Slow cooker lasagna

Slow cooker lasagna - Brown and Black Turtle on Brown Sand

Can a lasagna be made in the slow cooker, or will that cause the pasta to become unpleasant?



Best Answer

I have never tried it but the extended cooking of a slow cooker, combined with the concentrated and trapped moisture would surely turn the pasta into a gummy paste.

No-boil noodles are just a marketing ploy. You can assemble lasagna with regular uncooked lasagna noodles and bake it for 1 hour (350F) covered with foil waxed paper/parchment paper and foil and then uncover and scatter cheese across the top and bake for another 15 minutes.

Just make sure you have a layer of sauce in contact with the noodles and they'll absorb the moisture during cooking.

You can also assemble and freeze it this way too.




Pictures about "Slow cooker lasagna"

Slow cooker lasagna - Red and White Electric Fireplace
Slow cooker lasagna - Brown Turtle on Brown Soil
Slow cooker lasagna - Blue Turtles on Brown Sand



Can I put dry pasta in slow cooker?

If you're making noodles and pasta sauce in your slow cooker, we recommend you cook the pasta separately and make the sauce in the slow cooker. If you've done this before, you might opt to add dry noodles to the slow cooker near the end of the sauce cook time.

Can you make lasagna without boiling the sheets?

Some people swear you can use regular lasagna noodles without boiling them first. This works as long as they get extra moisture during cooking just like the no-boil noodles (either by soaking before assembling or using a watery sauce, and covering the dish).

How many layers should a good lasagna have?

Although there's no \u201ctraditional\u201d number, most lasagnas have between three to four layers. Feel free to add more layers to accommodate a large party. However, the majority of chefs agree that every lasagna should have a minimum of three layers.




More answers regarding slow cooker lasagna

Answer 2

My wife and I tried a slow-cooker lasagnga recipe and it was a disaster, probably for the reasons that Darin mentioned. Perhaps we didn't follow the recipe correctly, but either way, we weren't pleased with the results. I remember it being fairly slimy and certainly not resembling what we expected for a lasagna recipe.

Though we love our Crockpot for lots of different recipes, I would advise preparing lasagna in a more traditional way.

Answer 3

Some claim it can be done (e.g., Crockpot Lasagna)

However, I tried it once and was not happy with the pasta. Of course, I did not repeat the experiment to determine if that was my own fault; it probably was.

Answer 4

My neighbor does it quite frequently, and it comes out fine if you use a pasta that doesn't get overly soft when cooked. (I think she uses Barilla, and not the 'no cook' type, although she doesn't cook them first).

You do have to brown the ground beef and sweat any vegetables in advance, though, so it's not one of those 'throw everything into a pot and forget about it' slow cooker recipes.

I know many of her slow cooker recipes she got from the Fix It and Forget It cookbook, but I don't know for sure that it was one of them.

Sources: Stack Exchange - This article follows the attribution requirements of Stack Exchange and is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.

Images: Mikhail Nilov, Soumith Soman, tommaso picone, Jolo Diaz