
Have a few hours to spare? Take the slow road with our Sunday Simmer Red Gravyโthe deep, soulful ‘All-Day’ classic that started it all. โ

Quick-Turn Pasta Sauce
Reflect Sunday's all-day flavor in under 30 minutes.
Sunday is a marathon; Monday is a sprint. Weโre using the same flavor DNAโfennel, garlic, and deep tomatoโbut weโre accelerating the process by crumbling the meat and "frying" our aromatics. This isn't a compromise; it's a strategy.Ingredients
Method
The Crumble
- In a large skillet over medium-high heat, add the ground beef and the loose sausage meat. Use a wooden spoon to break the meat into small crumbles as it browns. Cook until crispy and caramelized. Do not drain the fat.
The Pasta
- Drop your pasta into boiling salted water.
The Pincรฉ & Aromatics:
- Push the meat aside. Fry the tomato paste in the center until dark maroon. Add the garlic, Beef base, oregano, basil, and red pepper flakes directly into the hot fat for 45 seconds. This "blooms" the dried herbs, making them taste fresh.
The Smooth Pour
- Stir in the Tomato Puree and Tomato Sauce first. This creates the "Gravy" silk.
The Body
- Add the small amount of Crushed Tomatoes. This gives the sauce that "Sunday" look where bits of tomato are suspended in the smooth sauce.
The Rapid Reduction
- Because puree is thicker and smoother than whole peeled tomatoes, it will "tighten up" into a rich gravy in just 10-15 minutes of bubbling.
The Finish
- Add the butter. Toss and stir over medium heat for 60 seconds.
Notes
Tempo Chefโs Notes: Mastering the Quick-Turn
- Bloom the Herbs, Don’t Just Toss Them: Dried oregano and basil are “sleeping” in the jar. When you add them to the hot meat fat with the garlic, you are blooming them. This wakes up the essential oils, giving you that “simmered all day” aroma in seconds. If you just toss them into the liquid sauce, they stay “dusty”โbloom them in the fat for the win.
- The Puree vs. Sauce Balance: We use Tomato Puree for the heavy “body” and Tomato Sauce for the sweetness and fluidity. This combination mimics the texture of a Sunday Gravy that has been reduced for hours. It should look like “Red Velvet”โsmooth, thick, and opaque.
- Sugar is a Cheat Code: If your canned tomatoes feel a bit too acidic or “tinny,” add a tiny pinch of sugar (no more than half a teaspoon) when you add the puree. It rounds out the sharp edges of the tomatoes, mimicking the natural sweetness that usually comes from a slow 4-hour braise.
- The “Rest” Period: Even a 20-minute sauce benefits from a “nap.” Once youโve married the pasta and sauce, turn off the heat and let it sit for just 2 minutes before plating. This allows the pasta to absorb the final bit of seasoning and “sets” the gravy so it doesn’t run.
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