My Meat Sauce
My grandfather use to be very secretative when it came to his sauce, actually when it came to his food in general. Now my meat sauce isn’t really his recipe exactly but it’s close. What’s the key? Pork. Its amazing what pork can do to a red sauce. The below is not a typical meat sauce nor is it a bolognese (no carrots or celery).
Ingredients
1 can crushed tomatoes
1 can tomato paste
1 cup of red wine
2 pork braccioles (thin pork cutlets wrapped up with parsley, cheese, and prosciutto)
2 minced shallots
1 minced garlic clove
6 links of plain sausage meat (remove casing)
1 cup of sliced mushrooms
3 tbs of extra virgin olive oil
In a pressure cooker saute shallots and garalic in olive oil until translucent. Cook sausage meat in with onions and shallots. When sausage meat is browned, add tomato paste and stir. Then add the mushrooms, crushed tomatoes, red wine, and braccioles.
Now set your pressure cooker on low and cook for the appropriate times on your pressure cooker (mine is about 15-20 minutes). Let your pressure cooker cool and when it is ready, remove the lid. Bring the sauce to a boil and cook for an additional 30 minutes to thicken the sauce.

so warm and delicious!
Tomato Tarts
There is nothing simpler than a tomato tart in the summer. If you grow tomatoes and never know what to do with your leftovers, this is a great way to use them.
4 lbs of tomatoes
4 tbs of Dijon Mustard
2/3 cup of shredded swiss cheese
1 ts. garlic powder
1/4 cup of finely chopped herbs (sage, rosemary, thyme)
1 pie crust (make your own or buy a Pillsbury pre-made)
Preheat oven to 400 degrees
- Bake crust for 10 minutes, remove, and let cool
- While pie crust is cooling, slice tomatoes into slices and drain excess juice in a collander
- After crust is cool, then spread the mustard on the bottom. Evenly sprinkle the cheese top of mustard and then arrange the tomato slices in one layer (like dominos)
- Sprinkle garlic powder and herbs ontop of tomatoes and bake for 15-20 minutes




