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Home Collections Sunday Supper

Slow Cooked Shredded Beef Ragu Pasta

By Nagi Maehashi
1,399 Comments
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Published3 Jul '17 Updated26 Mar '25
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A budget cut of beef, simple pantry ingredients, a bit of patience and pappardelle pasta. This Slow Cooked Shredded Beef Ragu Sauce with Pappardelle may be the king of all pastas. It is hands down one of my all time favourite pastas ever!

Rich, slow cooked Shredded Beef Ragu Sauce with pappardelle pasta. Stunning Italian comfort food at its best. recipetineats.com

Slow Cooked Shredded Beef Ragu Sauce

There’s this annoying thing that’s been a thorn in my backside all my working life. This thing called pride.

I’m not a professional food photographer, or food stylist, videographer or a chef for that matter. But that doesn’t matter. What does matter is being proud of everything that I have on my website, knowing that even if there are people out there who can take better photos and make better videos, that I’ve done the best I can do and I’m proud of what I’m sharing.

3 years into blogging with over 500 recipes, I still get butterflies when I hit Publish on a new or updated recipe.

And having rewritten, rephotographed and made a video for this Shredded Beef Ragu which I first shared over 2 years ago, yes I’m going to have butterflies when I hit Publish on this (again!) because it’s one of my all time personal favourites. 🙂

Rich, slow cooked Shredded Beef Ragu Sauce with pappardelle pasta. Stunning Italian comfort food at its best. recipetineats.com

I have a weakness for all things slow cooked, but hands down this shredded beef ragu is one of my all time favourites. I’d dare say I love it even more than traditional Ragu Alla Bolognese. It’s the shredded beef that seals the deal for me. The way it soaks up the sauce and clings to the pasta. It’s an absolute ripper!

I’m pretty sure I first learned how to make Slow Cooked Shredded Beef Ragu Sauce with Pappardelle from Lidia Bastianich. Years ago, her show “Lidia’s Italy” was one of the few cooking shows on free-to-air TV and I used to watch them over and over again. Almost everything I know about Italian cooking (including the reason why I was hunting down Kale a decade before it became “cool”) is because of Lidia Bastianich. Old school, real deal Italian. 🙂

Rich, slow cooked Shredded Beef Ragu Sauce with pappardelle pasta. Stunning Italian comfort food at its best. recipetineats.com

Rich, slow cooked Shredded Beef Ragu Sauce with pappardelle pasta. Stunning Italian comfort food at its best. recipetineats.com

Best Pasta to serve with Ragu

The question of what type of pasta to serve with different pasta sauces is a question that I get asked quite regularly. Generally, most pasta sauces will pair perfectly well with most common pasta types, like spaghetti, fettuccine, linguine, penne / ziti, macaroni, shells etc.

And while this Slow Cooked Shredded Beef Ragu Sauce will be great with any type of pasta, the best pasta for a rich sauce like this ragu is pappardelle. This wide, flat pasta is especially great for this recipe because the shredded beef clings to the wide strands.

For pappardelle, I am quite particular about which brand I use because I’ve had problems in the past with uneven cooking. I use San Remo which is a well known trusted brand here in Australia. The pappardelle is bundled into nests so they are fully submerged when dropped into boiling water, and the nests are loose enough so the bubbling water separates the strands and the pappardelle cooks evenly.

You’ll find San Remo pappardelle at all the major supermarkets as well as fresh produce stores and delis. And here’s a photo for size context – giant pasta in my Baby Hands…..

Rich, slow cooked Shredded Beef Ragu Sauce with pappardelle pasta. Stunning Italian comfort food at its best. recipetineats.com

Oh – and the other reason San Remo Pappardelle is my pasta of choice for ragu is because it’s an egg pasta. The addition of egg makes the pappardelle stronger so it doesn’t break when tossed in the thick, rich sauce.

If you’ve just invested hours of patience, slow cooking the sauce to tender perfection, you’ll make me cry if you just dump cooked pasta in a bowl and spoon over the sauce. And the entire nation of Italy will cry with me. 😉 Please promise me you will toss the ragu with the pasta before serving! It is worth it, I promise. Look how every strand of the pappardelle is beautifully coated in that luscious ragu!! – Nagi xx

Rich, slow cooked Shredded Beef Ragu Sauce with pappardelle pasta. Stunning Italian comfort food at its best. recipetineats.com

Watch How To Make It

Slow Cooked Shredded Beef Ragu Sauce with Pappardelle recipe video!

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Rich, slow cooked Shredded Beef Ragu Sauce with pappardelle pasta. Stunning Italian comfort food at its best. recipetineats.com

Slow Cooked Shredded Beef Ragu Pasta

Author: Nagi | RecipeTin Eats
Prep: 20 minutes mins
Cook: 2 hours hrs 30 minutes mins
Total: 2 hours hrs 50 minutes mins
Pasta, Slow Cooked
Italian
4.97 from 437 votes
Servings5 – 6 people
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Recipe video above. Ragu is one of those recipes that really showcases the beauty of Italian cooking – everyday ingredients, fast prep, leave it to cook long and slow and you end up with a luscious dish that tastes like a million bucks. This recipe makes enough sauce to serve 8 and freezes great.

Ingredients

Ragu

  • 1.2kg / 2.5 lb chuck beef or other slow cooking beef cut, cut into equal 4 pieces (Note 1)
  • 1 tbsp salt
  • Black pepper
  • 3 tbsp olive oil , separated
  • 3 cloves garlic , minced
  • 1 onion , diced
  • 1 cup carrots , diced (Note 2)
  • 1 cup celery , diced (Note 2)
  • 800g / 28oz crushed canned tomatoes
  • 3 tbsp tomato paste
  • 2 beef bouillon cubes , crumbled (Note 3)
  • 1 cup / 250ml red wine , full bodied (like merlot, cabernet sauvignon), or sub with beef broth/stock
  • 1 1/2 cups / 375 ml water (Note 3)
  • 3/4 tsp dried thyme or 3 sprigs fresh thyme
  • 3 dried bay leaves

To Serve (Not all Sauce is used)

  • 1 lb /500g dried pappardelle , or other pasta of choice (Note 4)
  • Freshly grated parmesan cheese or parmigiano reggiano
  • Fresh parsley , finely chopped (optional)
Prevent screen from sleeping

Instructions

  • Pat beef dry and sprinkle with salt and pepper
  • Sear Beef: Heat 1 tbsp olive oil over high heat in a heavy based pot. Add beef and sear each piece aggressively on all sides until very browned (3 – 5 minutes in total), then remove onto a plate.
  • Turn stove down to medium low and add remaining 2 tbsp of olive oil.
  • Soffrito: Add garlic and onion and sauté for 2 minutes. Then add the carrots and celery and sauté slowly for 5 minutes.
  • Add remaining Ragu ingredients and return the beef to the pot (including pooled juices). Turn the stove up and bring it to a simmer, then turn it down to low so it’s bubbling very very gently. (Note 7)
  • Slow cook: Cover the pot and let it cook for 2 hours or until beef is tender enough to shred. (Note 5 for slow cooker and pressure cooker).
  • Shred: Remove beef then coarsely shred with 2 forks. Return beef to the pot. Simmer for 30 minutes until sauce is reduced and thickened – beef will soften slightly more during this step.
  • Final season: Do a taste test and adjust the seasoning to your taste with salt and pepper. ALSO, add 1/2 tsp sugar if sauce is a bit sour for your taste (Note 6). Place the lid on and set aside until ready to serve (it’s even better the next day and freezes well for months!).

To Serve (Note 4):

  • Bring a very large pot of water with 1 tbsp of salt to the boil.
  • Add pasta and cook for 1 minute less than the recommended cooking time as per the packet instructions.
  • Meanwhile, place 5 cups of the Ragu in a very large fry pan, dutch oven or use 2 normal size fry pans. Heat over high heat while the pasta is cooking.
  • When the pasta is ready, transfer it directly from the pot into the fry pan using tongs.
  • Add 3/4 cup of pasta water into the fry pan.
  • Gently toss the pasta (I use 2 wooden spoons) for 1 to 2 minutes, until the sauce water evaporates and leaves you with a thick Ragu sauce that coats the pasta.
  • Yell for your family to sit down at the dinner table because you need to serve it immediately!
  • Serve with plenty of freshly grated parmesan, or even better, with parmigiano reggiano.

Recipe Notes:

1. Beef – Cut the beef into 4 pieces that are around the size of a baseball. The cook time of this recipe assumes you do this. 
2. Celery and carrots sautéed with the onions and garlic is called “soffritto” in Italian cooking. It is a very traditional base for many Italian dishes. Cooking them slowly over low heat releases their flavour and adds an extra dimension to this dish. But it’s not a deal killer if you skip these ingredients.
3. Beef stock – You could use liquid beef stock instead of water + stock cubes.
4. Pappardelle pasta is the thick wide pasta and is ideal for this recipe because the shreds of beef cling to the thick pasta strands. If you can’t find it, just use the widest pasta you can find eg tagliatelle, fettuccine.
Don’t skip the step of tossing pasta with the sauce! This is called “emulsifying” and it is a KEY secret to awesome pastas because it makes the sauce cling to the pasta. Italian Nonna’s will roll over in their graves if you don’t do this! I can’t stress enough what a difference emulsifying makes to pastas!
5. Slow Cooker & Pressure Cooker/Instant Pot – follow recipe to the end of Step 4 on the stove (or sauté function on your appliance). Turn heat up to high, add wine, stir and simmer for 3 minutes. Then transfer it all to the slow cooker or pressure cooker/IP, and add all remaining ingredients but DO NOT add water and extra salt & pepper.
Slow cook on low for 6 – 8 hours (i.e. 6 is enough, 8 hrs is fine, any more = beef turns to mush). Or pressure cook on high for 40 minutes. Shred beef then follow recipe.
6. Sugar – The sweetness of canned tomatoes differs depending on brand (typically more expensive = sweeter). So adjust the sweetness of your sauce to your taste by using sugar – 1/2 tsp at a time.
7. Low and slow – Turn the heat of the stove down to a level where it is bubbling very, very gently – a few bubbles here and there. This usually LOW on Gas Stoves but might be medium low on electric stoves. If it is too high – i.e. simmering rapidly (lots of bubbles appearing rapidly) – then you run the risk of the bottom burning. If it is too low, it will take longer to cook.
8. Recipe source: This recipe is based on classic slow cooked ragu recipes from Italian greats including Lidia Bastianich, Stafano Manfredi. It is not an exact replica of any, but is similar to many!
9. Storage – sauce keeps for 5 days in the fridge, or months in the freezer. 
10. Beef Ragu nutrition assuming sauce serves 8. Nutrition includes 80g / 2.7oz dried pasta per serving (standard quantity). Note: recipe as written uses 500g/1 lb pack of pasta which will serve 5 – 6 people.

Nutrition Information:

Calories: 678cal (34%)Carbohydrates: 69g (23%)Protein: 42g (84%)Fat: 26g (40%)Saturated Fat: 9g (56%)Cholesterol: 170mg (57%)Sodium: 1451mg (63%)Potassium: 1155mg (33%)Fiber: 5g (21%)Sugar: 8g (9%)Vitamin A: 3105IU (62%)Vitamin C: 13.2mg (16%)Calcium: 107mg (11%)Iron: 6.4mg (36%)
Keywords: Beef ragu, Ragu, Ragu Sauce, Slow Cooked Shredded Beef Ragu
Did you make this recipe?I love hearing how you went with my recipes! Tag me on Instagram at @recipe_tin.

Today’s recipe is brought to you with thanks to San Remo. When they asked if I would consider showcasing one of their products in a recipe, it seemed meant-to-be because I wanted to republish this Slow Cooked Shredded Beef Ragu and in fact, I had made the video using San Remo pappardelle pasta before they approached me! I figured it was a sign. ❤️ San Remo is Australia’s most well known pasta brand and is available at supermarkets all around Australia, including the pappardelle I recommend using for this recipe.


Life Of Dozer

Pappardelle pup. (Try saying that 10 times real fast after a few glasses of wine.)

Rich, slow cooked Shredded Beef Ragu Sauce with pappardelle pasta. Stunning Italian comfort food at its best. recipetineats.com

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1,399 Comments

  1. Mel White says

    May 7, 2021 at 3:45 pm

    Hi Nagi, i LOOOOVE all of your recipes so am excited to try this for mothers day. Do you have a recipe to make the Parpadelle from scratch or could you advise which type of flour would be best to use?

    Reply
    • Nagi says

      May 7, 2021 at 5:15 pm

      I don’t just yet sorry Mel!! One to add to the list! N x

      Reply
  2. Ella west says

    April 21, 2021 at 1:44 am

    5 stars
    I’m a slow cooker rookie and was very skeptical that this would not turn out as nice as it looks in the images but WOW – it was incredible! Highly recommend but I would say my beef was fairly cheap beef brisket cut and took 8 hours on low in order to be shreddable so don’t panic if yours takes longer than 6 hours

    Reply
  3. Erica says

    April 20, 2021 at 7:25 am

    5 stars
    Nagi, What kind of red wine and canned tomatoes do you use???

    Reply
  4. Angie says

    April 16, 2021 at 9:57 am

    5 stars
    Entire family LOVED this! My husband often orders this in restaurants and commented this recipe was “as good”! Thanks, Nagi! Another winner.

    Reply
  5. Nicole says

    April 15, 2021 at 11:04 pm

    Hi! Can this recipe be easily adjusted for an Instant Pot?

    Reply
    • Nagi says

      April 16, 2021 at 11:50 am

      Yes Nicole – it’s all in the recipe notes. N x

      Reply
  6. Felicity says

    April 14, 2021 at 5:03 pm

    5 stars
    Hiya! I can never find big chunks of chuck at the supermarket, only steak thickness. Would Topside or bolar roast cuts work?

    Reply
    • Nagi says

      April 15, 2021 at 4:50 pm

      Yes any slow cooking cut will be fine here felicity. N x

      Reply
      • Nicole says

        April 16, 2021 at 11:51 am

        See that now, thank you!

        Reply
  7. Jenny says

    April 11, 2021 at 1:08 pm

    5 stars
    Best Ragu Recipe! Everyone I make it for loves it!

    Reply
  8. Aaliyah says

    April 10, 2021 at 11:23 pm

    I wanted to make this recipe however, it is only me and my partner and 8 servings is simply too much even with freezing. If I wanted to make half of this recipe would I simply half the ingredients? How would you also advise I cut the me at?

    Reply
    • Nagi says

      April 12, 2021 at 4:34 pm

      Hi Aaliyah, you can click the servings and scale down to as many serves as you like, all the ingredients will change for you. Cook as per the recipe, just cut your smaller piece of beef into 4 so it cooks quicker (as you’ll have less liquid). Cook for about 1-1.5 hours, add a splash of water if the pan looks like it’s drying out. N x

      Reply
  9. qwerty says

    April 4, 2021 at 12:43 am

    I been doing 3-4 hr ragu all my life, and I tell you this need more tomato, and NOT paste. Don’t need to shred the beef, it looses a lot.
    In big cubes is allright. and Also you can use tongue, or other beef cuts, broad asado, etc.
    NEVER toss the ragu with the pasta right away. Serve on the table separately and ask everyone how would like the ragú served: on the side, on top, meat apart and sauce with the pasta, etc.
    It’s a form of etiquette (and perhaps a source of table fight in several places in Italy), also shows respect for whom did your cook this.
    Finally, you could make it for about 3hr, and continue the next day for 1hr more.
    you will never forget this ragú in your life.

    Reply
    • Barry says

      May 15, 2021 at 4:56 pm

      Wake up to yourself you elitist snob

      Reply
  10. Jo Davies says

    March 26, 2021 at 9:47 pm

    4 stars
    Rich and authentic! A suggestion; add 250g chicken livers. Fry after veg, before meat. I mince my own mince, so I chase them through the mincer with the beef. They break down completely, add a creaminess and more depth. The flavour of the liver itself isn’t present.

    Reply
  11. Anne P says

    March 26, 2021 at 11:01 am

    5 stars
    Hi Nagi! Another wonderful recipe. I followed the directions and ingredients exactly using the slow cooker. The left overs the next day were even better. Thanks again!

    Reply
  12. Saviour visanich says

    March 21, 2021 at 9:48 am

    5 stars
    Followed your recipe and done in the slow cooker. Simply awesome. Never had such a thick rich ragu for our pasta.

    Reply
    • Tamika Taylor says

      March 24, 2021 at 6:12 pm

      Hi, I’m am want to make this in the slow cooker but am confused by the intrustrucions as it says do not add water? Do I still need to add water for the beef beef cubes +

      Reply
  13. Steph A says

    March 21, 2021 at 3:03 am

    Question: for slow cooker version, *without* using bouillon, can I use 1c red wine and 1c beef broth?

    I initially made this recipe in my Dutch oven, but the meat was so tough I could not shred, it definitely needed more time to cook. Though despite that, it was very delicious! I never have bouillon so I did 1c red wine + 2c beef broth. This time I am trying the slow cooker to help with the tough meat issue, figured can’t go wrong. But was confused what to do using wine/broth vs. wine/bouillon. I have it in now with 1c each wine/broth but am concerned it will be too watery. (I probably ended up with 1.5c each as I didn’t want to waste).

    Reply
  14. Tamika Gonzalez says

    March 18, 2021 at 8:55 pm

    5 stars
    I may have already rated this recipe because I’ve had it and loved it before. But just in case, this recipe is beautiful and so delicious. Tonight I made the ragu and had it with mash potato and it was the best. Definitely one to save and reuse again and again

    Reply
  15. Alisa says

    March 14, 2021 at 5:04 pm

    Delicious and easy to prepare. Thanks to clear guidelines that are important to me as non locals that English is foreign language to them. Here in Israel the parts of the cow are called diffferently and perhaps also the division . Is the chuck a central part ot the shoulder?

    Reply
  16. Paul says

    March 12, 2021 at 7:26 pm

    5 stars
    Amazing, incredible, last-meal-worthy.

    And Dozer is adorable.

    Reply
  17. John says

    March 10, 2021 at 3:55 am

    5 stars
    Hi Nagi. My mum (yes, I’m English! but she was Italian) hailed from Tuscany, widely recognised as the home of pasta. I’ve been making ragu since I was 10 years old; I’m now 66 so you do the maths! What can I say? Your ragu has blown me away! The Bolognese sauce I have made up till now I use as a base for lots of things such as cottage pie and chilli con carne. I know that your type of sauce is more a southern recipe rather than northern, however, if your sauce proves as flexible, I’m going to have to change sides! Many thanks for proving that an old dog can still learn new tricks!

    Reply
    • Nagi says

      March 10, 2021 at 10:42 am

      Woah what a compliment John, that’s amazing!! I’m chuffed to say the least! I’m so happy you enjoyed it, thanks so much for letting me know!! ❤️ N x

      Reply
  18. Meg says

    March 8, 2021 at 4:07 pm

    Hi! My beef is really tough. have cooked for two hours. used the recommended cut and quantity and followed the recipe. Can anyone help??

    Reply
    • Cheryl Lynch says

      March 10, 2021 at 3:08 pm

      Meg, is it possible that the liquids (wine or water) were not room temp. Cold liquids will make the meat seize up and toughen.

      Reply
    • Nagi says

      March 9, 2021 at 10:27 am

      Hi Meg – sounds like it needs to cook longer if it is tough – pop it back in for another 30-60 minutes and just check it periodically until it gets to a shredable stage. N x

      Reply
      • Linda says

        March 20, 2021 at 5:37 pm

        5 stars
        This is an absolute winner!! Will definitely be making this again.. and again. I used beef brisket and cooked it for quite sometime (I kept checking until it was ready to shred with forks). I totally agree about tossing the pasta through the sauce rather than on top.. it just coats it so lusciously. I am GF so used a gf penne pasta. Delicious!!

        Reply
  19. Marnie T. says

    March 8, 2021 at 1:39 am

    5 stars
    There is a reason this recipe is 5 stars. I’ve made it as directed, DELICIOUS. Yesterday, I had some ground beef instead of chunks. It was just our family so I tried it with that instead. My 7 year old, I kid you not, all on her own said, “WOW! This is 5 stars!” (I never use this expression. Cracked me up.) Seriously, a wonderful recipe. Even my creatively critical mother loved it. Enjoy!

    Reply
  20. Sharon Davidson says

    February 28, 2021 at 8:07 am

    I thought this was a really tasty recipe. I did add LOTS of quartered mushrooms about 45 minutes before I served it, which added so much flavor and they sopped up the winey essence of the dish and were wonderful. I’m not a “shredded” beef person, so I cut the beef into chunks and did not shred it, and it was tender and excellent. Two days later, it was even better, and a week later, I put penne in ramekins and baked the ragu on it with a slice of Havarti on top–I didn’t have mozzarella or provelone, but the Havarti with grated fresh Asiago on top was really good! A friend dropped by on her way home so I served her a plate and she loved it!

    Reply
    • Nagi says

      March 1, 2021 at 10:31 am

      Sounds divine Sharon, I’m so glad you enjoyed it!! N x

      Reply
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