Friday 11 October 2013

Baked Ravioli

Making a batch of ravioli for a larger group of people can be time consuming - since the ravioli will need to be cooked in batches depending on the size of the saucepan. Besides, it is a challenge to keep the ravioli warm while you are cooking the rest of the batches, and you need to pester your guests to eat as soon as the ravioli is ready, lest it become cold and not quite as enjoyable. Ravioli also needs to be handled delicately, and you need to be really careful while tossing large quantities of it with a pasta sauce, so that none of them break apart. All together, serving ravioli to a larger group of people is a challenge, even when it is done the slyly simple way.
I've discovered the next best solution - bake it! You can cook all the ravioli in one go, leave it to cook in the oven as you can enjoy a conversation with your guests, and its much easier to keep it warm until its time to serve. You're far less likely to break the ravioli since they do not need to be handled as much - and even if a couple of pieces break, it still stays together without compromising on flavour or presentation. The texture of baked ravioli is not as soft as when they are boiled, so critics and connoiseurs may not approve - but I find this method to be very effective and tasty, particularly when you have a hungry lot hovering around the kitchen.
Here's how to go about it...

Step 1: Line a baking dish with a little bit of olive oil to make sure the pasta doesn't stick. Now spread out the ravioli in a single layer along the bottom of the dish.


Step 2: Cover the ravioli with your preferred pasta sauce - my favourite combination is with the cheesy tomato Slyly Simple sauce.

Step 3: Get creative - I used some asparagus in my dish. Perhaps you would like to try out some pieces of broccoli or mushrooms instead. You could even skip this step, it is going to taste great regardless.

Step 4: Add some cheese - I used grated cheddar here, but I imagine this would also be great with stronger flavours like goat cheese. You could skip this step too - although I'd say a bake looks incomplete without cheese :-)

If you like, you could repeat the steps above and make a second layer - my baking dish was wide enough so I stopped at one layer.

Step 5: Cover the dish with aluminium foil so that it bakes uniformly without burning the cheese. Pop into a pre-heated oven at about 100-120 degrees celcius, and bake for about 30-40 minutes. Baking time and temperature are rough estimates, its always safer to use a lower temperature and check on your dish after the first 20 minutes.

You could garnish the dish at the end with some fresh herbs or a dollop of butter if you like. Or if you can't wait anymore - just dig in!

Disclaimer: This dish is going to be a big hit, and you probably wont have enough. You may have some hungry faces at the dinner table even after this has been polished off.

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