If you've been looking for the best lasagna recipe, you've found it — and I promise it's easier than you think. This is layered with a rich, deeply flavored bolognese sauce made from scratch, a simple poured-over cream sauce (no, you don't need a thick béchamel — I'll explain why), and a lot of melted mozzarella. The result is bubbly, cheesy, and honestly restaurant-level impressive!

I've made this lasagna more times than I can count — tweaking the ratios, testing the cream sauce consistency, figuring out the exact bake time so the top gets that golden cheese crust without drying out the inside. The toothpick-and-tinfoil trick? Game changer. More on that in the tips. I have been perfecting this recipe over the past 5 years & its my family’s favorite quick weeknight meal!
What I love about this recipe is that it uses oven-ready egg lasagna sheets, which means no boiling, no draining, no wet noodles everywhere. The cream sauce does NOT need to be thick — it thickens as it bakes into the pasta and everything melds together perfectly. Trust the process!
Jump to:
How to make (VIDEO)

Instructions

- Step 1: Melt the butter, add in the heavy cream, spices & let it thicken to make the béchamel!

- Step 2: Sauté all our diced veggies & add in the beef, tomato sauce & all the spices for the bolognese sauce!

- Step 3: Layer everything together in a baking tray & bake!

- Step 4: Serve & enjoy!!
Scroll all the way down for the full recipe card!:)
Why You'll Love This Recipe
- No-boil noodles mean less work — oven-ready egg lasagna sheets go straight in; they absorb the sauces as they bake
- Feeds a crowd — this is the recipe for Sunday dinners, family gatherings, or a week of leftovers
- Beginner-friendly — if you can brown meat and stir a sauce, you can make this
- This is the ultimate Sunday dinner or cozy weekend meal — it's also perfect for meal prep since it reheats beautifully. Make it for a family gathering, a dinner party, or honestly just because you're craving something comforting and satisfying.

Related
Looking for other easy recipes like this best lasagna recipe? Try these:
Pairing
These are my favorite desserts to serve with [this recipe]:

The Best Lasagna Recipe (Creamy Bolognese Bake)
Ingredients
Equipment
Method
- Step 1 — Sauté the vegetables: Heat a drizzle of olive oil in a large pan over medium-low to medium heat. Add the diced red bell pepper, onion, and carrot and sauté for 5–7 minutes, stirring occasionally, until softened and just starting to turn golden at the edges. (WATCH VIDEO BELOW)
- Step 2 — Brown the beef: Add the ground beef straight into the pan with the vegetables, break it up with a wooden spoon, and mix well. Cook for about 10 minutes until fully browned. If a lot of liquid releases from the beef, drain or spoon it out — you don't want a watery bolognese.
- Step 3 — Build the bolognese: Pour in the tomato sauce, then stir in the sugar, paprika, garlic powder, and fresh parsley. Let everything simmer together for 5 minutes, then taste and season with salt and pepper. Remove from heat.
- Step 4 — Preheat the oven: Set your oven to 375°F (190°C) and let it preheat while you make the cream sauce and get set up for layering.
- Step 5 — Make the cream sauce: In a separate saucepan over low heat, melt the butter, then pour in the heavy cream and add the garlic powder, salt, and pepper. Stir and let it simmer gently for about 5 minutes — don't let it boil, just a gentle simmer. It will look thin, and that's completely intentional. It thickens as it bakes!
- Step 6 — Layer the lasagna: Grease the bottom of your baking dish with a spoonful of bolognese sauce to prevent sticking. Now start layering — egg lasagna sheets, then bolognese spread evenly, then a drizzle of cream sauce, then a generous handful of mozzarella. Repeat until you've used everything up (3–4 layers depending on your dish). For the very top, lay your final lasagna sheets and pile on as much mozzarella as your heart desires — this is your golden cheese crust moment.
- Step 7 — Bake: Stick toothpicks upright across the top of the lasagna, then tent with aluminum foil — the toothpicks keep the foil from touching and ruining your cheese layer. (A lidded baking dish works great here too.) Bake covered at 375°F (190°C) for 30 minutes, then pull off the foil and bake uncovered for another 20 minutes until the top is golden and bubbly.
- Step 8 — Rest and serve: Take it out of the oven and let the lasagna rest for 10–15 minutes before slicing — this is the hardest part but so worth it. The layers set, the sauces stop running, and your slices actually hold together. Serve and enjoy!
Notes
- Don't skip the resting time. I know it's hard to wait when it's smelling that good, but 10–15 minutes makes a real difference. The sauces set, the layers hold, and your slices actually look beautiful instead of collapsing into a delicious pile.
- The cream sauce is supposed to be thin. Every time I've shared this recipe, someone worries the cream sauce is too runny. It isn't. It soaks into the oven-ready pasta sheets as they bake and becomes part of the sauce — it thickens into a silky, rich layer that you'll absolutely love.
- Toothpick trick is non-negotiable. If you're using foil, those toothpicks are the difference between a gorgeous cheese top and a ruined one. Space them out evenly across the dish so the foil tents above the cheese at every point.
Tried this recipe?
Let us know how it was!Storage
- Fridge: Leftover lasagna keeps for up to 4 days in an airtight container or covered tightly with foil in the baking dish.
- Reheat (microwave): Reheat individual portions for 2–3 minutes, covered with a damp paper towel to keep it from drying out.
- Reheat (oven): Cover with foil and warm at 350°F (175°C) for 20 minutes until heated through. Remove the foil for the last 5 minutes to re-crisp the top.
- Freezer: This lasagna freezes well! Assemble fully, wrap tightly in foil, and freeze for up to 3 months. Thaw overnight in the fridge before baking or reheating. If baking from frozen, add 30–40 minutes to the covered bake time.

Frequently asked questions
Yes, you can assemble this lasagna up to 24 hours in advance. Layer everything in the baking dish, cover tightly with foil, and refrigerate. When you're ready, bake straight from the fridge — add 10–15 extra minutes to the covered bake time to account for the cold start.
Yes, you can assemble this lasagna up to 24 hours in advance. Layer everything in the baking dish, cover tightly with foil, and refrigerate. When you're ready, bake straight from the fridge — add 10–15 extra minutes to the covered bake time to account for the cold start.
No — that's the whole point of oven-ready sheets! They cook directly in the dish as the lasagna bakes, absorbing the sauces and softening perfectly. Just make sure your sauces cover the sheets well so they have enough moisture to cook through.
You can substitute ricotta, but the cream sauce in this recipe is what makes it especially silky and rich. If using ricotta, mix it with 1 egg and a pinch of salt to bind it, then spread it as a layer. The result is a more traditional lasagna — still delicious, just different in texture.
Watery lasagna usually comes from not draining the beef properly, or using too much sauce. Make sure to drain any excess liquid from the beef after browning, and don't overload each layer — spread the sauces evenly rather than pooling them in the center.
Yes! This lasagna freezes beautifully for up to 3 months. Assemble it fully in a freezer-safe dish, wrap in a double layer of foil, and freeze before baking. Thaw overnight in the fridge, then bake as directed, adding 30–40 minutes to the covered baking time.
Ground pork, Italian sausage, or a mix of beef and pork all work great in this bolognese. For a lighter version, ground turkey or chicken work too — just keep in mind that leaner proteins have less fat, so the sauce may need a touch more olive oil or a splash of broth to stay rich.













Leave a Reply