Marcella Hazan’s Bolognese Sauce
Updated Dec. 29, 2025

- Total Time
- At least 4 hours
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
Advertisement
Ingredients
- 1tablespoon vegetable oil
- 3tablespoons butter plus 1 tablespoon for tossing the pasta
- ½cup chopped onion
- ⅔cup chopped celery
- ⅔cup chopped carrot
- ¾pound ground beef chuck (or you can use 1 part pork to 2 parts beef)
- Salt
- Black pepper, ground fresh from the mill
- 1cup whole milk
- Whole nutmeg
- 1cup dry white wine
- 1½cups canned imported Italian plum tomatoes, cut up, with their juice
- 1¼ to 1½pounds pasta
- Freshly grated Parmigiano-Reggiano at the table
Preparation
- Step 1
Put the oil, butter and chopped onion in the pot and turn the heat on to medium. Cook and stir the onion until it has become translucent, then add the chopped celery and carrot. Cook for about 2 minutes, stirring vegetables to coat them well.
- Step 2
Add ground beef, a large pinch of salt and a few grindings of pepper. Crumble the meat with a fork, stir well and cook until the beef has lost its raw, red color.
- Step 3
Add milk and let it simmer gently, stirring frequently, until it has bubbled away completely. Add a tiny grating — about ⅛ teaspoon — of nutmeg, and stir.
- Step 4
Add the wine, let it simmer until it has evaporated, then add the tomatoes and stir thoroughly to coat all ingredients well. When the tomatoes begin to bubble, turn the heat down so that the sauce cooks at the laziest of simmers, with just an intermittent bubble breaking through to the surface. Cook, uncovered, for 3 hours or more, stirring from time to time. While the sauce is cooking, you are likely to find that it begins to dry out and the fat separates from the meat. To keep it from sticking, add ½ cup of water whenever necessary. At the end, however, no water at all must be left and the fat must separate from the sauce. Stir to mix the fat into the sauce, taste and correct for salt.
- Step 5
Toss with cooked drained pasta, adding the tablespoon of butter, and serve with freshly grated Parmigiano-Reggiano on the side.
Private Notes
Comments
I cannot comment of the taste of the sauce. It was cooling and I ran a short errand. In the meantime, my 8 year old Labrador Retriever, Jake, (who had never, ever bothered anything in the kitchen) somehow got the pot off of the cooktop and ate all of the sauce. The worst part was that I had tripled the recipe, so Jake ate 3 pounds of Bolognese sauce! I am certain he would rate the sauce a 5. We had to go out for dinner, but I will make the recipe again and post relevant feedback!PS Jake is fine.
At the end of the cooking process am I to remove the separated fat. I'm new to this.
This was a great and helpful guide. Added a few bits more here, reduced a few things there and ended up with a great bolognese.
I have to laugh at the people who are complaining about it not being good. You're saying that you had something on your stove top for 3 hours and not once did you taste it? This is cooking not baking. You taste everything at every step along the way and make adjustments. It is the lazy cook that blames the recipe
Made it many times. Always Fabulous, Always nowhere near that shade of red. Makes me question what "1½cups canned imported Italian plum tomatoes, cut up, with their juice" really means
It was simply divine, as promised. But with tweaks. I rendered pancetta in the butter and oil at the outset. During the long cooking time, I couldn't resist tasting it again and again, and so I added pinches of dried basil and oregano, then a pinch of brown sugar, then a little balsamic, then a sploosh of Tamari, and finally some porcini mushrooms, and that's when my inner Goldilocks knew it was just right. I'd say it's a fantastic basic recipe to modify and adjust as you go along.
I made this over the weekend and it was to die for. I couldn't find a whole nutmeg, so used ground nutmeg. Simmered for 7 hours while we shoveled out from the massive snow storm. Served with pici pasta and a bottle of chianti brought home from Tuscany. Chef's kiss!
