Classic Lasagna
- By Jennifer Segal
- Updated August 1, 2025
- 889 Comments
- Leave a Review
This post may contain affiliate links. Read my full disclosure policy.
Learn how to make a homemade lasagna that rivals the best Italian restaurants, with layers of savory meat sauce, creamy ricotta, and gooey mozzarella. It’s the kind of dish you’ll want to make again and again.

I love this classic lasagna because it has all the cozy, familiar flavors of the lasagna I grew up with, but it tastes like something you’d get at a fine Italian restaurant. It’s also easier than you’d think, thanks to oven-ready noodles that save time and effort and deliver that delicate texture you’d normally expect from homemade pasta.
The layers are packed with a flavorful meat sauce made with Italian sausage and vegetables, plus four types of cheese. Baked until bubbly and golden, it’s the perfect cozy dish for a crowd—and it reheats and freezes beautifully, too. This lasagna is a longtime family favorite, right alongside other crowd-pleasing dishes like baked ziti, stuffed shells, and manicotti. After all, everyone loves Italian!
“Best lasagna recipe—ever! Served with your fab Caesar salad. Conversation at the table was reduced to sighs of delight and an occasional OMG or YUM.”
What You’ll Need To Make Lasagna

- Onion, Garlic, Carrots & Celery: These aromatic vegetables form the base of the sauce, adding sweetness, savoriness, and depth of flavor.
- Italian Sausage: Adds richness and bold flavor. You can substitute ground beef—just amp up the garlic and Italian seasoning to compensate.
- Crushed Tomatoes, Red Wine & Heavy Cream: The tomatoes provide body and tang, the wine deepens the flavor, and the cream rounds it all out for a rich, well-balanced sauce.
- Ricotta, Cream Cheese, Egg & Parmigiano-Reggiano: These combine for a creamy, flavorful filling that bakes up smooth and rich (the cream cheese keeps the ricotta from getting grainy, and the egg helps it set).
- Oven-Ready (No-Boil) Lasagna Noodles: No need to pre-cook—these absorb the sauce as they bake. I like the Barilla brand best.
- Mozzarella: Melts into gooey, cheesy layers throughout the dish. Pre-shredded is fine—just go for whole milk for the best melt.
- Jump to the printable recipe for precise measurements
Step-By-Step Instructions
Step 1: Prep the vegetables. Place the onions, garlic, carrots, and celery in a food processor. Give them a rough chop first so they blend evenly, then pulse until minced but not puréed—they should melt into the sauce. (You can also chop by hand if you prefer.)

Step 2: Brown the sausage. Heat 2 tablespoons of the olive oil in a large pot over medium-high heat. Add the sausage and cook, breaking it up into small pieces, until lightly browned, about 5 minutes. Transfer to a plate with a slotted spoon and set aside.
Pro tip: Browning the meat first builds deep flavor in the pan, which carries through to the rest of the sauce.

Step 3: Cook the vegetables. Add the remaining tablespoon of olive oil to the pan, then add the minced vegetables. Cook until very soft, 6 to 8 minutes. They will blend into the sauce and thicken it naturally.

Step 4: Deglaze with wine. Pour in the wine and stir, scraping up the browned bits from the bottom of the pot—they’re packed with flavor. Let it simmer for a few minutes until mostly absorbed.

Step 5: Simmer the sauce. Add the tomatoes, cream, salt, pepper, sugar, thyme, and bay leaves. Bring to a boil, then lower the heat and simmer for about 20 minutes, until thickened.

Step 6: Add the sausage. Stir in the sausage and continue to simmer for another 10 minutes so everything melds together. Adding the sausage at this stage keeps it tender and lets the flavors mingle without overcooking the meat.

Step 7: Make the ricotta filling. In a food processor, combine the ricotta, cream cheese, egg, garlic, Parmesan, salt, and pepper. Process until smooth, then add the basil and pulse until finely chopped.

Step 8: Assemble the lasagna. Spread about 1½ cups of sauce on the bottom of a baking dish. (Starting with a layer of sauce prevents the noodles from sticking to the bottom of the dish and helps everything cook evenly.) Lay down 3 noodles, then spread with one-third of the ricotta filling and sprinkle with ¾ cup mozzarella.

Step 9: Repeat. Repeat these layers two more times. Top with the final 3 noodles, the remaining sauce, mozzarella, and ¼ cup Parmigiano-Reggiano. Don’t worry if the layers look tall—lasagna settles a bit as it bakes and rests.
Pro tip: You store the assembled, unbaked lasagne in the fridge overnight or freeze it for up to 3 months.

Step 10: Bake and rest. Bake the lasagna until bubbling and golden, about 1 hour. Let it rest for 15 minutes before slicing so it sets up.

Video Tutorial
You May Also Like
Classic Lasagna Recipe
Ingredients
For the Sauce
- 1 medium yellow onion, roughly chopped
- 5 cloves garlic, roughly chopped
- 2 medium carrots, roughly chopped
- 1 stalk celery, roughly chopped
- 3 tablespoons olive oil, divided
- 1½ pounds Italian sausage (bulk or removed from casing)
- ¾ cup dry red wine
- 1 (28-oz) can crushed tomatoes
- ½ cup heavy cream
- ¾ teaspoon salt
- ¼ teaspoon freshly ground black pepper
- 2 teaspoons sugar
- 1½ teaspoons dried thyme
- 2 bay leaves
For the Ricotta Mixture
- 1 (15-oz) container whole milk ricotta (about 1¾ cups)
- 3 oz cream cheese
- 1 large egg
- 1 clove garlic, roughly chopped
- ¾ cup grated Parmigiano-Reggiano
- ¾ teaspoon salt
- ¼ teaspoon freshly ground black pepper
- ½ cup roughly chopped fresh basil
For Assembling
- 12 oven ready, no boil lasagna noodles (such as Barilla)
- 16 oz shredded whole milk mozzarella cheese
- ¼ cup grated Parmigiano-Reggiano
Instructions
For the Sauce
- Place the onions, garlic, carrot and celery in the bowl of a food processor fitted with the metal blade; pulse until finely minced but not puréed.
- Heat 2 tablespoons of the olive oil in a large pot over medium-high heat. Add the sausage into the pan and cook, stirring occasionally and breaking the sausage into small pieces, until slightly browned but not cooked all the way through, about 5 minutes. Using a slotted spoon, transfer the partially cooked sausage to a plate. Set aside.
- Add the remaining tablespoon olive oil to the pan, reduce the heat to medium, and add the minced vegetables. Cook, stirring frequently, until the vegetables are very soft, 6 to 8 minutes. Do not brown; reduce the heat if necessary.
- Add the wine; continue cooking, stirring to scrape any brown bits from the bottom of the pan, until the wine is mostly absorbed by the vegetables, a few minutes.
- Add the tomatoes, cream, salt, pepper, sugar, thyme and bay leaves and bring to a boil. Reduce the heat and simmer, covered, until the sauce is thickened, about 20 minutes.
- Meanwhile, transfer the sausage to a cutting board and chop into smaller pieces (big chunks don't work well in lasagna).
- Add the sausage back to the pan and continue simmering, covered, until the sausage is fully cooked and the flavors meld together, about 10 minutes. Taste and adjust seasoning if necessary. Fish out the bay leaves and discard.
For the Ricotta Mixture
- Combine the ricotta, cream cheese, egg, garlic, Parmigiano-Reggiano, salt and pepper in the bowl of a food processor fitted with a metal blade. Process until evenly combined. Add the basil and pulse until finely chopped.
For Assembly
- Preheat the oven to 375°F (190°C).
- Spread about 1½ cups of sauce in the bottom of a 9 x 13-in (23 x 33-cm) baking dish. Arrange 3 noodles over the sauce (there will be a bit of space between the noodles; they expand as they cook). Dollop a third of the ricotta filling over the noodles, then spread evenly to cover. Sprinkle with ¾ cup (90 g) of the mozzarella cheese. Repeat the layering of sauce, noodles, ricotta filling and mozzarella 2 more times. Top with the remaining 3 noodles. Spoon the remaining sauce over the noodles, then sprinkle with the remaining mozzarella and Parmigiano-Reggiano.
- Spray a large piece of foil with nonstick cooking spray. Cover the lasagna tightly with the foil, sprayed side down. Bake for 40 minutes. Carefully uncover and increase the oven temperature to 400°F (205°C). Bake, uncovered, until the noodles are tender, the sauce is bubbling, and the edges are golden and puffed, about 20 minutes. Remove from the oven and let stand for about 15 minutes before serving.
Notes
Pair with
Nutrition Information
This website is written and produced for informational purposes only. I am not a certified nutritionist and the nutritional data on this site has not been evaluated or approved by a nutritionist or the Food and Drug Administration. Nutritional information is offered as a courtesy and should not be construed as a guarantee. The data is calculated through an online nutritional calculator, Edamam.com. Although I do my best to provide accurate nutritional information, these figures should be considered estimates only. Varying factors such as product types or brands purchased, natural fluctuations in fresh produce, and the way ingredients are processed change the effective nutritional information in any given recipe. Furthermore, different online calculators provide different results depending on their own nutrition fact sources and algorithms. To obtain the most accurate nutritional information in a given recipe, you should calculate the nutritional information with the actual ingredients used in your recipe, using your preferred nutrition calculator.
Add a Comment Cancel reply
This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.







Our FAVORITE lasagna!!! WOW!!!!!
I admit it – I was forced to make 2 tiny variations in the recipe. Used traditiona lasagna noodles as that is what sat in my pantry. No heavy cream & I subbed in FAGE GREEK YOGURT & held my breath – fantastic!!! Creamy sauce and no one knew. Searched your reader comments to see if anyone did that – and sharing here in case anyone else finds themselves in my predicament. (Does that mean I was eating healthy since I combined it with your Italian Salad?)
Jenn thank you for the flavor you bring to our kitchen table and the excellent instructions.
If I prefer not to use red wine, should I substitute something else or simply omit that step?
Hi Trisha, it’s fine to omit it — enjoy!!
My husband who says he’s never been able to find a good lasagna recipe has now made this four times in the last couple of months and absolutely loves it. Another fantastic recipe. Thank you, Jen!!
I made this last night for the first time – but since we are practically a vegetarian household, I substituted the sausage with Impossible meat and added italian seasoning for that “italian sausage” essence. It turned out wonderfully! We’ll be eating this for the next few days. Thank you!
Thanks for another great recipe Jen. Made this for my mom’s birthday and it came out perfect. I haven’t made lasagna in years because assembly was just a pain with the cooked noodles sliding around, and I didn’t think the oven-ready noodles would be any good. Boy was I wrong. Best lasagna recipe I’ve ever used. Didn’t make any changes and I can’t wait to make it again.
Hi Jen. Thanks for all the great recipes; I’ve not found one we didn’t thoroughly enjoy.
We try to eat reasonably healthy, so I was wondering about using ground turkey and turkey sausage (akin to your wonderful turkey meatballs) for the sauce. Do you think that would work and still have good flavor? Thanks for your thoughts.
Hi Diana, Turkey sausage would work well here, but I’d stay away from the ground turkey as the sausage adds so much flavor. Hope that helps (and please LMK how it turns out if you try it)!
Turned out great using turkey sausage (I followed your advice and used Shady Brooks) as the only meat. Thanks for the counsel; left to my own devices I would have mixed ground turkey and turkey sausage and it would not have been nearly as flavorful. We loved it.
Glad it came out well — thanks for the follow-up!!
Just made this lasagne for the first time. It is by far the best meat lasagne recipe out there. Followed the recipe exactly and it turned out perfect. Thanks Jen for another fabulous recipe.
My son told me, after lunch today, that this is the best lasagna he has ever had! My husband and I really enjoyed it too. Hope to make this a lot.
Hi! If whole milk ricotta is not available in our country, what is the best substitute?
Hi Melz, Do you have access to reduced-fat ricotta? If so, I’d use that. Hope you enjoy!
Can’t wait to try this for NYE!! Question- did you use the Emile Henry 11×13 or 11×8 for this recipe? It’s hard to gauge on your pictures, but they look more like the 11×8 pan I saw at the store today 🙂 Beautiful dishes! Thanks so much!
Hi Rebecca, I actually use a 13 x 9-inch pan. You can find that referenced in the instructions under “For Assembly.” Hope that clarifies!
Sorry for my typo. Meant 9×13! Great, thanks for clarifying.
This recipe is the best homemade lasagna. From the first bite, I could see everyone’s eyes rolling back on their head. That was a quiet dinner. I froze some, pulled it out 6mos later, still as good as the day made it. I would give this one 10 stars. Tastes better than any Italian restaurant. Salute
Another fantastic recipe. My wife says it’s the best she’s ever had. Just ordered your cookbook. Thanks to you, I rock in the kitchen.