
5.0 from 15 votes
Butternut Squash Ravioli Recipe
This Butternut Squash Ravioli with Sage Butter Sauce is delectable! The ravioli melt in your mouth and the nutty brown butter sage sauce complements the ravioli in the most comforting way!
Prep Time
1 hr 5 mins
Cook Time
5 mins
Total Time
1 hr 10 mins
Servings: 6 -8 servings
Calories: 446 kcal
Course:
Main Course
Cuisine:
Italian
Ingredients
For the pasta dough (click link to see recipe and step-by-step instructions):
- 400 grams flour Caputo "00" Flour also use all purpose flour
- 4 eggs
- semolina flour for dusting
For the butternut squash ravioli filling (enough for about 50 small ravioli):
- 1 medium butternut squash about 4 cups, prepared and cut into 1 inch cubes (no skin or seeds)
- 1 tablespoon extra-virgin olive oil plus more for drizzling the squash
- ½ cup onion chopped
- 2 garlic cloves minced
- 3 tablespoons Parmigiano Cheese or pecorino romano cheese
- 1 pinch nutmeg to taste
- salt and fresh ground pepper to taste
For the Brown Butter Sauce:
- 4 tablespoons good quality salted butter
- 5-6 fresh sage leaves
- freshly ground pepper if desired
- Parmigiano Cheese parmesan cheese, for serving
Instructions
- Preparing the Homemade Pasta Recipe. Let the dough rest and make the ravioli filling.
Cup of Yum
Make the Filling:
- Preheat the oven to 400 degrees F. Line a baking sheet with foil. Prepare butternut squash by peeling, cutting into cubes, and discarding seeds. You can also buy pre-cut butternut squash. Drizzle with a bit of olive oil, toss to coat, and bake for about 30 minutes until soft and golden. Set aside, let cool slightly.
- In a small skillet heat olive oil on medium-high heat. Add onion and cook until slightly golden about 5 minutes. Add garlic and cook until fragrant about 1 minute. Set aside.
- In a food processor or blender combine the cooked squash, onion and garlic, parmigiano, salt and pepper, and nutmeg. Pulse until smooth. Cover and place in refrigerator until ready to use for filling ravioli.
- Ravioli Maker Method:
- After the pasta dough rests and you've made the filling. Divide the dough into four parts. Roll each piece in the pasta machine to 6-7 setting or desired thickness (not too thin).
- TIP: Only roll dough one section at a time and cover the rest of the dough with plastic wrap as you fill the pasta sheets with filling- or the dough will dry.
- Place your prepared pasta sheet on top of the ravioli maker in a single layer. The dough will hang over the edges.
- Place the plastic holder with indent over the pasta sheet. Using light pressure press down on the dough. This creates little pockets for the filling.
- Fill the ravioli with a small mound of filling- 1 heaping teaspoon per ravioli. Do not overfill or they will be hard to seal and spill out the sides.
- Place the second sheet of dough directly over the first. Get rid of air pockets by pressing down gently on the dough. With a rolling pin press down gently and roll on top of the second pasta sheet to cut and seal the edges.
- When done- turn over the ravioli maker and the individual ravioli will pop out sealed and cut! If they don't come out gently wiggle them until they come off from the mold.
- Place the uncooked ravioli on a large baking sheet lined with parchment paper and semolina flour. Cover with a clean and light kitchen towel until ready to cook.
- Make your sauce of choice and boil ravioli in a large pot of salted water for about 3-5 minutes until they float to the top. Cook in batches. Coat with brown butter sauce and extra cheese.
Brown Butter Sage Sauce:
- Place brown butter sauce ingredients in a saucepan over medium heat until butter turns dark brown and golden color. You can also microwave for 1 minute at a time until the butter turns slightly brown- careful not to burn! Add fresh ground pepper to taste, if desired.
- Toss hot ravioli in brown butter sage sauce and add extra grated Parmigiano cheese. Mangia!
Notes
- You can use a ravioli mold, or ravioli stamps to make the ravioli achieve the shape you desire!
- Make sure the filling is not too wet – the ravioli won’t seal and the filling will leak out of the fresh pasta.
- Make sure the filling doesn’t puncture the pasta dough– ingredients that will break the dough while cooking (for example- raw vegetables or large chunks of cooked meats) are not recommended. If you using vegetables make sure to steam or sauté them until soft and drain liquid.
- Light coat cooked ravioli in the sage brown butter sauce while waiting for the rest of the pasta to cook. This will prevent them from sticking together.
- Do not overcrowd the pot– cook them in batches or they will stick together and not cook evenly.
- Slotted spoon– this is helpful when transferring the cooked ravioli to a pan with the sauce, or transferring to a strainer.
- Stir gently at the beginning of cooking. My favorite tool is Pasta Server & Spaghetti Portion Utensil.
- Make sure you have a large pot of boiling salted water.
Nutrition Information
Calories
446kcal
(22%)
Carbohydrates
67g
(22%)
Protein
13g
(26%)
Fat
14g
(22%)
Saturated Fat
7g
(35%)
Polyunsaturated Fat
1g
Monounsaturated Fat
5g
Trans Fat
0.3g
Cholesterol
131mg
(44%)
Sodium
149mg
(6%)
Potassium
581mg
(17%)
Fiber
5g
(20%)
Sugar
4g
(8%)
Vitamin A
13699IU
(274%)
Vitamin C
28mg
(31%)
Calcium
124mg
(12%)
Iron
5mg
(28%)
Nutrition Facts
Serving: 6-8 servings
Amount Per Serving
Calories 446
% Daily Value*
Calories | 446kcal | 22% |
Carbohydrates | 67g | 22% |
Protein | 13g | 26% |
Fat | 14g | 22% |
Saturated Fat | 7g | 35% |
Polyunsaturated Fat | 1g | 6% |
Monounsaturated Fat | 5g | 25% |
Trans Fat | 0.3g | 15% |
Cholesterol | 131mg | 44% |
Sodium | 149mg | 6% |
Potassium | 581mg | 12% |
Fiber | 5g | 20% |
Sugar | 4g | 8% |
Vitamin A | 13699IU | 274% |
Vitamin C | 28mg | 31% |
Calcium | 124mg | 12% |
Iron | 5mg | 28% |
* Percent Daily Values are based on a 2,000 calorie diet.