
Italian Families, Sunday Lunch & When Love Gets Serious
When It Gets Serious: Italian Families & Sunday Lunch
So you’ve shared some wine. You’ve baked cake. You’ve mastered schiacciata. And then one day, out of the blue and as if it was nothing, they say: Domenica vieni a pranzo da noi. Sunday lunch invitation… Rest assured-this is not just lunch. This is the final level of Italian romance.
For many Italian families, Sunday lunch has always been the most important event of the week. A long table set to host all generations, food that starts cooking early in the morning and doesn’t stop arriving until late afternoon. Most Italians still remember these lunches like a scene from a movie.
Nonna in the kitchen since dawn, aunts and uncles slowly arriving, cheese and salumi to start. Big bowls of pasta, roasts, vegetables, dessert after dessert and wine bottles piling up. The eating. The talking. The laughing. The arguing. Four, five, sometimes six hours around the table, and even with all the chaos, it always felt sacred.
Today, life is faster, families are smaller, work is busier. Some people gather at home, some go to restaurants for long Sunday lunches instead. Either way it is still special, it`s a pause, a moment of closeness, a reminder of what truly matters.
And very often, right in the middle of the table… There’s lasagna.
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The Recipe That Helps (Part 3)
Classic Italian Sunday Lasagna – not fancy: just slow, generous, and made with love.
You’ll need:
For the ragù:
• 400 g ground beef (or half beef, half pork)
• 1 small onion, finely chopped
• 1 carrot, finely chopped
• 1 celery stalk, finely chopped
• 400 g tomato passata
• Olive oil
• Salt & pepper
For the layers:
• Lasagna sheets (fresh if you can find them)
• About 500 ml béchamel sauce
• Plenty of grated Parmigiano Reggiano
How to make it:
Heat olive oil in a pan and gently cook onion, carrot, and celery until soft and sweet.
Add the meat and let it brown slowly.
Pour in the tomato passata, season well, and let it simmer quietly for at least 30–40 minutes.
(Sunday food is never rushed.)
Preheat the oven to 180°C / 350°F.
In a baking dish, start layering:
Lasagna Sheets – Ragù – Béchamel – A good sprinkle of Parmigiano.
Repeat until the dish is full.
Finish with lots of béchamel and cheese on top.
Bake for about 35–40 minutes, until golden and bubbling.
Let it rest for 10 minutes before serving.
(It holds together better, and builds anticipation.)
Cut big slices.
Go back for more.
That’s the Italian way.
The Real Italian Love Story
If you’re invited to Sunday lunch, you’re not just dating anymore. You’re being welcomed into the family world. Because in Italy, love doesn’t live in grand gestures. It lives in kitchens, in recipes passed down, in tables that stay full for hours, in stories told between bites.
Sharing meals together is how people connect here. It’s how traditions survive and families grow. And that’s exactly what we share at Cooking Italy.
Our cooking classes and food tours aren’t only about pasta, tiramisù, or food and wine tastings.
They’re about stepping into real Italian food culture, the kind that starts in family kitchens, moves through local neighbourhoods, and always ends around long tables.
So whether you’re here for romance, culture, or simply great food, we welcome you to experience Italy with local hosts, through hands-on cooking classes and small-group food tours focused on local flavours, culture, and history.
Shared with love (and one more plate),
Katarina
for CookingItaly.com
This article is part of our Valentine’s series exploring love, food, and Italian culture.