Why Does My Lasagna Come Out Watery? - EHow
Maybe your like
- Chow Down
- Main Dishes
Few pasta dishes are as impressive as a big pan of lasagna. Hot and fresh from the oven, bubbling and aromatic under its golden topping of cheese, it's a sure crowd-pleaser. That's why it's doubly disappointing to cut into the layered pasta and discover a wet and soupy mess beneath the cheese. If you find this happens to you on a regular basis, you may be overlooking an important point or two regarding lasagna construction.
Advertisement
Assess the Sauce
Video of the Day
If your lasagna's too wet, the obvious prime suspect is your sauce. Some are wetter than others, and even your grandmother's prized marinara recipe might not be ideal for use in a lasagna.
Advertisement
Related Stories
Chow Down How to Prepare Frozen Mussels
Chow Down How to Serve Fruit with Quiche for Breakfast
Chow Down How to Wash Oyster Mushrooms Video of the Day
Ladle 3 or 4 ounces of sauce onto a plate, and watch it. If it spreads quickly to form a flat pool, or if it "weeps" a puddle of thin liquid from around the tomatoes, it's likely the culprit. It needs to be thicker for lasagna than for spaghetti or other noodles, and you have a few options for making it that way.
Advertisement
- Stir in a few tablespoons of tomato paste, and simmer the sauce until the paste is thoroughly dispersed.
- Cheat shamelessly, and thicken the sauce with a small quantity of cornstarch or quick-mixing "gravy" flour stirred into cold water or tomato juice.
- Simmer the sauce until enough moisture evaporates to thicken it naturally. This concentrates the flavors as well, so it's the best option when time permits.
Advertisement
Tip
You may simply be using too much sauce. All you need is a few tablespoons per layer, enough to cover the noodles and keep them from drying.
Check the Cheese
Your cheese layer can also contain a lot of excess moisture. Low-fat cottage cheese or ricotta tends to lose whey as it contracts in the oven's heat, so that's a starting point.
Advertisement
Related Stories
Chow Down How to Prepare Frozen Mussels
Chow Down How to Serve Fruit with Quiche for Breakfast
Chow Down How to Wash Oyster Mushrooms Use full-fat cheese when possible -- it's an indulgent dish, and you have the option of reducing portion size -- and press as much moisture from the cheese as you can before you add it to the lasagna. A generous handful of dry cheese, such as finely shredded Parmesan, adds flavor and helps absorb any surplus moisture. Finally, whipping an egg or two into your cheese layer helps bind up any escaping whey. As an added bonus, it helps preserve the cheese's rich and creamy texture.
Advertisement
Audit the Add-Ins
If you like to load up your lasagna with healthful ingredients, you might be compounding the problem. Mushrooms, zucchini, onions, spinach and sweet peppers all contain plenty of water, which cooks out in the oven. Cooking the water out beforehand is your best bet. Mushrooms, spinach and onions can be sauteed gently in a skillet, separately or together. Usually, you can squeeze extra moisture from the spinach once it's cooked. Zucchini and sweet peppers can be sauteed or roasted, as you prefer.
Advertisement
Advertisement
Next, the Noodles
Noodles are your ally in the war against wetness, if you use them intelligently. If you prefer traditional dry lasagna noodles, just cook them until they're flexible rather than fully al dente. Remember, they'll spend the best part of an hour bubbling in hot sauce. Just blot them dry and arrange them in your pan, where they'll find the extra moisture and cooking time they need. Fresh pasta and no-cook dry noodles don't need to be boiled ahead of time, which speeds and simplifies your preparations. In each case, they'll absorb the moisture they need from your sauce.
Advertisement
Be Patient
Even if you've done everything perfectly, your lasagna will still seem wet and soupy if you cut into it as soon as it leaves the oven. It needs at least 15 to 20 minutes to cool before you cut into it, and ideally 30 minutes. It will still be hot, but the cheese, sauce and noodles will all have had time to compose themselves. Not only will the lasagna slice more readily, you'll run less risk of burning your mouth on a pocket of super-hot sauce or cheese. Baking the lasagna a day ahead is another option. Its flavors will mature, and the noodles will have lots of time to absorb any excess moisture.
Advertisement
eHow may earn compensation through affiliate links in this story. Learn more about our affiliate and product review process here.you may like
1Nashville Hot Chicken Recipe You Need to Try
2Low-Carb Pizza Dough Recipe
3What Is the Difference Between Salsa & Picante Sauce?
You May Also Like
1What Causes Toast to Brown?
2How Would You Cool Down Chili That Has Too Much Chili Powder in It?
3Easy Braciole Steak Recipe
Tag » Why Is My Lasagna Watery
-
How To Prevent & Fix Watery Lasagna - SharePostt
-
What Causes Watery Lasagna And How To Fix It! - Cooking Chops
-
Why Is Your Lasagna Watery And How To Fix It? - Julie's Cafe Bakery
-
Why Is My Lasagna Watery | 11 Tips And Tricks For Firm Lasagna
-
How Do You Make Sure Lasagna Is Not Watery? - Food Channel
-
Why Is My Lasagna Watery? - What You Can Do - Cooks Dream
-
What Do I Do If My Lasagna Is Too Watery? - Quora
-
How Do You Prevent Your Lasagne From Being Watery?
-
Why Does My Lasagna Come Out Watery? Wayne211 - BlogFree
-
What Causes Watery Lasagna And How To Fix It!
-
Why Is My Lasagna Watery? - Foodly
-
3 Ways To Make Better Lasagna | Bon Appétit
-
What Causes Watery Lasagna And How To Fix It. - One Pot Meals
-
What Do I Do If My Lasagna Is Too Watery? - 2014 Panda Seo