Italian sausage stew a one pan meal
Meat and vegetables simmered in a tomato and garlic sauce
This is one of Ricky’s recipes and he calls it sausage cacciatore. Cacciatore is a Mediterranean term for catch of the day. His parents were Sicilian and his cooking is very Mediterranean. Like all people of our parents age group, regardless of what part of the world they came from, they knew how to put together a meal with what was on hand. So while he calls it a cacciatore, my family of Anglo heritage would consider this Italian sausage meal in a skillet, a stew. It has potatoes and green beans like a more conventional stew but is simmered in a tomato and garlic sauce. Either way our catch of the day is Italian sausages 🙂 and it’s great no matter what you call it.
If you are always looking for another way to get your Italian sausage fix like I am, this recipe is one to try. Serve this dish with a crusty loaf of bread, rolls or biscuits to sop up the excess sauce, and have some freshly grated parmesan cheese and maybe some red pepper flakes at the table.
This is a simple recipe with simple ingredients. With not much planning or effort you can have a savory, satisfying and economical home cooked meal.
Here’s what YOU WILL NEED:

1 pound of Italian sausages sweet or hot |
28 ounce can of whole plum tomatoes |
2 medium sized potatoes |
1/2 pound fresh green beans |
5 cloves of garlic |
1/2 teaspoon salt |
1/2 teaspoon pepper |
1 teaspoon dried oregano |
1/4 teaspoon fennel seed (optional) |
olive oil for skillet |
About the ingredients
Fennel seed
I add fennel seed to this recipe. You can find it most anywhere you buy your spices. Fennel seed is the flavor that distinguishes Italian sausages from other kinds. It’s one of the reasons I like Italian sausages so much so I have it on hand to add to dishes like this. You don’t need it. You will have fennel flavor from the sausage anyway. But if you want to get an extra blast of fennel flavor, add 1/4 teaspoon to the recipe.
Your garlic should be minced. That means you should cut it into a very small chop so you get some in every bite. We have a post on mincing if you want to read more about it Slice Dice Mince and Chop.
This is WHAT TO DO:
Prepare the ingredients
Trim and cut the green beans

Trim the ends off the green beans. And cut them into 2 or 3 pieces depending on the size of the green bean. You don’t want your pieces too big.
Kitchen shears make trimming and cutting green beans quick and easy.
Chop the potatoes
You should chop your potatoes into relatively large bite sized pieces. The potatoes are more porous than the green beans and will cook faster because of that. So cutting the potatoes in larger pieces and your green beans in smaller ones will help with having them fully cooked at the same time.
You don’t need to peel the potatoes but wash them well. Leaving the skin on saves time and the peel has nutrients you would otherwise be throwing away.
Mince the garlic
We are going to mince the garlic cloves. You can use jarred minced garlic if you want, just make sure you check the bottle to find the equivalent amount to a clove of garlic. The bottle I have in my refrigerator now is 1/2 teaspoon = one clove. The equivalent amount can vary depending on the size of the chop so don’t make assumptions.
Crush the tomatoes by hand
Pour the canned tomatoes in a bowl. Crush the tomatoes by hand in the sauce they are packed in. This will give you some chunks of tomato in the finished stew which will give it a little more texture and a very fresh taste.
Now our ingredients are ready

The canned tomatoes are crushed by hand so they are no longer whole but still have chunks.
The potatoes and green beans are cut into bite sized pieces. Don’t cut the potatoes too small. You don’t want the potatoes to get mushy while you are waiting for the green beans to be done. You are going to simmer the stew for about 45 minutes.
The garlic is minced.
Time to start cooking
Brown the sausages
Use a heavy bottomed 10 or 12 inch skillet. Add enough olive oil to cover the bottom of the skillet and let it warm up on medium high heat. Add the sausage links and sauté until brown. When browned but not fully cooked remove them from the skillet and put aside. We will finish cooking them while they are simmering in the tomato sauce.

Brown the Italian sausages in a skillet on medium high heat. They won’t be fully cooked. They will continue cooking while simmering in the sauce.
Save some clean up by using a splatter screen
When you are sautéing or frying on the stovetop you should never put a lid on the skillet. Moisture starts to build up if you don’t have air circulation and you end up steaming whatever is in the skillet. Steaming and sautéing/frying give drastically different results. A splatter screen put over the skillet allows the air flow you need but helps to keep grease from splattering all over.

This is a splatter screen. It keeps grease from splattering all over the stovetop but still lets air circulate which is is necessary when sautéing. It’s a handy kitchen tool to have around. You do not need to spend a lot of money on one. They all work. Get a large one and you can use it on all of your skillets.
The browning on the bottom of the skillet is a good thing
There will be residue on the bottom of the skillet from cooking the sausages. This is called a fond. Some of the reason you sauté a meat first when making a dish is to get this fond. It is loaded with flavor.

The browning on the pan from sautéing the sausages is going to add a lot of flavor to the stew. That browned residue is called a fond.
Sauté the minced garlic
Remove the sausage from the skillet, and add the chopped garlic to the drippings. Move the garlic around in the skillet for about a minute until tender but not browned.

Add the minced garlic to the oil in the skillet and move it around in the oil and sausage drippings for a minute or so to make it tender but not browned,
Add the crushed tomatoes
Now we will add the hand crushed tomatoes, juice and all to the skillet and mix it into the oil and garlic. As we mix we want to get all the browning on the bottom of the pan into the sauce. That is called deglazing. This is where you are going to capture all that added flavor. A wooden spoon is the best tool for this for lots of reasons but in this dish more so than others. The tomato sauce can react to certain metals and distort the taste.

Add the hand crushed tomatoes with the juice they were packed in to the olive oil and garlic in the skillet and with a wooden spoon mix it in with the oil and garlic. As you mix make sure to get all the browning at the bottom of the pan mixed into the tomato sauce.
Cut the cooled sausages into 1 inch pieces
When the sausages have cooled, slice the browned sausages into one inch pieces.
Add the rest of the ingredients
We are ready to add the trimmed green beans, potato, spices and sliced sausages to the skillet. Stir to incorporate.


Simmer
Put a cover on the skillet and simmer until potatoes and green beans are tender, usually about 45 minutes depending on how large the vegetable pieces are and how tender you like your vegetables. A simmer will have bubbles rising continuously to the top with a few popping open at a time. Simmering will cook the vegetables without turning the potatoes to mush and finish cooking the sausage.

This is the end result after simmering. The sausage is cooked through, the potato and green beans are tender and the tomato sauce has thickened..
As you can see, there are still chunks of tomato in the stew. They add texture and a fresh tomato taste.
Serve
Serve in a rimmed dish or bowl with bread, rolls or biscuits to sop up the sauce. Top with grated parmesan cheese.


Italian Sausage Stew
Ingredients
Instructions
Prepare Ingredients
- Trim the ends from the green beans. Kitchen shears make quick work of this. Cut the beans into 3 or 4 small pieces depending on how big they are.
- Wash your potatoes well. You don't need to peel them. Cut potatoes into fairly large pieces. They cook faster than the green beans and we want them done at the same time.
- Mince the garlic cloves you can use jarred minced garlic just make sure you are using the right equivalent amount. It will be listed on the label.
- Empty the canned tomatoes, juice and all, into a bowl. Crush the tomatoes by hand leaving large pieces of tomato.
Cooking Instructions
- Warm a 10 or 12 inch heavy bottomed skillet on medium high heat. When warm add enough olive oil to cover the bottom. Brown the Italian sausage links in the skillet. They won't be fully cooked. When browned, take them out of the skillet and put them aside to cool. Do not drain the skillet. The drippings and the browning on the bottom of the skillet add a lot of flavor.
- Lightly sauté the minced garlic in the sausage drippings. Just warm the garlic, don't brown it.
- Add the hand crushed tomato to the skillet. As you mix the tomato, garlic and oil together, make sure you are getting the browning at the bottom of the skillet mixed in too. The browning is called a fond and mixing it in to the liquid is called deglazing. This is a flavor boosting technique.
- When sausages are cooled cut them into one inch slices.
- Add sliced sausage, trimmed green beans, potatoes, salt, pepper oregano and fennel to the skillet. Stir to incorporate.
- Cover the skillet and simmer for about 45 minutes until the green beans and potato are cooked to your desired tenderness.
- Serve in high rimmed dinner plate or a shallow bowl. Top with grated parmesan cheese and/or crushed pepper flakes.