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Please help me fix my spaghetti
I'm hoping some of the foodies on DW can provide some inspiration.
On Monday, I made this recipe from Hello Fresh. It's ragu spaghetti with zucchini, and comes with a little bottle of pepperolio (which appears to be indistinguishable from my Chinese chili oil) to spice it up.
Both Lydy (who had a taste) and I agreed that it was edible, tasty even, but bland. This despite the fact that it had onions, fresh garlic, and a generous helping of Italian seasoning (containing garlic, black pepper, parsley, basil, and oregano), plus some of the pepperolio. I don't remember blandness being a problem the last time I made this recipe. This time, the Hello Fresh had a rather larger onion and zucchini than the time before, but that shouldn't have made a significant difference. The only other difference I can think of is that last time I was on my own, and I left the sauce to simmer for about 20 minutes; this time, I was running late, and I only went with the minimum mandated 5 minutes.
I still have more than half of the spaghetti left, so if I can figure out what I can add to it to improve it, that would be nice. I would appreciate suggestions. I also have lots more of the Italian seasoning, since most of the recipes that use it call for half a packet. I have a decent but not luxurious spice shelf in addition to that.
I know that a lot of spaghetti sauce has some sugar in it, but I'm loath to add that without a strong recommendation. I can add more pepperolio, but spicy hot isn't necessarily a substitute for flavor.
Any other ideas?
On Monday, I made this recipe from Hello Fresh. It's ragu spaghetti with zucchini, and comes with a little bottle of pepperolio (which appears to be indistinguishable from my Chinese chili oil) to spice it up.
Both Lydy (who had a taste) and I agreed that it was edible, tasty even, but bland. This despite the fact that it had onions, fresh garlic, and a generous helping of Italian seasoning (containing garlic, black pepper, parsley, basil, and oregano), plus some of the pepperolio. I don't remember blandness being a problem the last time I made this recipe. This time, the Hello Fresh had a rather larger onion and zucchini than the time before, but that shouldn't have made a significant difference. The only other difference I can think of is that last time I was on my own, and I left the sauce to simmer for about 20 minutes; this time, I was running late, and I only went with the minimum mandated 5 minutes.
I still have more than half of the spaghetti left, so if I can figure out what I can add to it to improve it, that would be nice. I would appreciate suggestions. I also have lots more of the Italian seasoning, since most of the recipes that use it call for half a packet. I have a decent but not luxurious spice shelf in addition to that.
I know that a lot of spaghetti sauce has some sugar in it, but I'm loath to add that without a strong recommendation. I can add more pepperolio, but spicy hot isn't necessarily a substitute for flavor.
Any other ideas?
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I don't think the issue is likely to be insufficient flavour inputs; I suspect the issue is likely to be a combination of lean beef and not enough time for the flavours to combine. (Plus zucchini can be a fat mop, which will inhibit the spread of the flavours. A big bland zucchini can blandify its surroundings.)
I'd try heating the sauce back up and giving it half an hour to simmer, stirring a couple tablespoons of olive oil in at the start. If (I'm not sure) you've got the sauce already on spaghetti, I might try the same but adding enough water to be sure it won't stick (and thus burn) while it heats back up, and then time the simmer by how long it takes the sauce to thicken back up as the water boils off.
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If you have a carrot, I might dice that up and throw it in with the zuccini - they will add the dimension of sugar without being straight sugar. (It doesn't need to be a very big carrot for this to work.)
It's also possible a small splash of vinegar (or wine or lemon juice) wouldn't hurt. One of the three generally improves most foods for my tastebuds.
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(Not a foodie.)
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