How to Make Ligurian Vegetable Lasagna

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Amy Riolo
Author, Cooking Instructor, Food Writer, Culinary Consultant
http://www.amyriolo.com/  
 

Amy Riolo is an internationally recognized culinary expert specializing in Middle Eastern and Mediterranean culture and cuisine. As a cookbook author, lecturer, food historian, food writer, culinary consultant, and cooking instructor, Amy promotes her philosophy of cooking and living with both pleasure and health. Her first book, Arabian Delights; Recipes & Princely Entertaining Ideas from the Arabian Peninsula has received rave reviews (Capital Books). Her second book Nile Style; Egyptian Cuisine and Culture (Hippocrene Books) will be released in spring 2009. She is also completing The Mediterranean Diabetes Cookbook, (American Diabetes Association) which will be released in spring 2010.

Amy’s popular lectures range in topics and include everything from Middle Eastern business etiquette to the history of various cuisines. She has been an invited guest speaker for the Embassy of the Arab Republic of Egypt, Welcome to Washington International, Montgomery College, Les Dames D’Escoffier, The Baltimore-Luxor-Alexandria Sister City Committee and the Mycological Association of Washington, DC. Amy also makes frequent appearances on numerous television and radio programs both in the United States and Egypt including Fox TV, Montgomery and Fairfax County TV, Nile TV and WHYY.           

Amy currently writes the “Culture and Cuisine” feature for the Baltimore- Luxor-Alexandria Sister City Committee. She has also written articles for Cooking Light Magazine, Azizah Magazine, and the Kulanu newsletter. A graduate of Cornell University, Amy has experience in vocational, recreational, and children’s instruction, as well as corporate team building and cultural/culinary events. Her knowledge of the Italian, French, Spanish, and Arabic languages has enabled her to interpret many cultures and cuisines with intimacy and ease. She regularly teaches cooking classes at Sur la Table in Arlington, Virginia, and for private organizations.

A successful culinary consultant, Amy enjoys developing menus, recipes, training seminars, and themes for corporations, restaurants, and hotels. Amy is often asked to work as a consultant for museums where she creates menus and décor which represent the theme of new collections. In addition, she works with curators to incorporate sensory components like scent, touch, and taste into the schedule of events, allowing museum patrons to fully experience each exhibit.

Amy is a member of The International Association of Culinary Professionals, Culinary Historians of Washington, Les Dames d’Escoffier, Slow Food DC, Welcome to Washington International (where she co-chairs the Gourmet Committee), Cornell Club of Washington, the Women’s National Book Association, and the Baltimore – Luxor – Alexandria Sister City Committee (Where she is the chairperson of the Baltimore Friends of the Alexandria Library). Amy is based in the Washington DC, area and maintains a home in Egypt. She is currently organizing culinary tours to both the Mediterranean and Middle East.

How to Make Ligurian Vegetable Lasagna

 

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How to Make Ligurian Vegetable Lasagna

Ingredients

2 (12 ounce) boxes Harris Teeter lasagna sheets (or 24 ounces fresh lasagna sheets)
1 pound Farmers Market new potatoes, scrubbed and thinly sliced
1 tablespoon kosher salt

Garden Puree:
1 pound frozen Harris Teeter sugar snap peas, thawed and drained
1 cup frozen Harris Teeter petite peas, thawed and drained
1 pound frozen Harris Teeter asparagus, thawed and drained
1 pound frozen Harris Teeter green beans, thawed and drained
3 Farmers Market scallions, green part only, roughly chopped
4 tablespoons H.T. Traders extra-virgin olive oil, plus extra for drizzling
1/4 cup Farmers Market basil leaves
1 cup fresh, hand-dipped ricotta cheese or 3/4 cup pine nuts
freshly grated, parmesan cheese or rice cheese

Instructions

1. Put the potatoes into a medium pot. Cover with water. Add salt. Bring to a boil and cook until tender (15 minutes). Drain and set aside.

 

2. Make the garden puree:
Bring a large pot of salted water to a boil. Add snap peas, peas, asparagus and green beans. Cook until bright green and crisp (about 2 to 3 minutes). Drain, transfer to a bowl of salted ice water to stop cooking. Drain again. Reserve half of the vegetables. Puree the other half with the scallions, olive oil, basil leaves, salt and pepper in a food processor. Fold in ricotta by hand. If using pine nuts, add them to the food processor and continue to puree. Set aside.

 

3. Preheat the oven to 350 degrees. Cook the lasagna sheets: Fill a pasta pot with water. Bring to a boil over high heat. Add salt, lower heat to medium and add 4 sheets of pasta at a time. After 4 to 5 minutes, remove sheets with tongs, drain and set aside. Lasagna sheets will still be hard at this time, but they will cook thoroughly in the oven. Continue until all of lasagna sheets are cooked.

 

4. To assemble the lasagna:
Lightly oil a 9x13-inch baking pan with olive oil. Cover the bottom of the pan with one layer of lasagna sheets. Spread a thin layer (about 4 tablespoons) of garden puree of lasagna sheets. Scatter a handful of reserved vegetables over the top. Layer a few potato slices over the top of the vegetables. Cover evenly with another layer of pasta sheets.

 

5. Continue layering garden puree, vegetables, potatoes. Repeat the process until all lasagna sheets are used up. Top the last layer with remaining garden puree and vegetables. Sprinkle cheese on top. Drizzle olive oil over the cheese.

 

6. Bake for 40 minutes. Let stand 10 minutes, slice and serve.

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