**Classic Tomato Sauce: A Versatile Culinary Masterpiece**
In the realm of cooking, few sauces command as much respect and versatility as the classic tomato sauce. Its vibrant red hue, rich umami flavor, and tangy acidity have elevated countless dishes to culinary stardom. This comprehensive guide presents a collection of classic tomato sauce recipes, each offering a unique twist on this timeless staple. From the traditional Italian rendition to contemporary variations infused with exotic herbs and spices, these recipes cater to a wide range of palates and preferences. Whether you're a seasoned chef or a home cook seeking to elevate your culinary skills, this article provides the essential knowledge and step-by-step instructions to create a classic tomato sauce that will transform your meals into unforgettable gastronomic experiences.
CLASSIC TOMATO SAUCE
Since everyone has his or her version of this sauce, we spent a lot of time getting this one right. No surprise, the best results came from using the best ingredients. When it comes to tomato sauce, using poor quality canned tomatoes can leave an acidic or tinny taste in your mouth. So while it is a bit more expensive, we like to use Pomi brand chopped tomatoes (you know, the ones that come in a box). The sauce starts with a careful "sweating" of onions (cooking them slowly, until translucent but not brown, to extract as much flavor as possible), and the flavor continues to build from a nice, long, low-heat simmering after the tomatoes are added.
Provided by Daniel Holzman
Yield Makes 7 cups
Number Of Ingredients 8
Steps:
- Heat the olive oil in a large pot over medium heat. Add the onions, bay leaf, oregano, garlic, and salt and cook, stirring often, until the onions are soft and translucent, about 10 minutes.
- Add the tomato paste and continue cooking for 5 minutes. Add the tomatoes and stir constantly until the sauce begins to boil. Lower the heat and simmer for 1 hour, stirring every 5 minutes or so to prevent the sauce on the bottom of the pot from burning. Taste and season with additional salt, if desired. Remove the bay leaf before serving.
CLASSIC TOMATO SAUCE
Serve this tomato sauce recipe from Daniel Holzman and Michael Chernow's "The Meatball Shop Cookbook" with Classic Beef Meatballs.
Provided by Martha Stewart
Categories Food & Cooking Ingredients Vegetables
Yield Makes 7 cups
Number Of Ingredients 8
Steps:
- Heat olive oil in a large pot over medium heat. Add onion, bay leaf, oregano, garlic, and salt. Cook, stirring often, until onion is soft and translucent, about 10 minutes. Add tomato paste and continue cooking 5 minutes more.
- Add tomatoes and cook, stirring constantly, until sauce comes to a boil. Reduce heat and simmer for 1 hour, stirring every 5 minutes or so to prevent burning. Season with salt, if desired. Remove bay leaf before serving.
MARCELLA HAZAN'S CLASSIC ITALIAN TOMATO SAUCE
Steps:
- Put a 3-quart saucepan over medium-high heat. Add the tomatoes, butter, onion halves, and a pinch of salt. Bring to a simmer then lower the heat. Crush the tomatoes lightly with the back of a spoon as they cook, and stir occasionally. Simmer very gently for 45 minutes, or until droplets of fat appear on the surface of the tomatoes. Remove and discard the onion.
CLASSIC TOMATO SAUCE
If you're Italian, you probably have your own particular version (family version) of a classic tomato sauce. Carefully handed down from generation to generation. So, here's my two-cent's worth... Actually, it's my Aunt Josephine's two-cent's worth. In this recipe, everything is fresh; including the tomatoes. So, for...
Provided by Andy Anderson !
Categories Other Sauces
Time 1h
Number Of Ingredients 11
Steps:
- 1. In a small bowl, whisk together the tomato paste, and white wine until fully incorporated, and then set aside. Chef's Note: I was about ten, when I first watched my Aunt Josephine make this recipe, she poured some wine into a bowl, and some into a small glass. She looked at me winked, and said: Some for the recipe, and some for me. I got my first taste of wine that day...
- 2. Remove the stems from the tomatoes, turn them up-side-down, and cut a small X on the bottom of the tomato with a small pairing knife. Just deep enough to pierce the skin.
- 3. Blanch the Tomatoes Fill a large bowl with water and ice. The bowl should be big enough to hold the ice, water, and the tomatoes. Put a large pot of water on the boil, and then add a few tablespoons of table salt. The pot should be large enough to hold the boiling water, and two tomatoes at a time without boiling over. Carefully put the tomatoes into the rolling boiling water... two at a time, for about 30 to 60 seconds. In most cases you should be able to see the skin, where you made the X, begin pulling away from the flesh of the tomato. Immediately, move the tomatoes from the boiling water to the ice bath. Continue the process until all the tomatoes have been properly blanched, and are sitting happily in the ice bath. You should be able to go to the bottom of the tomato, where you made the X cut, and simply grab and easily peel back the skin. Chef's Note: What is Blanching? Moving the tomatoes from a hot to a cold liquid is called blanching. It helps to loosen the skin for peeling. But that's not all, in addition to helping in the peeling process, blanching helps to set the bright green color of some vegetables, and keeps other vegetables from turning gray like: asparagus, greens, peas, and green beans. It's also used for preparing vegetables for freezing. The ice bath shocks the vegetable (I would be pretty shocked if you dropped me into an ice bath), and quickly stops the cooking process that was initiated by the hot water.
- 4. Use a small paring knife to dig out the tough part at the top of the tomato that held the stem. Quarter the tomatoes, and then place into a food processor fitted with an S-blade, and add the tomato paste/wine mixture. Chef's Note: The tomato paste is the only canned vegetable we're using in this recipe. Tomato Paste is cooked down tomatoes, to the point where they can be scooped with a spoon but will not flow. Very thick, like peanut butter. Tomato paste is generally thinned with wine, broth or water. Just a small amount added to soups, chili and stews gives tomato flavor while helping to thicken the stock. In this case, the tomato paste, and wine mixture will compliment the fresh tomatoes and add some needed body to the sauce. This is called building "layers" of flavor.
- 5. Give the tomatoes a few quick pulses in the food processor. Chef's Note: This step determines the consistency of your tomato sauce. Some cooks like to process until the tomatoes are almost the consistency of a puree. Aunt Josephine preferred hers a bit chunky, and so do I. Chef's Note: If you don't have a food processor, or you just don't want to use it, you can always put them on a cutting board, and have at them with your trusty kitchen knife, and then put them into a bowl, and add the wine. Reserve the chopped tomatoes. Chef's Tip: To save on cleaning another bowl, you can just leave them in the bowl of the food processor.
- 6. Variation on a theme. If you want a deeper flavor to the sauce try this. Don't mix the tomato paste with the wine. Instead, in step 4, only add the tomatoes and the wine to the food processor, and continue with step 5... don't add the tomato paste. Then, add the tomato paste with the other ingredients in step 9. Cooking the tomato paste a bit will concentrate its flavor, and also help to infuse that deep tomato taste into the herbs, onions, and carrots. Continue with the rest of the recipe, as written.
- 7. Add the olive oil to a large pot, and heat over medium heat. Chef's Note: This pot needs to be big enough to eventually hold all of the ingredients.
- 8. Add the chopped onions, and grated carrots, then cook stirring often, until the onions are soft and translucent, about 6-8 minutes. Chef's Note: The whole process will come to a screeching halt if you let any of the ingredients brown, or burn. The onions should be lightly sizzling in the oil, but not frying. So, that 6-8 minute time is just a suggestion. Keep an eye on the veggies. Fresh Versus Dried Herbs Dried herbs are generally more potent and concentrated than fresh herbs, so you'll need less. The ratio is typically three times the amount of fresh herbs as dry. This recipe calls for 1 tablespoon of fresh oregano or 1 teaspoon of dried... a teaspoon is 1/3 of a tablespoon. How to Store Herbs Fresh herbs should be wrapped in a paper towel, stored in a resealable plastic bag, and then placed into the refrigerator. Depending on how fresh they were when you bought them, you should get an addition week to ten days use out of them. Dried herbs should be stored out of the light and in a cool, dry place. Once that jar has opened, the herbs will begin to lose their potency. A general rule is: Whole dried: 2 years. Cut, dried: 1 year. Powered: 6 months. Of course the best approach is to grow your own, and just cut what you need. Time to go back to the farm.
- 9. Add the bay leaves, oregano, garlic, salt, pepper, and continue to cook; stirring often, an additional 3 to 5 minutes. Don't let the veggies brown or burn. Chef's Note: The chemical nature of the salt will work with the proteins in the vegetables to pull the different flavors of this sauce together; however, a tablespoon of salt, is a lot of salt. You might try adding half the salt, and then in step 10, add more as the sauce is simmering. Assuming you feel it needs any more. You can always add more salt, if needed; however, it's kind of hard to remove it, if it's too much.
- 10. Add the reserved chopped tomatoes, and slowly simmer for about 30 minutes. As the sauce is simmering, taste and add additional salt as you go. Chef's Note: Adding salt at the end of the cooking process makes the sauce taste salty... Adding it as you cook makes the sauce taste seasoned. Chef's Note: Remember to fish out and discard the bay leaves before serving.
- 11. Additional Cooking Note: This recipe works best with fresh ingredients; however, there are times when you just can't find any good, fresh tomatoes. Personally, I find the basic tomatoes that you find at your local super grocer bland and tasteless lumps (I miss the mom-and-pop grocery stores that I grew up with). I have tried this recipe with two "store bought" varieties: One in a can, and one in a box. Hunts Whole Plum Tomatoes: In a can, but I'll admit that they do have good flavor, and as opposed to other specialty brands, they are relatively easy to find in most stores. Pomi Whole Plum Tomatoes: They come in a box, and get very high ratings from other chefs as to freshness, and taste; however, they do cost more than Hunts tomatoes and not all stores carry the Pomi brand.
- 12. Serving Suggestions: You could plate up a bunch of pasta: Capellini, Fusilli Bucati, Pici... your choice, and ladle some sauce on top. Add a bit of freshly-grated parmesan, maybe a sprinkle of crushed red pepper, and dig in. Don't forget the wine, and a nice loaf of crusty bread. This sauce also goes well with my Aunt Josephine's meatballs, or anybody else's meatballs for that matter. Whatever you do, share it around a table with good friends and family. Remember, friends don't let friends eat alone... share the love. Keep the faith, and keep cooking.
- 13. If you enjoyed this recipe, and would like to be notified when I post more yummy food, just click here to follow me: https://www.justapinch.com/my/favorites/add/id/747894
CLASSIC TOMATO SAUCE
Since everyone has his or her version of this sauce, we spent a lot of time getting this one right. No surprise, the best results came from using the best ingredients. When it comes to tomato sauce, using poor quality canned tomatoes can leave an acidic or tinny taste in your mouth. So while it is a bit more expensive, we like to use Pomi brand chopped tomatoes (you know, the ones that come in a box). The sauce starts with a careful "sweating" of onions (cooking them slowly, until translucent but not brown, to extract as much flavor as possible), and the flavor continues to build from a nice, long, low-heat simmering after the tomatoes are added.
Yield 4 people
Number Of Ingredients 8
Steps:
- Heat the olive oil in a large pot over medium heat. Add the onions, bay leaf, oregano, garlic, and salt and cook, stirring often, until the onions are soft and translucent, about 10 minutes.
- Add the tomato paste and continue cooking for 5 minutes. Add the tomatoes and stir constantly until the sauce begins to boil. Lower the heat and simmer for 1 hour, stirring every 5 minutes or so to prevent the sauce on the bottom of the pot from burning. Taste and season with additional salt, if desired. Remove the bay leaf before serving.
Tips and Tricks:
- Use ripe tomatoes: The riper the tomatoes, the sweeter and more flavorful your sauce will be. If you can't find ripe tomatoes, you can roast them in the oven to concentrate their flavor.
- Don't overcrowd the pot: When you're cooking the tomatoes, don't overcrowd the pot. This will prevent them from cooking evenly and will make the sauce watery.
- Simmer the sauce for at least 30 minutes: The longer you simmer the sauce, the more time the flavors will have to develop. Simmer the sauce for at least 30 minutes, or up to an hour for a richer flavor.
- Season the sauce to taste: Be sure to season the sauce to taste with salt, pepper, and other herbs and spices. You can also add a pinch of sugar to balance out the acidity of the tomatoes.
- Use the sauce in a variety of dishes: Tomato sauce is a versatile ingredient that can be used in a variety of dishes. Try it on pasta, pizza, chicken, or fish. You can also use it as a base for soups and stews.
Conclusion:
Making a classic tomato sauce is a great way to use up fresh tomatoes and create a delicious and flavorful sauce that can be used in a variety of dishes. With a few simple ingredients and a little bit of time, you can make a tomato sauce that is sure to impress your family and friends.
Are you curently on diet or you just want to control your food's nutritions, ingredients? We will help you find recipes by cooking method, nutrition, ingredients...
Check it out »
#30-minutes-or-less #time-to-make #preparation #for-large-groups #number-of-servings
You'll also love