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The Best Make Ahead Lasagna has three kinds of cheese, two different meats, one fantastic homemade sauce, and oodles of real noodles that require absolutely zero boiling. It all adds up to an award-winning, freezer-friendly recipe I’ve been making (and loving) for over a decade.

Over the years, I tweaked this recipe to get everything exactly right. Here’s what I love about it:
You can make it ahead. The lasagna needs at least 5 hours to chill and let the sauce soften the noodles, but you can definitely make it the night before (even 3 days before) and bake it when you need it. Want your own freezer lasagna? Wrap it up in foil once you assemble it, no need to bake it beforehand. Then stash it away for dinner emergencies.
It uses real lasagna noodles. I’ve always hated the “oven-ready,” pre-boiled, no-boil lasagna noodles, which fall apart in the pan. Real noodles taste better, period. And with this recipe, you don’t even cook or soak them.
Homemade meat sauce. A quick and easy, 20-minute meat sauce loaded with ground beef and Italian sausage.
Table of Contents
Oven Ready Lasagna Recipe Ingredients

At a Glance: Here is a quick snapshot of what ingredients are in this recipe.
Please see the recipe card below for specific quantities.
- Ground meat: I prefer 1 pound each of ground beef and Italian sausage (2 pounds total). Or use just ground beef, just ground Italian sausage, or choose another ground meat entirely (such as ground turkey).
- Sugar: Even a tablespoon is too much for some people. If you don’t like the sound of sugar in your meat sauce, please leave it out. In my family, people add ¼ cup or even up to ½ cup.
- Italian seasoning: It’s easy to make your own homemade Italian seasoning with dried basil, oregano, rosemary, thyme and marjoram.
- Fennel seeds: The seeds make the Italian sausage flavors pop. If you love the taste of a sweet tomato sauce, use just ground beef (no sausage), at least ¼ cup sugar, and omit the fennel seeds.
- Ricotta cheese: Make your own ricotta with just 4 ingredients: Milk, lemon juice, vinegar, and salt.
- Lasagna noodles. NOT “oven ready” or “no-boil noodles.” Those pre-cooked noodles will shred on your fork in the most unappetizing way, while the “real” noodles will soften in the fridge in just 5 hours
How to Make No Boil Lasagna
Recipe revision: I updated this Lasagna recipe to make just the amount you need (2 quarts). In the past, my recipe made a quart of extra sauce. You can download a PDF of the original lasagna recipe ( <– click this link) if you are looking for that.
To make the meat sauce:
- In a large saucepan or Dutch oven over medium-high heat, add beef (or sausage) and onion, and cook until mostly browned, about 5 minutes. Drain if desired. Stir in garlic until fragrant, about 30 seconds.

- Stir in crushed tomatoes, tomato sauce, tomato paste, sugar, basil, Italian seasoning, and fennel seeds. Simmer uncovered for 15 minutes, stirring occasionally. Season to taste with salt and pepper (I like 1 teaspoon salt and ½ teaspoon pepper). You should have about 2 quarts of sauce.

To make the cheese filling:
- Meanwhile, in a large bowl, combine ricotta cheese with egg, parsley, and salt. Chill until the sauce is finished.

How to Layer Lasagna
- In the bottom of a 9-inch x 13-inch baking dish, spread 2 cups meat sauce. Arrange a single layer of uncooked noodles over the meat sauce (I sometimes do 3 full-size noodles lengthwise and then a partial noodle crosswise).

- Spread with a heaping 2/3 cup of the ricotta mixture. Top with about 1 ½ cups (5 ounces) of mozzarella. Sprinkle with ⅓ cup Parmesan cheese.

- Spoon 2 cups meat sauce over the cheese. Make another layer of noodles, ricotta mixture (heaping 2/3 cup), mozzarella (1 ½ cups) and Parmesan (⅓ cup). Repeat layers 1 more time, for a total of 3 layers. Spray a large piece of foil with nonstick spray and cover baking dish. Refrigerate at least 5 hours or overnight.

- Preheat oven to 375 degrees. Bake, covered with foil, for 25 minutes. Remove foil and bake an until hot and bubbly, about 25 minutes longer. Cool 5 minutes, then garnish with parsley before serving if desired.

No Boil Lasagna Recipe Tips and Variations
- Yield: As written, the lasagna is made in a 9” by 13” baking dish, enough for 12 servings.
- Storage: Store leftovers covered in the refrigerator for up to 4 days.
- Make ahead: Make this recipe up to 3 days before you need it and keep it in the refrigerator.
- Freezer: Wrap the unbaked lasagna tightly in plastic wrap and freeze it for up to 2 months. Thaw overnight in the refrigerator, then bake as directed (preheat oven to 375 degrees, bake 25 minutes with foil, 25 minutes without foil). To bake the frozen lasagna straight from the freezer, bake 1 hour covered with foil and 24 minutes without the foil (the lasagna must reach 165 degrees on an internal thermometer).
- Store-bought sauce: You’ll need 2 quarts of sauce for one pan of lasagna. You might want to add a little extra water if the sauce is on the thick side. This lasagna recipe uses a wet sauce so the noodles can soften in the liquid.
- Disposable aluminum pans: I’ve made this in aluminum pans without a problem. They’re just fine!
- Pesto: Got a jar of pesto in the pantry, or homemade pesto in the refrigerator? Add a surprise layer somewhere for lots of extra flavor.
- Lasagna as a soup: Dinner in 30 minutes with my stove top Lasagna Soup, or set and forget my Slow Cooker Lasagna Soup with only 10 minutes of prep.
What to Serve With Lasagna
Round out your Italian feast with an Italian-inspired salad such as a Caesar salad or antipasto salad. Add a side of garlic bread or bruschetta on toasted crostini. If you prefer a vegetable side, choose something green and light such as roasted green beans with lemon.
For dessert, choose any Italian classic such as Tiramisu or a basket of crunchy Italian pizzelle. If you’re looking for a cocktail, try an Aperol Spritz or a pitcher of Red Sangria.
How to Store No Boil Lasagna
Store leftovers covered in the refrigerator for up to 4 days.
Make ahead:
Make this recipe up to 3 days before you need it and keep it in the refrigerator.
Freezer:
Wrap the unbaked lasagna tightly in plastic wrap and freeze it for up to 2 months. Thaw overnight in the refrigerator, then bake as directed (preheat oven to 375 degrees, bake 25 minutes with foil, 25 minutes without foil). To bake the frozen lasagna straight from the freezer, bake 1 hour covered with foil and 24 minutes without the foil (the lasagna must reach 165 degrees on an internal thermometer).

Recipe FAQs
No-boil noodles shred on the end of your fork in the most unappetizing way, so this recipe uses traditional dry lasagna noodles that soften in the source in a matter of hours. It takes a little bit of planning, but it’s fool-proof!
I love a mixture of three cheeses in my lasagna: ricotta, mozzarella, and Parmesan.
1. Ricotta is the primary cheese. A layer of ricotta is creamy with a smooth texture, and the other cheeses layer on top of it.
2. Mozzarella melts like a dreamy so you get that classic stretchy cheese you expect. It also has a mild flavor that doesn’t overpower the dish.
3. Parmesan adds a savory flavor and saltiness. It’s the least important, but I always add it.
If you don’t like ricotta cheese, substitute cottage cheese or just use more mozzarella. You could also use provolone (just make sure it isn’t smoked). Instead of Parmesan, you could try fontina, pecorino Romano, or asiago.
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Oven Ready Lasagna
Ingredients
For the meat sauce:
- 1 pound ground beef (see note 1)
- 1 pound ground Italian sausage
- 1 medium onion peeled and chopped (about 1 cup)
- 4 cloves garlic minced
- 1 (28-ounce) can crushed tomatoes
- 1 (15-ounce) can tomato sauce
- 1 (6-ounce) can tomato paste
- 2 tablespoons granulated sugar or to taste (see note 2)
- 1 1/2 teaspoons dried basil
- 1 teaspoon Italian seasoning (see note 3)
- 1 teaspoon fennel seeds (see note 4)
- Salt and freshly ground black pepper
For the cheese filling:
- 1 (15-ounce) container ricotta cheese (see note 5)
- 1 egg
- 2 teaspoons dried parsley
- 1/2 teaspoon salt
For assembly:
- 1 box lasagna noodles NOT no-boil (see note 6)
- 1 pound shredded mozzarella cheese
- 1 cup freshly grated Parmesan cheese
- minced fresh parsley for garnish
Instructions
To make the meat sauce:
- In a large saucepan or Dutch oven over medium-high heat, add beef (or sausage) and onion, and cook until mostly browned, about 5 minutes. Drain if desired. Stir in garlic until fragrant, about 30 seconds.
- Stir in crushed tomatoes, tomato sauce, tomato paste, sugar, basil, Italian seasoning, and fennel seeds. Simmer uncovered for 15 minutes, stirring occasionally. Season to taste with salt and pepper (I like 1 teaspoon salt and ½ teaspoon pepper). You should have about 2 quarts of sauce.
To make the cheese filling:
- Meanwhile, in a large bowl, combine ricotta cheese with egg, parsley, and salt. Chill until the sauce is finished.
To assemble and bake the lasagna:
- In the bottom of a 9-inch x 13-inch baking dish, spread 2 cups meat sauce. Arrange a single layer of uncooked noodles over the meat sauce (I sometimes do 3 full-size noodles lengthwise and then a partial noodle crosswise). Spread with a heaping 2/3 cup of the ricotta mixture. Top with about 1 ½ cups (5 ounces) of mozzarella. Sprinkle with ⅓ cup Parmesan cheese.
- Spoon 2 cups meat sauce over the cheese. Make another layer of noodles, ricotta mixture (heaping 2/3 cup), mozzarella (1 ½ cups) and Parmesan (⅓ cup). Repeat layers 1 more time, for a total of 3 layers.
- Spray a large piece of foil with nonstick spray and cover baking dish. Refrigerate at least 5 hours or overnight.
- Preheat oven to 375 degrees. Bake, covered with foil, for 25 minutes. Remove foil and bake an until hot and bubbly, about 25 minutes longer. Cool 5 minutes, then garnish with parsley before serving if desired.
Recipe Video
Notes
- Ground meat: I prefer 1 pound each of ground beef and Italian sausage (2 pounds total). Or use just ground beef, just ground Italian sausage, or choose another ground meat entirely (such as ground turkey).
- Sugar: Even a tablespoon is too much for some people. If you don’t like the sound of sugar in your meat sauce, please leave it out. In my family, people add ¼ cup or even up to ½ cup.
- Italian seasoning: To make your own Italian Seasoning, in a small bowl, combine 2 Tbsp. of dried basil, 2 Tbsp. of dried oregano, 2 Tbsp. of dried rosemary, 2 Tbsp. of dried thyme, and 2 Tbsp. of dried marjoram. Store extra in an airtight container.
- Fennel seeds: The seeds make the Italian sausage flavors pop. If you love the taste of a sweet tomato sauce, use just ground beef (no sausage), at least ¼ cup sugar, and omit the fennel seeds.
- Ricotta cheese: Make your own ricotta with just 4 ingredients: Milk, lemon juice, vinegar, and salt.
- Lasagna noodles. NOT “oven ready” or “no-boil noodles.” Those pre-cooked noodles will shred on your fork in the most unappetizing way, while the “real” noodles will soften in the fridge in just 5 hours
- Yield: As written, the lasagna is made in a 9” by 13” baking dish, enough for 12 servings.
- Storage: Store leftovers covered in the refrigerator for up to 4 days.
- Make ahead: Make this recipe up to 3 days before you need it and keep it in the refrigerator.
- Freezer: Wrap the unbaked lasagna tightly in plastic wrap and freeze it for up to 2 months. Thaw overnight in the refrigerator, then bake as directed (preheat oven to 375 degrees, bake 25 minutes with foil, 25 minutes without foil). To bake the frozen lasagna straight from the freezer, bake 1 hour covered with foil and 24 minutes without the foil (the lasagna must reach 165 degrees on an internal thermometer).
- Store-bought sauce: You’ll need 2 quarts of sauce for one pan of lasagna. You might want to add a little extra water if the sauce is on the thick side. This lasagna recipe uses a wet sauce so the noodles can soften in the liquid.
- Disposable aluminum pans: I’ve made this in aluminum pans without a problem. They’re just fine!
- Pesto: Got a jar of pesto in the pantry, or homemade pesto in the refrigerator? Add a surprise layer somewhere for lots of extra flavor.
Hi!
So, do you have to chill the sauce after making it before layering it with the rest of the ingredients? So that all of the ingredients are cold when assembling? Or can you add the sauce hot right after cooking it to assemble the lasagna?
Also, is it safe to refrigerate leftovers after baking and reheat again? Seems like that would be too many times to chill and reheat, but not sure?!
Thanks so much!! 🙂
Hi Tiffanie, no, you don’t have to chill the sauce. I always assemble the lasagna while the sauce is still warm. It cools down pretty fast once you start spreading it out anyway, so it won’t be piping hot by the time you’re done assembling the lasagna. It’s totally fine to refrigerate and reheat leftovers yes!!! You basically have 4 days to eat the leftovers. I would say, just reheat the portions as you are going to eat them (after the initial bake). But you’ll be good. If you need more clarification, just let me know! Thanks! -Meggan
Can you please send the original sauce recipe, with the extra ?
Thank you
Hi,
Our local grocery stores have been out of regular lasagna noodles. All I could find was Barilla Whole Grain lasagna noodles. I’ve already prepared it and refrigerated it for tomorrow evening. Do you think the noodles will soften? Do I need to adjust the time or temperature?
Thank you
Hi Lynda, I’m sorry I didn’t get back to you in time! I meant to say your noodles should be just fine and would soften appropriately. Hopefully you’ve discovered that by now as well. I’m sorry about my delay. I hope your lasagna was good. Thank you! -Meggan
Hi. I made this before when it had the additional sauce and can’t remember the difference in the recipes. Could you send me the unedited version or just the extra ingredients/steps. I should’ve written it down but didn’t think you’d change it.
Thanks!
Hi Dustin, I’m sorry about that. My sister is CONSTANTLY telling me to stop changing recipes on the site, but I can’t help it, I just end up doing it. Other people have scolded me for food waste (because the lasanga used to make extra sauce) and I couldn’t handle the criticism, so I fixed it. “Fixed it.” I’ll email you the original. So sorry about that! -Meggan
I made this for a big crowd (one tray using ground turkey, and another tray vegetarian) and it was terrific! A few notes/changes besides the turkey instead of beef: be sure you really squish the top layer of noodles down into the sauce and cheese, so they soften properly. I also did not add any sugar. I got a zillion compliments on this, and it turned out great. Thanks for a wonderful recipe.
This is amazing to hear Allison! Thanks so much! -Meggan
Can you freeze instead of sitting overnight?
Hi Shara, at some point the lasagna needs to sit so the noodles can soften. It is possible that could happen AFTER you freeze it, like when it’s thawing, but I haven’t tested that particular nuance of the recipe. What I know works is – let it sit overnight so the noodles soften, THEN freeze it, then you can thaw it and bake it as normal. So that’s what i would recommend. The other way might work, but I’m not 100% sure. Thanks!- Meggan
I’ve tried a lot of different lasagna recipes over the years and this was delicious. So nice to make it the day before and store it in the fridge — typically I am stressed and tired from an hours long process of making lasagna, so I never make it on a weekday, but this method actually made it possible to eat lasagna on a Tuesday night after a long day of work! My husband declared it the best lasagna I had ever made. I’m already planning what to stock the freezer with for when our second baby arrives in July, and this just made the top of the list. Thanks for a great recipe!
This makes me so happy Megan! All of it – a happy husband, a fresh baby on the way, delicious lasagna… perfection. I’m so happy to help, and I know exactly what you mean about lasagna potentially ruining your day. It’s nice when you can just pop it in the oven and then ENJOY eating it! Thanks for the comment and if you need anything else, just let me know. Congrats on your pregnancy also. 🙂 -Meggan
What brand noodles do you use? They are SO different from what I can get in my local shops!
Hi Sarah, I typically use either Barilla brand or generic. I shop at Ralph’s in California so the generic brand is Kroger. I don’t know if that helps at all. If you have other questions, just let me know! Thanks! -Meggan
Hi Megann,
Can I put these right into the freezer without cooking and cook later?
Hi Jessica, I think so? I have always recommended that you let it sit in the refrigerator first, for a minimum of 5 hours, so the noodles have a chance to soften (since they go in uncooked). But, as long as you allow that time after freezing, before baking (time to thaw and time for the noodles to soften), you should be okay. Having said that, I don’t know for sure but I really hope it works! Thanks. -Meggan
All I have on hand are the Oven Ready noodles. (And we have a winter storm advisory in effect, so I can’t get out!) Any idea of what adjustments I should make?
Hi Gloria! I haven’t made it with the oven ready noodles, but my suspicion is that you could just bake it immediately without waiting for the noodles to soften. It should be ready to go immediately. So tuck that lasagna in the oven and watch the bad weather from your cozy house! Take care and thanks. -Meggan