What to do with leftover ricotta?
peachmagic
Posts: 57 Member
in Recipes
I made veggie lasagna last night and only used 1 cup of ricotta, so I still have like half the tub of it left. I have only ever used ricotta for lasagna and have no idea what else to do with it. Anyone have any ideas?
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Replies
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I usually turn mine into pasta sauce. I have 2 ways I like to do this.
Option 1: Fry garlic in a pan. Add tinned diced tomatoes; season with salt, pepper, and whatever herbs you please (I use Italian mixed dried herbs). Add parboiled spinach (fresh or frozen; excess water squeezed out). Simmer until the spinach is cooked. Add ricotta; heat through.
Option 2: Fry garlic. Add chopped grilled veg (I like eggplant, zucchini, sweet potato, and capsicum). Add ricotta and a little bit of stock (or cooking water from the pasta); heat through. I also like to add capers, but the rest of my family doesn't like this. Serve with fresh parsley.0 -
You can put some on pizza, or bruschetta, season and stuff cherry tomatoes and grill/broil, put some in an omelette,0
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CANNOLIS.
Blend the ricotta with some sugar/splenda, vanilla and a little bit of citrus zest.
If you can't find the shells, use mini ice cream cones.0 -
Ricotta is basically very tiny curd cottage cheese, so you can also use it in place of cottage cheese or any recipe that includes cottage cheese.0
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1/4 cup part skim ricotta
1/2 tsp. almond extract
ground cinnamon to taste
truvia or other artificial sweetner to taste
Mix it all together , toast an english muffin and spread the ricotta mixture on top. Voilla! Yummy.0 -
Make low-sugar desserts, such as the ricotta creme from the South Beach diet books.
Some examples:
http://www.mizfrogspad.com/Diet/Recipes/Ph1_Desserts.htm0 -
CANNOLIS.
Blend the ricotta with some sugar/splenda, vanilla and a little bit of citrus zest.
If you can't find the shells, use mini ice cream cones.
Or waffles. Or French toast. Yum.0 -
I made veggie lasagna last night and only used 1 cup of ricotta, so I still have like half the tub of it left. I have only ever used ricotta for lasagna and have no idea what else to do with it. Anyone have any ideas?
Ricotta crepes > You'll need 3 or 4 eggs + 2TB sugar [your sweetner] + pinch salt and butter to grease your crepe pan. Whizz all ingredients, less the butter in the blender till smooth. Make your crepes.0 -
http://food52.com/recipes/13902-baked-ricotta-and-goat-cheese-with-candied-tomatoes?from_related=1&related_src_type=recipe
Depending on where you live, tomatoes of all kinds are in season right now.0 -
MUST DO lemon ricotta pancakes. Check out Pinterest for the recipe or just Google. They are amazing!
We have actually started buying ricotta for the pancakes and then using the rest of the container for a pasta dish :-) They're that good.0 -
I am lazy and seldom use (part skim) ricotta for recipes -- but I buy it all the time to eat with sliced fruit. Right now stone fruit is in season and it is delicious with plums, peaches, apricots, nectarines... sometimes I dust with a little splenda and/or cinnamon, or sprinkle 1/4 cup of whole oats or 2T ground flax seeds.0
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Stuffed shells
On a flatbread
In a crepe
Also, I believe allrecipes.com and other sites let you search by ingredient. Also, pinterest.0 -
I make oatmeal ricotta pancakes!0
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I mixed it with peanut butter once and it was awesome0
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I mixed it with peanut butter once and it was awesome
I thought about doing that!! Now I will with your testimony.. Thanks!0 -
You can substitute ricotta for paneer in Indian recipes or queso fresco in Mexican recipes. In fact, the recipe for making all three of them at home is basically the same: milk + acid + heat = fresh white cheese.
Here's a recipe from my hobby food blog that shows how to make fresh ricotta to make gnocchi: http://heidicookssupper.com/blog/2009/07/30/return-to-gnocchi-the-continuing-search-for-pillowy-dumplings/0 -
I am lazy and seldom use (part skim) ricotta for recipes -- but I buy it all the time to eat with sliced fruit. Right now stone fruit is in season and it is delicious with plums, peaches, apricots, nectarines... sometimes I dust with a little splenda and/or cinnamon, or sprinkle 1/4 cup of whole oats or 2T ground flax seeds.
Recall on stone fruits:
http://www.cnn.com/2014/07/22/health/costco-fruit-recall/0 -
I just eat it straight, not unlike cottage cheese. It is a cheese, after all.
Other than that, we used to make manicotti with it -- ricotta, parmesean, mozzarella, parsley (there were numbers once upon a time, now it's largely to taste) - mix together, stuff cooked shells, top with your favorite marinara sauce and a little more mozzarella, cover in foil, bake at 375F (iirc) for 30 minutes. Nom, nom, nom.0 -
Good to know! Fortunately I have a neighborhood farmer's market, where I got mine. I remember learning about listeria when I was pregnant, and it certainly doesn't sound like something to be messed with!0
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MUST DO lemon ricotta pancakes. Check out Pinterest for the recipe or just Google. They are amazing!
We have actually started buying ricotta for the pancakes and then using the rest of the container for a pasta dish :-) They're that good.
This!! Surpringly good0 -
I would never have even thought to use it in a sweet dish! Thanks guys!0
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