Search for:



If you enjoy the videos we make; buy us a cup of tea: https://ko-fi.com/glenandfriendscooking
Welcome back to the kitchen, friends! Today we’re making a rustic Italian sausage and vegetable skillet using our homemade family sausage recipe. Every January, Julie and I make a year’s supply of Italian pork sausage using a simple family recipe passed down from one of Julie’s uncles in Italy. It’s a classic blend of pork, salt, pepper, fennel, hot pepper flakes, and white wine — simple ingredients that create incredible flavour.

In this episode, we turn that homemade sausage into an easy one-pan Italian comfort food dinner. The sausage is browned and simmered with zucchini, onions, mushrooms, garlic, sweet peppers, tomatoes, pickled banana peppers, and hot pepperoncini for a rich, flavourful dish that’s perfect for using whatever vegetables you already have in the fridge.

This is one of those flexible “clean out the fridge” recipes where you can swap ingredients depending on what’s in season or what you have on hand. The result is a hearty, rustic meal packed with vegetables and bold Italian flavours.
Serve this dish over polenta, gnocchi, pasta, rice, couscous, or mashed potatoes to soak up all that delicious tomato and sausage sauce.
If you enjoy rustic home cooking, traditional recipes, and simple comfort food, you’re in the right place.
Thanks for stopping by the kitchen!
What You’ll Learn in This Video
How to cook homemade Italian sausage in a skillet
Building flavour with wine, tomatoes, and vegetables
A flexible one-pan dinner recipe
Tips for turning simple ingredients into a hearty meal

One Pan Smothered Sausage Recipe
INGREDIENTS
Oil for frying
1 Kg (2 pounds) sausage
1-2 zucchini, sliced
2 medium onions, sliced
2-3 garlic cloves, minced
Salt and pepper to taste
250g (½ pound) mushrooms, sliced
250 mL (1 cup) white wine
Crushed red pepper flakes to taste
3-4 mild pickled peppers, chopped
3 sweet bell peppers, sliced
1 – 796 mL (28-oz) can tomatoes
1 bunch spinach
15 mL (1 Tbsp) Italian seasoning, optional

Method:
In a heavy pan or braiser over medium high heat, brown the sausage in a little oil.
Remove the browned sausage from the pan, adjust the oil and sauté the zucchini, onions, and garlic until the onions are translucent.
Seasoning with salt and pepper to taste.
Add in the mushrooms and continue cooking until mushrooms have lost most of their moisture.
Pour in the wine and cook, stirring occasionally until liquid has reduced by ⅔.
Stir in red pepper flakes, pickled peppers, and other seasoning if using.
Add the sausage back to the pan, along with the sweet peppers and tomatoes.
Partially cover, reduce to a simmer and simmer about 20 minutes.
Add in the spinach, and cover to cook until spinach has wilted.

This method is infinitely variable and I encourage you to swap in your fave veggies, sausage, and seasoning.

More info about Hope Air: https://hopeair.ca/
2026 Hope Air Donation: http://www.hopeair.ca/glen

Here is the link to our Apron: https://searchandrescuedenim.com/products/s-r-x-glen-friends-chef-apron?country=IO&variant=50865649877152

https://searchandrescuedenim.com/GLENANDFRIENDSCOOKING
Discount code to be used at checkout: GLENANDFRIENDSCOOKING

Buy us a cup of tea: https://ko-fi.com/glenandfriendscooking

Help us out with a PayPal donation: https://www.paypal.com/cgi-bin/webscr?cmd=_s-xclick&hosted_button_id=T4FPGUQABAUTE

Join this channel:
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCsU15yvILBmnHPeAf4SFVaQ/join

This channel is nothing without you our viewers! Thanks for watching the Old Cookbook Show and our Historical Cooking.
#LeGourmetTV #GlenAndFriendsCooking

Check out our Aviation and Flying Channel: https://www.youtube.com/glenshangar

29 Comments

  1. I always chop fresh spinach into strips before sauteing. I find the smaller pieces make it less slimy, if that makes sense.

  2. I made your brown sugar and bacon cookies from 12 years ago. They are scrummy, but in your best tradition I had to use dark brown sugar and self rising flour as I didn't have the recipe ingredients, and still scrummy. Cheers, glen.

  3. This is a version of one of the best meals I ever ate. I had gone camping with friends. Everyone else at the campground had sandwiches. It was cold and damp. My friend had brought a grill, and we had sausage, potatoes, onions, and peppers. So satisfying.

  4. Now I know how I will use some of my sausage – unfortunately my butcher uses plastic casing, so it may end up looking like sausage crumbles by the time I Remove the casing… oh well.

  5. Toss in some cooked barley. I’m fortunate enough to have a local shop that makes excellent hot and mild ( we call it sweet here in northeast Pennsylvania) Italian sausage.
    I have made this very similar using boneless pork chops. Thanks Glen

  6. I just love you guys! Your videos are always fun and very educational. I like and watch every one of them (on both channels). Thank you so much for all of the time you spend making such great content!

  7. I made the mushroom ragu last week! Now another dinner for a cold saturday night. I think I'll put some hot cherry peppers in mine. Thank you for the inspiration.

  8. I think I'd almost always add some beans to that, take it almost into a cassoulet type direction. Obviously not a "proper" cassoulet. The french would throw a brick through my window, but who cares about traditional when you are cooking in your own home.

Write A Comment