Subj : Today in History - 1967
To   : All
From : Dave Drum
Date : Sat Jan 14 2023 05:27:00

14 January 1967 - PRELUDE TO 'SUMMER OF LOVE' IN SAN FRANCISCO: With
tunes from the Grateful Dead and Jefferson Airplane, talks from Timothy
Leary, and free LSD provided by Owsley Stanley, the Human Be-In turns
on, tunes in, and drops out at Golden Gate Park.

MMMMM----- Recipe via Meal-Master (tm) v8.06

     Title: Lasagne of Love - PART 1
Categories: Pasta, Vegetables, Pork, Beef, Herbs
     Yield: 10 servings

MMMMM------------------------MEAT SAUCE------------------------------
     2 lg Onions; 2 3/4 c chopped
     3 tb (to 4 tb) olive oil
   1/2 c  Whole milk
     4 tb tomato puree
     2    Carrots
     1    Rib celery
     4 cl Garlic
     6 oz Rindless pancetta or bacon
     1 sm Bunch Italian parsley (20 g)
     1 tb Fresh thyme leaves
          +=OR=+
     1 ts Dried thyme
   1/4 ts Red pepper flakes
    12 oz Ground beef
    12 oz Ground pork
     1 c  Red wine
     2 c  Beef broth
    28 oz (2 tins) diced tomatoes
     2 ts Kosher salt
          +=OR=+
     1 ts Fine sea salt)
     3    Fresh bay leaves

MMMMM-------------------------BECHAMEL-------------------------------
          Vegetable prep detritus from
          - meat sauce, above
     4 c  Whole milk; more as needed
     1 ts Soft sea salt flakes
          +=OR=+
   1/2 ts Fine sea salt
          A good grinding of white
          - pepper
     2    Fresh bay leaves
     7 tb Unsalted butter
   3/4 c  A-P flour
     3 tb (40 g) fresh grated Parmesan

MMMMM-------------------------ASSEMBLY-------------------------------
    18    (to 20) dried lasagne sheets
     1    Ball mozzarella; not bufala
     5 tb (40 g) fresh grated Parmesan

 Chop the onions, dropping the peeled skin into a
 saucepan big enough to make the béchamel shortly.

 In a large, heavy-based casserole or pan that comes with
 a lid warm 3 tablespoons of the oil and, over medium-low
 heat, cook the onions for 5 minutes, then turn down to
 low and cook for a further 15 minutes, stirring every
 now and again until the onions are beginning to soften
 and colour.

 While the onions are cooking, first stir the tomato
 purée into the 125 ml/1/2 c of milk, and set aside for a
 mo. Peel the carrots if they need it and chop them each
 into 3 or 4 pieces, dropping them into the bowl of a
 food processor and the peelings and any discarded pieces
 into the saucepan with the onion skin. Tear the celery
 into pieces and add to the processor, then peel the
 garlic (dropping the peelings into the béchamel pan) and
 add the cloves to the processor. Cut the pancetta (or
 bacon) up a bit and add to the processor as well, along
 with the parsley (you can use all the tender stems too).
 Strip enough thyme leaves from the stems to give you 1
 tablespoon, add this too (or use 1 teaspoon of dried
 thyme) and blitz until everything is finely chopped, but
 not mush. Obviously, you could chop everything by hand.
 In which case, don’t drive yourself mad trying to get
 everything as fine as the processor version.

 When the 15 minutes is up on the onions, heat the oven
 to 170º/150ºC Fan (355/325°F fan) Scrape every last bit
 of the bacony vegetable mixture from the processor into
 the pan, turn the heat up to medium-high, stir well and
 cook for 5 minutes, then turn the heat down again to
 medium-low, sprinkle in the chilli flakes, and cook for
 another 5 minutes.

 CONYINUED TO PART TWO

 Makes: 9 - 12 servings

 By Nigella Lawson

 RECIPE FROM: https://www.nigella.com

 Uncle Dirty Dave's Archives

MMMMM
MMMMM----- Recipe via Meal-Master (tm) v8.06

     Title: Lasagne of Love - PART 2
Categories: Pasta, Vegetables, Pork, Beef, Herbs
     Yield: 10 servings

          DIRECTIONS CONTINUE

 Yurn the heat to high, crumble in the ground beef and
 pork and turn well in the pan for about 5 minutes. If
 you need to add another tablespoon of oil, do.

 Add the wine, let it bubble up, and then pour in the
 beef broth, the tins of diced tomatoes, the tomato purée
 and milk mixture, salt and bay leaves and bring to a
 bubble. Taste to see if you want to add any more salt,
 and then clamp on a tightly fitting lid and transfer to
 the oven, leaving it to cook for 1 hour.

 Straightaway, pour the litre / 4 cups of milk for the
 bechamel over the vegetable peelings, add the salt,
 pepper and bay leaves, and bring almost to the boil, but
 don’t let it boil. Turn off the heat, cover with a
 tightly fitting lid (which will stop it from getting a
 skin, as well as making the flavours infuse better) and
 leave while the meat sauce cooks. When the meat sauce
 has been in the oven for 45 minutes, strain the milk
 into a large batter jug. If, when all the milk has
 dripped through, you are short of your full litre, just
 pour in a little more milk to top up.

 Clean out the pan (just with water’s fine, you don’t
 need soap), dry it well and melt the butter in it, then
 add the flour and mix together, over medium heat, for a
 couple of minutes, forming your roux, and cooking it a
 little; you should have a dingy primrose paste that,
 somehow, magically, seems to come away from the pan and
 cleave to itself as you stir and move it about.

 Take the pan off the heat, swap your wooden spoon for a
 whisk, preferably a little one that's good for removing
 lumps, and slowly whisk in the milk. Don't worry, by the
 way, that the milk (thanks to the onion skins) will have
 a slightly peachy tone about it. I rather like it,
 actually, not that it is visible in the finished sauce.

 When all the milk is whisked in, carry on whisking until
 you've got a smooth cream in the pan, and then put back
 on the heat, lowish, and keep whisking until you have a
 very, very thick sauce, with all taste of flouriness
 banished; this will take 5-7 minutes. Off the heat,
 quickly whisk in the 3 tablespoons of Parmesan and then
 scrape every last bit back into the batter jug, tasting
 for seasoning as you go.

 Take the meat sauce out of the oven, and give a gentle
 stir with a large ladle. Once you can taste it without
 burning your mouth, check for seasoning.

 Now, it's just a matter of layering up. My lasagne dish
 measures 24 x 35 x 6cm / 9 1/2" x 14" x 2 1/2" and it's
 a pretty tight fit. Sit the dish on a baking tray. Line
 the dish with a couple of ladlefuls of the meat sauce,
 aiming to get more liquid than meat, and cover with a
 layer of lasagne sheets. I get 4 sheets in the bottom
 layer but find that for subsequent layers I need extra,
 which I snap into pieces for patching gaps. Put a couple
 more ladlefuls of the liquidy bit of sauce into a jug or
 bowl, and set aside for now.

 Put a third of your béchamel on top of the lasagne
 sheets and use a spatula to help spread it a little, but
 don't worry about making an absolutely even,
 edge-to-edge covering. Top with a third of your
 remaining meat sauce, then cover with another layer of
 lasagne sheets, followed by your second third of
 béchamel, second third of meat sauce and third layer of
 lasagne sheets. Add your remaining béchamel and meat
 sauce in order and top with a final layer of pasta
 sheets and then add the set-aside liquidy meat sauce to
 cover, pressing down if you need to make sure the top
 layer of pasta is, if not submerged exactly, then
 lightly covered. Leave now for at least 30 minutes, but
 longer (up to 2 days) if needed; if you're leaving it
 for more than about 2 hours, you will need to
 refrigerate it.

 When you are ready to bake your lasagne, heat the oven
 to 200º/180ºC Fan 400º/355ºF Fan. Finely chop or shred
 the mozzarella and sprinkle over the top of the unbaked
 lasagne, then sprinkle over the Parmesan. Cover with
 foil, trying not to press it down on the top of the
 lasagne, and bake for 40 minutes (if it's been
 refrigerated it'll probably need 1 hour). Remove the
 foil (pull off any cheese that's stuck to it and add it
 back to the top of the lasagne) and cook for a further
 30 minutes until it's slightly scorched in parts, the
 cheese gooey, the pasta swollen and runkled on top, and
 everything piping hot all the way through.

 Makes: 9 - 12 servings

 RECIPE FROM: https://www.nigella.com

 Uncle Dirty Dave's Archives

MMMMM
MMMMM----- Recipe via Meal-Master (tm) v8.06

     Title: Lasagne of Love - PART 1
Categories: Pasta, Vegetables, Pork, Beef, Herbs
     Yield: 10 servings

MMMMM------------------------MEAT SAUCE------------------------------
     2 lg Onions; 2 3/4 c chopped
     3 tb (to 4 tb) olive oil
   1/2 c  Whole milk
     4 tb tomato puree
     2    Carrots
     1    Rib celery
     4 cl Garlic
     6 oz Rindless pancetta or bacon
     1 sm Bunch Italian parsley (20 g)
     1 tb Fresh thyme leaves
          +=OR=+
     1 ts Dried thyme
   1/4 ts Red pepper flakes
    12 oz Ground beef
    12 oz Ground pork
     1 c  Red wine
     2 c  Beef broth
    28 oz (2 tins) diced tomatoes
     2 ts Kosher salt
          +=OR=+
     1 ts Fine sea salt)
     3    Fresh bay leaves

MMMMM-------------------------BECHAMEL-------------------------------
          Vegetable prep detritus from
          - meat sauce, above
     4 c  Whole milk; more as needed
     1 ts Soft sea salt flakes
          +=OR=+
   1/2 ts Fine sea salt
          A good grinding of white
          - pepper
     2    Fresh bay leaves
     7 tb Unsalted butter
   3/4 c  A-P flour
     3 tb (40 g) fresh grated Parmesan

MMMMM-------------------------ASSEMBLY-------------------------------
    18    (to 20) dried lasagne sheets
     1    Ball mozzarella; not bufala
     5 tb (40 g) fresh grated Parmesan

 Chop the onions, dropping the peeled skin into a
 saucepan big enough to make the béchamel shortly.

 In a large, heavy-based casserole or pan that comes with
 a lid warm 3 tablespoons of the oil and, over medium-low
 heat, cook the onions for 5 minutes, then turn down to
 low and cook for a further 15 minutes, stirring every
 now and again until the onions are beginning to soften
 and colour.

 While the onions are cooking, first stir the tomato
 purée into the 125 ml/1/2 c of milk, and set aside for a
 mo. Peel the carrots if they need it and chop them each
 into 3 or 4 pieces, dropping them into the bowl of a
 food processor and the peelings and any discarded pieces
 into the saucepan with the onion skin. Tear the celery
 into pieces and add to the processor, then peel the
 garlic (dropping the peelings into the béchamel pan) and
 add the cloves to the processor. Cut the pancetta (or
 bacon) up a bit and add to the processor as well, along
 with the parsley (you can use all the tender stems too).
 Strip enough thyme leaves from the stems to give you 1
 tablespoon, add this too (or use 1 teaspoon of dried
 thyme) and blitz until everything is finely chopped, but
 not mush. Obviously, you could chop everything by hand.
 In which case, don’t drive yourself mad trying to get
 everything as fine as the processor version.

 When the 15 minutes is up on the onions, heat the oven
 to 170º/150ºC Fan (355/325°F fan) Scrape every last bit
 of the bacony vegetable mixture from the processor into
 the pan, turn the heat up to medium-high, stir well and
 cook for 5 minutes, then turn the heat down again to
 medium-low, sprinkle in the chilli flakes, and cook for
 another 5 minutes.

 CONYINUED TO PART TWO

 Makes: 9 - 12 servings

 By Nigella Lawson

 RECIPE FROM: https://www.nigella.com

 Uncle Dirty Dave's Archives

MMMMM
MMMMM----- Recipe via Meal-Master (tm) v8.06

     Title: Lasagne of Love - PART 2
Categories: Pasta, Vegetables, Pork, Beef, Herbs
     Yield: 10 servings

          DIRECTIONS CONTINUE

 Yurn the heat to high, crumble in the ground beef and
 pork and turn well in the pan for about 5 minutes. If
 you need to add another tablespoon of oil, do.

 Add the wine, let it bubble up, and then pour in the
 beef broth, the tins of diced tomatoes, the tomato purée
 and milk mixture, salt and bay leaves and bring to a
 bubble. Taste to see if you want to add any more salt,
 and then clamp on a tightly fitting lid and transfer to
 the oven, leaving it to cook for 1 hour.

 Straightaway, pour the litre / 4 cups of milk for the
 bechamel over the vegetable peelings, add the salt,
 pepper and bay leaves, and bring almost to the boil, but
 don’t let it boil. Turn off the heat, cover with a
 tightly fitting lid (which will stop it from getting a
 skin, as well as making the flavours infuse better) and
 leave while the meat sauce cooks. When the meat sauce
 has been in the oven for 45 minutes, strain the milk
 into a large batter jug. If, when all the milk has
 dripped through, you are short of your full litre, just
 pour in a little more milk to top up.

 Clean out the pan (just with water’s fine, you don’t
 need soap), dry it well and melt the butter in it, then
 add the flour and mix together, over medium heat, for a
 couple of minutes, forming your roux, and cooking it a
 little; you should have a dingy primrose paste that,
 somehow, magically, seems to come away from the pan and
 cleave to itself as you stir and move it about.

 Take the pan off the heat, swap your wooden spoon for a
 whisk, preferably a little one that's good for removing
 lumps, and slowly whisk in the milk. Don't worry, by the
 way, that the milk (thanks to the onion skins) will have
 a slightly peachy tone about it. I rather like it,
 actually, not that it is visible in the finished sauce.

 When all the milk is whisked in, carry on whisking until
 you've got a smooth cream in the pan, and then put back
 on the heat, lowish, and keep whisking until you have a
 very, very thick sauce, with all taste of flouriness
 banished; this will take 5-7 minutes. Off the heat,
 quickly whisk in the 3 tablespoons of Parmesan and then
 scrape every last bit back into the batter jug, tasting
 for seasoning as you go.

 Take the meat sauce out of the oven, and give a gentle
 stir with a large ladle. Once you can taste it without
 burning your mouth, check for seasoning.

 Now, it's just a matter of layering up. My lasagne dish
 measures 24 x 35 x 6cm / 9 1/2" x 14" x 2 1/2" and it's
 a pretty tight fit. Sit the dish on a baking tray. Line
 the dish with a couple of ladlefuls of the meat sauce,
 aiming to get more liquid than meat, and cover with a
 layer of lasagne sheets. I get 4 sheets in the bottom
 layer but find that for subsequent layers I need extra,
 which I snap into pieces for patching gaps. Put a couple
 more ladlefuls of the liquidy bit of sauce into a jug or
 bowl, and set aside for now.

 Put a third of your béchamel on top of the lasagne
 sheets and use a spatula to help spread it a little, but
 don't worry about making an absolutely even,
 edge-to-edge covering. Top with a third of your
 remaining meat sauce, then cover with another layer of
 lasagne sheets, followed by your second third of
 béchamel, second third of meat sauce and third layer of
 lasagne sheets. Add your remaining béchamel and meat
 sauce in order and top with a final layer of pasta
 sheets and then add the set-aside liquidy meat sauce to
 cover, pressing down if you need to make sure the top
 layer of pasta is, if not submerged exactly, then
 lightly covered. Leave now for at least 30 minutes, but
 longer (up to 2 days) if needed; if you're leaving it
 for more than about 2 hours, you will need to
 refrigerate it.

 When you are ready to bake your lasagne, heat the oven
 to 200º/180ºC Fan 400º/355ºF Fan. Finely chop or shred
 the mozzarella and sprinkle over the top of the unbaked
 lasagne, then sprinkle over the Parmesan. Cover with
 foil, trying not to press it down on the top of the
 lasagne, and bake for 40 minutes (if it's been
 refrigerated it'll probably need 1 hour). Remove the
 foil (pull off any cheese that's stuck to it and add it
 back to the top of the lasagne) and cook for a further
 30 minutes until it's slightly scorched in parts, the
 cheese gooey, the pasta swollen and runkled on top, and
 everything piping hot all the way through.

 Makes: 9 - 12 servings

 RECIPE FROM: https://www.nigella.com

 Uncle Dirty Dave's Archives

MMMMM

... You mean you need drugs to hallucinate?
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