#71 Vincisgrassi alla Maceratese ( Marche)
Vincisgrassi stayed with me from the first bite I ever had, dusty and hungry after a motocross race with my father in the Marche. It looked like lasagna, but the flavor told a different story built on slow ragù, offal, wine, and care. Every layer asks for time, and every hour gives something back. It’s not about excess, but about attention, the kind of cooking that turns patience into generosity.
Full recipe with ingredients, method and tips live already on my Substack (link in bio).
#vincisgrassi #forgottenitalianclassics #marchigianacucina #italianfoodhistory #slowcooking

17 Comments
Incredible. I need to make this
Ma è una lasagna. Stessi ingredienti, cambia solo il fegato… almeno nel tuo short.
I absolutely love this channel. thank you for Intruducing more underrated dishes from a cuisine that tends to get overshadowed by a few mainstream dishes, and the rustic way you cook these dishes looks so authentic as if we're actually looking into how it would be cooked for a family dinner
Ive alway wondered why Italian dishes use so much ollive oil, is there any historical reason? 😅 amazing dish either way.
Ooh looks good, I'm always down for chicken liver and chicken gizzard
prova il cardone in brodo, è un piatto abruzzese di natale
I really wanna try making it sometime.
Goodness, I love your content so much. Thank you!
You tell beautiful stories in your videos. Thank you for sharing this passion!
Bro no besciamella in vincisgrassi
That's lasagnas.
Already out of recipes ?
Ecco: davanti a questi piatti non c'è cucina al mondo che tenga. Qui siamo nell'Olimpo
Ma che forgotten, avendo la nonna marchigiana a ogni festa Pasqua natale.. li preparava, molto buoni!!
"becomes more than just pizza and pasta"
makes lasagna
Brother all you do is reinforce the stereotypes. Pizza and pasta is all you offer the world, and bald men
Really love these old school, zero waste recipes!
It looks delicious! I hear you that it’s from
A different region, but what truly is the difference between this and lasagna because I really don’t see much of a difference at all
No hate just curious!