, finely chopped
  • 2plump garlic cloves, minced
  • ¼pound ground beef or veal
  • Pinch of ground cinnamon
  • Salt to taste
  • freshly ground black pepper to taste
  • ¼pound (about ⅔ cups) roasted mushroom mix
  • 128-ounce can plus 1 14.5-ounce can chopped tomatoes in juice, pulsed in a food processor
  • ¼teaspoon sugar
  • 1teaspoon oregano
  • 1teaspoon fresh thyme leaves or ½ teaspoon dried thyme

Ingredient Substitution Guide

Nutritional analysis per serving (6 servings)

113 calories; 7 grams fat; 2 grams saturated fat; 0 grams trans fat; 3 grams monounsaturated fat; 1 gram polyunsaturated fat; 10 grams carbohydrates; 5 grams dietary fiber; 6 grams sugars; 6 grams protein; 590 milligrams sodium

Note: The information shown is Edamam’s estimate based on available ingredients and preparation. It should not be considered a substitute for a professional nutritionist’s advice.

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Italian Meat Sauce With Half the Meat Recipe (2)

Preparation

  1. Step

    1

    In a large, deep skillet or casserole heat olive oil over medium heat and add onion. Cook, stirring often, until tender, about 5 minutes, and add garlic. Cook, stirring, until fragrant, about 30 seconds, and turn heat up to medium-high. Add ground beef or veal and brown for about 5 minutes, stirring. Add cinnamon and season to taste with salt and pepper.

  2. Step

    2

    Stir in roasted mushroom mix, tomatoes, sugar, oregano and thyme. Season with salt and pepper and bring to a rapid bubble over medium-high heat. Turn heat down to medium, cover partially if sauce is spluttering too much, and simmer, stirring often, until thick and fragrant, 15 to 20 minutes. Taste and adjust seasonings. Serve with pasta, figuring on ⅓ cup per 3-ounce serving.

Tip

  • The sauce will keep for 3 or 4 days in the refrigerator and freezes well.

Ratings

4

out of 5

277

user ratings

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Cooking Notes

Pete McConnell

It probably defeats the purpose of this but I had some meat I wanted to use up and no mushrooms, so: 1 pound of beef, no mushroom mixture, and a little extra oregano and thyme to punch it up. Totally great. I’d even do this with ground pork sausage or ground turkey. The cinnamon is so subtle but makes a huge difference.

Jayne Ann

Used 1/2 lb ground steak. Roughly chopped mushrooms, mixed in garlic olive oil, salt, pepper. Roasted but did not pulverise. Sautéed onion/ eschallot in olive oil and butter. Doubled garlic. Tomato paste, pinch cinnamon (or garam masala) Za’atar (Palestinian thyme), x 2 Italian Marzano tinned tomatoes (both available on Amazon), 1/2 cup dry sherry, the mushrooms, loads of chopped Coriander. Rinsed tomato tins and added water. No sugar needed w/wine/sherry. Simmer gently for at least an hour.

TobyCat

Two T of olive oil didn't seem like enough, so I added 6-8 T more. Mistake. The mushrooms came out wet rather than dry. Great taste but the sauce was runny (though that may be due to using last summer's tomatoes from the freezer). Was the beef necessary? I don't know--I plan to make the sauce again with mushrooms only to see if I miss it. Think this sauce will be great over veggies, btw (lookin' at you, zucchini).

Maree d.

A beautiful dish but just not quite on the mark. It left me wanting something else included in the ingredients. I am a HUGE fan of mushrooms too but am wondering if whole green Italian green olives added would have worked?

patricia

Please. Drag out the food processor to chop up the canned tomatoes?Break ‘em up with a spoon! Less work and cleanup.

Nikki

1.5 cans diced toms (796 mL, 1 can puréed)1 lb ground beef1 lb mushrooms (made 1 cup cooked)1 tsp sugar

christine

This was amazing! My family loved it. I used a very large shallot instead of the onion and garlic and also sautéed some finely chopped carrots, celery and bell pepper. Added the whole pound and the mushrooms and more tomatoes. I love the trick of the roasted mushrooms and cinnamon. Will def make again.

Dave Aubrey

This is one of my favorite quick meat sauces. I skip the cinnamon, mushrooms, and sugar though to keep it savory.

Brandon

Wholly underwhelming. You are basically left to your own devices to give this sauce any chance of having flavor. As with any red sauce that is not a painstakingly cooked bolognese, it is really just trial and error to get a red sauce to taste great if you are not going to put any Romano in it.

jp

I made this last night for New Year's eve dinner and it was wonderful. I didn't have ground cinnamon, but used a cinnamon stick instead. It adds a nice sweetness to the sauce, no need to add sugar. I also added a bay leaf to balance it out a bit. If it gets to sweet with the cinnamon stick, take it out and set it aside. So good.

Pete McConnell

It probably defeats the purpose of this but I had some meat I wanted to use up and no mushrooms, so: 1 pound of beef, no mushroom mixture, and a little extra oregano and thyme to punch it up. Totally great. I’d even do this with ground pork sausage or ground turkey. The cinnamon is so subtle but makes a huge difference.

Ashley

If I omit the sugar will it drastically change the sauce?

Melissa English

This is a regular in my house and regularly tricks an 11 year old meat lover. I like to use shallots for the onion, and I used super lean ground beef and it was fine. I find fresh oregano is better than dried.

Melody Moxley

Just made this tonight. Followed recipe exactly, except for subbing lean ground turkey for the ground beef; to reduce fat, sautéed mushrooms in cooking spray (rather than roasting) and also used cooking spray to sauté onions, etc. Yield was greater than indicated; made 4 1/2 cups, even though I cooked it longer ( about 45 min).Very good flavor, and very healthy. Did not miss having a greater quantity of meat. Used the cinnamon, and it was fine. Will definitely make this again.

Trish Stevens

Using the mushroom mix and a small amount of meat is genius. I will try with my italian sauce recipe next time. I was not a big fan of the cinnamon in this sauce. I love cinnamon in baked goods but not so much in my meat sauce.

Glcc42

Fabulous new comfy food with a Cuban flavor.mwhats not to like.

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Italian Meat Sauce With Half the Meat Recipe (2024)

FAQs

How much meat per person for meat sauce? ›

One pound of meat makes enough sauce to dress a pound of pasta, which serves four to six people. You can easily scale up from there, and I think you probably should, because ragù makes excellent leftovers, and freezes well.

How much meat do you need for spaghetti? ›

You can use as much meat as you want, really - but anywhere from 1-2 pounds per large jar of sauce should work out best. I tend to use 1 pound of meat nearly every time.

What's the difference between Bolognese and meat sauce? ›

It all comes down to the meat and tomatoes. While both are pasta sauces, Bolognese places more emphasis on the meat.

What is Italian meat sauce made of? ›

Tomato paste, wine (you can omit if you prefer), Worcestershire sauce, garlic, onion, Italian seasoning…. all my favorite things in one pot. I added a couple sausage links because I love their sweet/salty flavor they bring to the sauce. It's definitely one ingredient I advise against skipping.

How much sauce do I need for 4 people? ›

For tomato-based sauces, a good rule of thumb to follow is to use one jar of 24-ounce pasta sauce for every 16-ounce package of pasta. When calculating how much sauce for pasta per person, generally about 2 to 4 ounces (1/4 to 1/2 cup) of sauce for each 2 ounce (about 1 cup cooked) serving of pasta would be needed.

How much meat do I need for 24 oz of spaghetti sauce? ›

1 24 oz. jar of pasta sauce (Prego, Ragu, etc.) 1 pound of ground meat (Turkey, Beef or Italian sausage)

How much is half of 4 pounds of ground beef? ›

Amount needed when halving = 4 pounds / 2 = 2 pounds. To convert 2 pounds to ounces, we multiply it by 16: 2 pounds * 16 ounces/pound = 32 ounces. Therefore, when you halve the recipe, you will need 32 ounces of ground beef.

What is a good spaghetti ratio? ›

And the key ratio here is 1:2. For every 4 ounces of pasta, you want 8 ounces of liquid. Four ounces will make a good portion for one person, so if you have a family of four, you will want 1 pound of pasta and 32 ounces of liquid.

Do Italians put meat in bolognese? ›

The ragù is an Italian sauce made with pieces of meat or minced meat, cooked over low heat for many hours. There many local variants of the ragù: the most common are ragù alla bolognese (Bolognese-style ragù), ragù alla napoletana (Neapolitan-style ragù) and ragù alla siciliana (Sicilian-style ragù).

Which meat is best for bolognese? ›

The meat to be used for ragù should be of at least two types: pork and beef, but in this respect, everyone has their own recipe. The difference is the cut of meat chosen, which should not be too lean.

What is ragù vs bolognese? ›

Even though both are considered meat sauces and are thusly chunky, ragù is more like a thick tomato sauce with recognizable bits of ground beef within it. Bolognese, though, is creamier and thicker because it is made with milk. It is not considered to be a tomato sauce.

What do Italians call sauce with meat? ›

Here's the gist: the two ways Italians say “sauce” in Italian are salsa and/or sugo. Both words translate as “sauce” but never as “gravy.” Ragù doesn't even translate as “gravy” but comes close enough since it involves meat which is what people really mean when they say “gravy” (my personal opinion).

How do you thicken Italian meat sauce? ›

Cornstarch: Make a slurry of half water, half cornstarch and whisk until smooth. Cornstarch is a powerful thickener, so start by whisking in no more than 1 tablespoon of the mixture per 2 cups of simmering sauce; stir and simmer for 2 minutes, check the thickness, and repeat with more slurry as needed.

What pasta is best for meat sauce? ›

For Meat Sauces

If you want to best capture these hearty sauces, serve them with traditional tube-shaped pasta—like Rigatoni and Tortiglioni—or deep scoopable shapes like Shells and Orecchiette.

How much meat do I need for 24 oz of sauce? ›

1 24 oz. jar of pasta sauce (Prego, Ragu, etc.) 1 pound of ground meat (Turkey, Beef or Italian sausage)

What is the ratio of meat per person? ›

Use calculator to help determine how much meat to buy.

Boneless Meat: 1/2 lb. per person for adults and 1/4 lb. per person for children. Bone-In Meat: 1 lb.

How much meat do you need for 20 people? ›

In other words, if you're cooking for 10 people, you'll want at least five pounds of meat total. For 20 people, plan to purchase 10 or more pounds of meat.

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