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Рецепт Move Over 007, it's Ravioli, Baked not Boiled.
by Mary Cokenour

There are those days when making a meal is the farthest thought from my mind. New ideas are hidden deeply, and I am in the mood for nothing special. I look in the pantry, refrigerator and freezer; hoping that something will jump out at me and scream, "Here I am! Eat me!!!" That finally happened when Buitoni's Shrimp and Lobster Ravioli peeked its green box out. Hello my little friend. One problem though is that I didn't want to use the packet of garlic butter sauce that came with it. Oh no, I didn't throw it away; that will be used for another recipe featuring rigatoni, chicken and a few vegetables. So what to do with it, and suddenly the ideas started to pop into my mind...diced tomatoes, but a creamy tomato sauce, not chunky; cheese, not as a garnish, but as a main ingredient. Of course a plain cheese, meat filled, even chicken and cheese ravioli can be used with this recipe. Lets see what I finally created, and it sure did taste good!

Baked Ravioli

Ingredients:

Preparation:

Take the packet of garlic butter sauce from the Buitoni box, label and return to the freezer (save for another recipe). Heat a large sauce pan of unsalted water on high heat; when boiling, cook the ravioli for only one minute before straining. All ice has been removed and the ravioli is no longer sticking together; it will finish cooking in the sauce while baking.

Preheat oven to 375F; spray a 1 and 1/2 quart baking dish with nonstick cooking spray. Begin the layering process by spreading one cup of sauce in the bottom of the dish.

Spread out half the ravioli over the sauce.

Spread half the diced tomatoes over the ravioli.

Mix the Romano and mozzarella cheeses together; spread half the mixture over the tomatoes and ravioli.

Now repeat the layering of sauce, ravioli, tomatoes, cheese; finish off with the final cup of sauce.

Bake for 25 - 30 minutes; sauce will be bubbling and all the cheese melted. The box of ravioli I used had 18 ravioli in them; during the baking process they expanded their bulk by half, so a serving of three was just right. Therefore, this recipe made six servings.

The ravioli cooked up perfectly; the flavor of the sauce was infused into the pasta. Tasting the seafood, pasta, cheese and tomatoes all together made me feel as if I was eating a decadent seafood parmigiana over pasta. Sometimes, you have to think outside of the box, and not use everything inside it either.

Mary Cokenour