Preserved Marinara Sauce
Suddenly there are so many tomatoes that it’s time to can them for the off-season. I like to plant a dozen tomatoes, half are a small flavorful tomato such as an Early Girl and half a combination of Marzano or another Roma tomato, which offer a thicker sauce. You can get tomatoes from your local farmers market or u-pick farm if you aren’t growing them in your back yard. When our spring edition comes out, I’ll share how to grow dry-farmed tomatoes, which are the most intense and flavor balanced tomato.
See the video following the recipe below.
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Suddenly there are so many tomatoes that it’s time to can them for the off season. I start by canning diced tomatoes in a cold pack, because these can be used for almost anything. By September, there are so many tomatoes that I start making Marinara Sauce and Ketchup and dried or roasted tomatoes. I always use a mixture of dry farmed Early Girls and Romas, but you can use any very flavorful tomato, mixed with a Marzano or Roma plum tomato to thicken the texture of the sauce. I like to use dry farmed tomatoes because the balance of acidity and dry farming them makes them extra sweet.
- 8 Lb Early Girl and Roma tomatoes
- 4 tbsp organic olive oil
- 1-2 heads of garlic
- 2 onions, minced opt
- 2 bunch fresh basil, chopped
- salt and pepper flakes to taste
- lemon juice
- leftover Pinot Noir
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You will need a boiling water bath canner and a box of pint jars with lids and seals.
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Prepare your tomatoes and basil by washing and removing any discolored parts.
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Start a pot of water, blanch the tomatoes, cut the stem out, cut in half and deseed.
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If you have a sieve, put the tomatoes through the sieve to attain a smooth sauce, if not chop the tomatoes.
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Put some olive oil in a large pot and heat, peel and mince the garlic, add to the oil insuring that it does not brown, but that it melts.
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Add the onion if using, stirring until transparent.
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Add the tomatoes and simmer. Because these are dry farmed tomatoes, there is much less moisture. Using Roma’s also decreases moisture. Pour in some red wine. The sauce thickens quickly.
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When the sauce is almost as thick as you want it, add the basil. Keep the sauce hot so that it will not shock your bottles.
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Have the water in your canner simmering. Fill clean pint jars to ½” of the lid. Top with enough lemon juice to cover. Clean the jar lip, Fasten the lid and immerse in the water. Slowly bring the water to a low boil. Process for 35 minutes.
There is nothing like a jar of “fresh” tomatoes or Marinara Sauce in the winter or spring. And there is no similarity to whatever you can buy in a can. This recipe is enough for 7 pints, which just fills the canner.
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