The Not-So-Typical Spinach Venison Lasagna

It's seems as if anything Italian is a hit in our household, so when lasagna night comes, everyone is eager for dinner and, well, left overs.

Since we were blessed with a small deer at the start of winter, we have been finding ways of adding venison to our everyday cooking. It turns out that ground venison is our go-to. I know, not everyone has venison stock piled in their freezer, so feel free to make this recipe with ground beef or no meat at all. I will note that the venison is extremely lean and when used in a sauce there's no worries about the "game-y" taste most people are afraid of. 

While venison may not be common in most people's fridge/freezer, I am not one to constantly have ricotta cheese in my fridge. Instead, homemade yogurt or whole milk yogurt is most likely always in my kitchen. So, I experimented with a simple substitution and to my dismay, it turned out great. I hope you enjoy a classic lasagna dinner with a little bit of a twist.

 

Not-So-Typical Spinach-Venison Lasagna

Tomato Sauce Ingredients:

3 Tbsp Julia’s Good Medicine Basil Garlic Olive Oil

1 small yellow onion, finely chopped

2 garlic cloves, crushed

1 lb. ground venison OR beef (optional)

1 can diced tomatoes

1 can crushed plum tomatoes

2 Tbsp tomato paste

1 tsp brown sugar

1 tsp Julia’s Good Medicine Parsley, Sage, Rosemary and Thyme Herbal Sea Salt

1 Tbsp oregano

1 Tbsp dried basil

½ tsp crushed red pepper

½ tsp coarsely ground black pepper

 

Lasagna Ingredients:

2 ½ cups whole-milk yogurt

2 bunches organic spinach, coarsely chopped

1 egg

9 no-cook lasagna noodles

1 lb. part-skim mozzarella cheese, thinly sliced OR shredded

2/3 cup grated Parmigiano Reggiano cheese

 

Directions:

1      To prepare sauce, heat olive oil in a large saucepan. Add onion and garlic; cook until soft and translucent, but not brown.

2      Add venison and cook until browned.

3      Add tomatoes, tomato paste, sugar, herbal sea salt, oregano, basil, crushed red pepper and black pepper; stir well. Bring to a boil; simmer, uncovered, 30 minutes. Let cool slightly.

4      Preheat oven to 375F.

5      To prepare lasagna, combine yogurt, spinach and egg in a large bowl; mix well.

6      Coat the bottom of the 13 x 9-inch baking pan with a third of the tomato sauce. Cover sauce with 3 noodles without overlapping (break noodles to fit), half the yogurt mixture and remaining mozzarella. Top with remaining 3 noodles, remaining sauce and parmigiana cheese.

**To make ahead of time, cover with foil and refrigerate 6 to 8 hours or overnight.

7      Place pan on baking sheet. Bake, uncovered, 40 minutes, or until bubbly.

8      Let stand about 15 minutes before cutting into squares.

9      Serves 12, Enjoy!

Cannonball Island

The start of this website's blogging begins with a journey to Cannonball Island. This island is where the Makah people would (and still do) have their vision quests. Out of respect for the first nations people, we did not climb the island where one stays during their quest. Instead, we watched a group of deer move from the forest and find their footing around the "almost" perfectly round cannonball rocks and venture out to the island. 

 

 

It's at the Ozette site where a mudslide engulfed part of a Makah village. It's at this site where some of the most well-preserved ethnobotanical artifacts were found in the U.S. And it is at this site where one can talk to the large Sitka Spruce and Cedar elders, while emerging onto the land's edge in the Northwestern corner of this country. And it is where many beginnings have begun and ended, it's a place that inspires me as an ethnobotanist and naturalist.