This is a reader-favourite recipe included by popular demand in my debut cookbook “Dinner”!

Spinach and Ricotta Cannelloni

This is one of my go-to freezer meals I make to give to friends, and a great one to make for dinners to cater for both carnivores and vegetarians. I make it often throughout most of the year, except perhaps at the very height of summer. Yes, I love cannelloni that much! Cannelloni is a tube shaped dry pasta about 7 cm / 3″ long and 2cm / 2/3″ wide. It is stuffed with filling, covered in a sauce and cheese then baked. It does not need to be cooked before filling, it softens when baked in the oven. The most common variety is a spinach and ricotta filling topped with a tomato sauce which is the version I am sharing today. Manicotti is also a dry paste tube. It’s the Italian-American version of cannelloni.  The difference is that manicotti is larger with ridges, whereas cannelloni is smooth. The spinach and ricotta filling in this recipe fills 18 – 22 cannelloni tubes, or 10 – 12 manicotti tubes. There are two ways to make cannelloni:

stuffing dry pasta tubes rolling the filling up in fresh lasagna sheets

I like using the tubes – partly because they are more cost effective. And also because I like the size – a better filling to pasta/sauce/cheese ratio. Lasagna sheets are thicker and you need a double layer where the sheets overlap to seal in the filling and inevitably, the cannellonis end up bigger.

Easiest way to fill cannelloni tubes

And I know what many of you are thinking – stuffing the tubes is a pain.  After many years of using knives / thin spoons / combination of those + the end of wooden spoons and I finally accepted the inevitable fact: The fastest way to fill the tubes is with a piping bag.7 seconds per tube x 20 tubes = 2.3 minutes. (Watch the video!)

The Spinach and Ricotta Filling

The Spinach and Ricotta Filling is creamy, has the perfect spinach to ricotta ratio, and made extra tasty with the addition of parmesan and cheese. It’s so good, I can eat spoonfuls of it straight out of the bowl! Here’s what’s in it:

Spinach – use frozen for convenience (thaw, remove excess water before using), or fresh if you’ve got an abundance of it; Ricotta – be sure to use a food quality full fat, creamy one. (Tip: avoid Perfect Italiano tub, it’s quite powdery and unpleasant) Shredded cheese – a flavoured one is best, like cheddar, tasty. Save the mozzarella for the topping. Parmesan – don’t skip this! It adds extra savouriness and seasoning to the filling. Just store bought finely shredded or grated is fine, or grate your own. Garlic – because it makes everything better Egg – for binding (can be skipped) Nutmeg – optional, but it’s a lovely touch. I use it in almost all my spinach ricotta fillings. Salt and pepper

This is my standard recipe that is virtually identical (if not identical) to what I use for all things spinach and ricotta, from this Spinach and Ricotta Pasta Bake, to Puff Pasty Puffs, Rotolo (it’s like upright cannelloni – and it’s amazing!), to Spinach Ricotta Rolls. YES, it’s perfectly fine to freeze. If using to stuff something, then thaw, give it a good mix then use per recipe. If it’s already prepared, like Cannelloni, it can even be cooked from frozen. I freeze cannelloni more often than cooking it fresh!

Sauce for Cannelloni

Cannelloni has to be smothered generously with sauce to ensure there’s enough liquid for the dry pasta tubes to absorb and cook in the oven, and there is still sauce when serving it up. The most common sauce is a tomato pasta sauce which is what I use. There are recipes “out there” that say to just use plain canned tomatoes or tomato passata for the topping (or bottled pasta sauce). I really, REALLY think that if you’re making the effort to making cannelloni, it is a no brainer to make a tiny extra effort to make a simple pasta sauce. It is honestly so much better than using plain canned tomato or a store bought pasta sauce!

Option: Load up on extra spinach

You can double the spinach in this, if you want. It can take it, plus you will use up an entire box of cannelloni tubes. They come in boxes of 30 here in Australia, and it is kind of annoying to end up with 10 or so floating around in the pantry, which then motivates me to make another batch just to use them up, then I end up with more tubes leftover so I have to make another batch. Serve Cannelloni with a simple garden salad tossed with Italian Dressing. For a blow-out Italian feast, add a side of Garlic Bread, or a quick Cheesy Garlic Bread! – Nagi x

Watch how to make it

This recipe features in my debut cookbook Dinner. The book is mostly new recipes, but this is a reader favourite included by popular demand!

 

Life of Dozer

Remember how I shared his current favourite toy – this squeaking emoji? Did I mention his favourite place to gnaw away at it? Smack bang in the middle of the new day bed. He literally plonks himself in the middle. And please… someone remind me why I got a DARK GREY one??? 🙄 SaveSave SaveSave SaveSave SaveSave SaveSave SaveSave SaveSave SaveSave SaveSave

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