La genovese is Naples' secret masterpiece—a ragù of beef slowly braised in an enormous quantity of onions (typically a 2:1 or even 3:1 ratio of onions to meat by weight) until the onions dissolve completely into a golden-brown, sweet, deeply savoury cream sauce that is one of Italian cuisine's most extraordinary and least-known preparations. Despite its name, la genovese is emphatically Neapolitan—the name likely refers to Genoese merchants or innkeepers in medieval Naples, not to the city of Genoa (where the dish is unknown). The preparation is an exercise in patience and faith: a large piece of beef (typically a tough braising cut—girello/eye of round, muscolo/shin, or manzo di primo taglio) is browned, then buried in a mountain of thinly sliced onions (3-5 kg of onions for 1 kg of meat) with a small amount of olive oil, carrot, celery, white wine, and nothing else—no tomato. The pot is covered and cooked over the lowest possible heat for 4-6 hours, during which the onions undergo a slow, magical transformation: they release their water, then slowly caramelise in the meat juices, breaking down into a thick, amber-coloured cream of extraordinary sweetness and depth. The meat, meanwhile, becomes fall-apart tender. The finished sauce is a revelation: deep golden-brown, silky, intensely sweet from the caramelised onions, deeply savoury from the beef juices, with no trace of the individual onion slices—they have become sauce. It's traditionally served with ziti or candele (long, thick tubular pasta) broken into irregular pieces, with the meat served as a separate course. The dish is considered by many Neapolitan cooks to be even more important than ragù napoletano—more difficult, more nuanced, and more rewarding.
Beef braised in massive quantities of onions (2:1 or 3:1 onion-to-meat ratio). No tomato. Cook 4-6 hours on lowest heat. Onions dissolve into a golden-brown cream sauce. White wine, carrot, celery—nothing more. The beef is served separately. Patience is the only technique.
Use at least 3 different types of onions (yellow, red, and white) for complexity. The onions should be sliced thin but don't need to be uniform—they're all dissolving anyway. A heavy pot with a tight lid is essential for trapping the moisture the onions release. If the bottom starts to catch, add a tiny splash of water and scrape. The meat should be one large piece, not cubed—it's served sliced as a secondo. Some cooks add a marrow bone for richness.
Adding tomato (absolutely no tomato in a proper genovese). Using too few onions (the onion quantity is extreme and non-negotiable). Cooking too fast (the onions must dissolve slowly—if they brown before melting, the heat is too high). Adding liquid (the onions provide all the moisture). Stirring too often (check every 30-45 minutes, no more).
Jeanne Carola Francesconi, La Cucina Napoletana; Arthur Schwartz, Naples at Table