Esta es una exhibición prevé de cómo se va ver la receta de 'Vegetarian Lasagna' imprimido.

Receta Vegetarian Lasagna
by Monte Mathews

A few years ago, I got a call from a

guest who was about two hours away from coming to dinner. He’d called to tell me that he and his new

wife had become vegetarian. Quite

frankly, my initial impulse was to continue cooking the dinner I’d planned and

let the two of them survive on the baked potatoes I was cooking. They were the

only completely vegetarian item on the menu that night. I managed to control myself, eliminated the

pancetta in the spinach and forgot the pie with its Crisco crust and served the

berries for the filling all by their lonesome. Inside, I seethed. Since then, I've come a long way, baby! I've embraced Meatless Mondays and lightened up on meat protein in our diet. I'll never be anything other than an omnivore and meat will always find its way onto our table. But today, I'm sharing a classic recipe that might just change even a meat-and-potatoes man into, well, a meat-and-potatoes man who loves his vegetables.

For devoted readers of Chewing the Fat, if this recipe sounds vaguely familiar, it's because it was one that I shared with you when the blog was a lot newer. It's from this very week in 1911. The recipe has a long list of ingredients but I want to assure you it is not that time-consuming. But it is exceptional. From Saveur's great "The New Comfort Food--Home Cooking from around the world" (Chronicle Books 2011), here is a lasagna that, with a meat sauce, would have been an almost too-hearty dish for this time of year. Instead, the layers of mushrooms and the meat-y tomatoes, the creamy béchamel, the two cheeses—even the pasta—were light and

delicious. Not at all heavy, it was the

perfect thing to serve with a simple green salad and some crusty French

bread. And believe it or not, I got the whole thing in the

oven in under an hour. The lasagna

noodles went straight into the dish uncooked which not only saved time, it

also gave the lasagna the body to hold together beautifully. Try this.

I think you’ll be amazed at how light, delicious and healthy it is. Here’s the recipe:

Recipe for Vegetarian

Lasagna adapted from Saveur’s “New Comfort Food” (Chronicle Books 2011) Serves 6-8. Prep 1 hour. Baking Time 1 hr;

golden, 15 minutes more.