Pasta Mass-produced lasagne with a ruffled edge is called , ,
sciabò, and
sciablò. In recent times, lasagne used in the baked dish have tended to be of a long, narrow rectangular shape called , although a more traditional square shape is still found. In
Veneto, factory-produced are called
bardele or
lasagnoni.), as well as the
sagne of
Salento (the "heel" of the Italian "boot"), The lasagna of
Naples, , is layered with local
sausage, small fried
meatballs, hard-boiled eggs,
ricotta and
mozzarella cheeses, and sauced with
Neapolitan ragù, a meat sauce. The dish is eaten at
Carnival, and is not held in high esteem locally; food writer Arthur Schwartz details that "almost without fail", Neapolitans tell visitors "the really good lasagne is from
Bologna".
Italian-American recipes show an influence of Neapolitan lasagna, often using ricotta cheese in place of
béchamel sauce found in northern Italian recipes. Another southern Italian recipe, , is also associated with a religious festival, in this case
Christmas: it uses a
capon broth in place of ragù, and is layered with veal meatballs, mozzarella,
prosciutto, and
Parmesan. , layered with a thick
ragù and béchamel and corresponding to the most common version of the dish outside Italy, is traditionally associated with the
Emilia-Romagna region of Italy. In its capital, Bologna, is layered with ragù (a thick sauce made with onions, carrots, celery, finely ground pork and beef, butter, and tomatoes), béchamel sauce, and Parmesan cheese. , from
Ferrara, features sheets of green pasta (created by mixing spinach into the pasta dough) and may include
pancetta, chicken livers, and other meats. A version from the
Marche, known as
vincisgrassi, features mushrooms and offal such as chicken livers and
sweetbreads. , from
Genoa, combines a light béchamel with
pesto and is then baked, although some more modern Genoese versions omit the béchamel and use boiled pasta. Traditionally, pasta dough prepared in southern Italy used
semolina and water; in the northern regions, where semolina was not available,
flour and
eggs were used. In Emilia-Romagna the dough or was traditionally rolled paper-thin by hand, often by a professional . ==Gallery==