Searching for a comforting, delicious, and easy-to-make soup recipe? Look no further than tomato soup! This classic dish is a staple in many households, and for good reason. It's packed with flavor, nutrients, and can be enjoyed by people of all ages.
This article features a collection of mouthwatering tomato soup recipes that cater to various dietary preferences and skill levels. From traditional tomato soup to vegan, gluten-free, and roasted tomato soup variations, there's a recipe here for everyone. Each recipe includes step-by-step instructions, helpful tips, and beautiful photos to guide you through the cooking process.
Whether you're looking for a quick and easy weekday meal, a cozy dinner option for a chilly evening, or a flavorful soup to serve at your next gathering, these tomato soup recipes have got you covered. So, grab your apron and let's dive into the world of delicious tomato soup!
EASY TOMATO SOUP RECIPE FOR CANNING
This home canned tomato soup recipe is easy to make and kid friendly. The soup is condensed, so it takes up less storage space in the pantry. If you don't have a pressure canner, you can also freeze the soup.
Provided by Laurie Neverman
Categories Soup
Time 4h20m
Number Of Ingredients 9
Steps:
- Place tomatoes, celery, onion, parsley and bay leaves in a large stainless steel pot. Cook gently, uncovered, until tender, stirring as needed. I aim to reduce the volume roughly by half, or until it starts to thicken.
- Press through a food strainer or sieve into a large stainless steel or enameled cast iron saucepan. Set aside 2 cups of puree to cool.
- Whisk together Clear Gel and cooled tomato puree to form a slurry.
- Bring soup back to a boil and stir in the Clear Gel slurry. Continue to boil for two minutes, until it thickens. Add salt, pepper and sugar (if desired). Soup will not resemble commercial soup concentrate. Instead, it will look like a slightly too thick tomato soup.
- Ladle into pint or half pint jars and fill to 1" headspace. Wipe rims and seat two piece caps.
- Process in pressure canner at 10 pounds of pressure for weighted gauge and 11 pounds for dial gauge, for 25 minutes for pints or half pints. Do not use quarts for this recipe.
- When ready to serve the canned tomato soup, just heat with equal amount of liquid such as milk, water or chicken broth.
- Makes around 4 pints.
Nutrition Facts : ServingSize 1 cup, Calories 169 calories, Sugar 19.6 g, Sodium 911.4 mg, Fat 1 g, SaturatedFat 0.2 g, TransFat 0 g, Carbohydrate 38.7 g, Fiber 6.6 g, Protein 4.7 g, Cholesterol 0 mg
CANNING TOMATO SOUP BASE
Follow this step by step tutorial to learn how to can tomato soup.
Provided by Sarah Cook - Sustainable Cooks
Categories Canning
Time 1h15m
Number Of Ingredients 2
Steps:
- Rinse the tomatoes and cut in half, or quarters for larger tomatoes.
- Add a strainer/colander to a large bowl.
- Wash and sanitize your jars. You'll want to keep them warm to avoid having them crack when placed in the canner. You can fill them with hot water, or place them on a tray in the oven at 170F.
- Wash your lids with hot soapy water and place them in a clean bowl for now.
- Add the tomatoes to a pot of boiling water and parboil them until you see the skins start to come off one of the tomatoes (about 1-2 minutes).
- Use a slotted spoon and remove the tomatoes and place in the strainer.
- Run the tomatoes through a food mill to remove the seeds and skins.
- Transfer the tomato puree to a pot over low heat or a crockpot set to low. Keep warm until ready to can.
- Add 3 quarts of water to your pressure canner and put it on a burner set to high. Make sure there is a canning rack in the bottom of the canner.
- Add lemon juice or citric acid to your canning jars.Quarts: 2 tbsp lemon juice OR 1/2 tsp citric acid. Salt (optional) 1 tspPints: 1 tbsp lemon juice OR 1/4 tsp citric acid. Salt (optional) 1/2 tsp
- Place a funnel on a canning jar and ladle in the warm tomato puree, leaving 1 inch of headspace. Headspace is defined as the space between the top of the food and the top of the jar.
- Using a long utensil (I prefer a plastic chopstick), remove all the air bubbles from the jar.
- Use a wet clean rag and wipe the rim of the jars to make sure they are free of any food.
- Place a clean new lid on the jar. Add a ring, and tighten to fingertip tight.
- Using canning tongs, gently place the jars in the canner. Lock the lid. Soon, steam will start coming through the vent pipe.
- Allow the steam to pass through for about 10 minutes. Then put the pressure regulator on top. (see photos in post above to see this in action)
- Pretty soon, the air vent will pop up. That is a sign that you're starting to build pressure inside the canner. Tomato soup need to be pressure canned at 11 pounds of pressure for 15 minutes for both pints and quarts. (see time chart in post for adjusted times for elevation and water bath canning).
- When the dial gauge reaches 11 pounds of pressure, reduce the burner temp to medium, and start your timer. The pressure must stay at 11 or (a little bit) above for the duration of the cooking time. You'll likely need to adjust the temp on the burner a few times depending on your stove.
- When the time is up, remove the canner from the burner and allow it to sit until you hear a distinctive "click" of the air vent dropping. Remove the pressure regulator and carefully remove the lid (Pro tip: I always use oven mitts when I take the lid off because the steam is crazy hot).
- Let the jars sit for 5 minutes in the canner and then lift them out with canning tongs. Place on a towel where they can sit undisturbed for 12 hours.
- After a few hours, to check for sealing, gently press down in the middle of the lid. If the lid has no give, it's sealed. If you can press the lid in and it pops a bit, your jars are not sealed.
- Complete steps 1-8 above.
- Fill your canner so that there will be 2 inches of water over the tallest jar that you are canning. Set it on a large burner set to high.
- Complete steps 10-14 above.
- When the water has reached a rolling boil, place the jars in the canner and place the lid on top. Process pints for 35 minutes or quarts for 40 minutes.
- When the time is up, remove the canner from the burner and let the jars sit for 5 minutes in the canner and then lift them out with canning tongs.
- Place on a towel where they can sit undisturbed for 12 hours.
Nutrition Facts : ServingSize 0.5 cup, Calories 83 kcal, Carbohydrate 18 g, Protein 4 g, Sodium 22 mg, Fiber 5 g, Sugar 12 g
CANNED TOMATO SOUP
The best canned tomato soup recipe! A great way to use up those extra tomatoes from the garden. When ready to serve, mix with equal parts milk and warm.
Provided by jennyrose81
Categories Soups, Stews and Chili Recipes Soup Recipes Vegetable Soup Recipes Tomato Soup Recipes
Time 13h15m
Yield 32
Number Of Ingredients 9
Steps:
- Place onions, celery, and tomatoes in a large pot; pour in enough water to just cover vegetables; bring to a boil. Reduce heat and simmer until tomatoes are tender, 20 to 30 minutes. Pour tomato mixture through a strainer or food mill, discard solids, and return liquid to the pot; stir sugar and salt into liquid.
- Blend butter and flour together in a blender until smooth and creamy; add tomato juice. Blend until smooth. Pour butter mixture into liquid in the pot. Cook and stir over medium heat just until tomato soup is hot.
- Sterilize the jars and lids in boiling water for at least 5 minutes. Pack the tomato soup into the hot, sterilized jars, filling the jars to within 1/4 inch of the top. Run a knife or a thin spatula around the insides of the jars after they have been filled to remove any air bubbles. Wipe the rims of the jars with a moist paper towel to remove any food residue. Top with lids, and screw on rings.
- Place a rack in the bottom of a large stockpot and fill halfway with water. Bring to a boil and lower jars into the boiling water using a holder. Leave a 2-inch space between the jars. Pour in more boiling water if necessary to bring the water level to at least 1 inch above the tops of the jars. Bring the water to a rolling boil, cover the pot, and process for 20 to 30 minutes.
- Remove the jars from the stockpot and place onto a cloth-covered or wood surface, several inches apart, until cool. Once cool, press the top of each lid with a finger, ensuring that the seal is tight (lid does not move up or down at all). Store in a cool, dark area, and wait at least 12 hours before opening.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 125.4 calories, Carbohydrate 17.2 g, Cholesterol 15.3 mg, Fat 6.1 g, Fiber 2.4 g, Protein 2.1 g, SaturatedFat 3.7 g, Sodium 104.1 mg, Sugar 11.4 g
MOM'S BEST TOMATO SOUP CANNING RECIPE
My Mennonite mother's 'famous' tomato soup - hard to beat! Perfect anytime of the year! Enjoy! Here's what I purchased (for you to use as a baseline reference): - to yield 75 quarts of soup - 3 bushels of tomatoes, 6 lbs. butter, 5 lbs. sugar, 3 bunches celery, 5 lbs. flour. Hope that helps! (RECIPE BELOW IS FOR 8-10 QUARTS) (I make lots, and then frequently give this as a gift for a new mother, a hostess gift (when invited to dinner), a get-well meal, etc..) Super quick - easy to make, and can easily add garlic bread and a salad and dessert for a quick meal to bless someone. ENJOY!
Provided by WJKing
Categories Vegetable
Time 1h50m
Yield 8-10 quarts
Number Of Ingredients 7
Steps:
- Chop onion& celery.
- Place in large kettle w/ just enough water to keep them from burning.
- While this simmers, cut tomatoes (remove stems if not using strainer).
- Add to kettle& cook until tender.
- Place this all through Victorio strainer (or similar).
- Return to kettle.
- Add sugar& salt.
- Cream butter and flour together& mix thoroughly with two cups of COLD juice, until dissolved (or blend together in a blender), to avoid lumps of flour in the juice.
- Add butter/flour mixture to warmed tomato juice. (Add before it's hot, to avoid lumps of flour!).
- Stir well.
- Heat just until hot. (If it gets to a boil, it can make the flour lumpy).
- Just prior to boiling, turn off the burner. (It will continue to thicken as it cools.).
- Ladle into jars& close securely with lids.
- Return to canner & process 20-30 minutes (start timing when it's at a 'rolling' boil).
- Remove from canner & allow to set until sealed (approx. 12 hours) To serve, mix equal parts tomato concentrate to milk, and add 1/2 t. of baking soda per pint as it cooks (1 t. per quart).
- .
Nutrition Facts : Calories 529.3, Fat 24.8, SaturatedFat 14.9, Cholesterol 61, Sodium 3827.1, Carbohydrate 74.4, Fiber 11.4, Sugar 48.5, Protein 9.5
TOMATO SOUP FOR CANNING
An old recipe for tomato soup. For canning, check the Ball canning book for more up to date times for canning. Looks good although it called for 1/2 cup salt, I changed to 3 tablespoons because that seemed excessive to me. Feel free to add more if you wish.
Provided by Dienia B.
Categories Low Protein
Time 3h30m
Yield 10 pints
Number Of Ingredients 9
Steps:
- Cook all vegetables together.
- When done, sieve until like a smooth paste.
- Add remaining ingredients and cook until thick.
- Seal in glass jars while hot.
- I would process in pressure cooker myself for about 90 minutes.
- I'm guessing this to be safe however, it may be less time.
TOMATO SOUP - CANNING RECIPE
Make and share this Tomato Soup - Canning recipe recipe from Food.com.
Provided by Diana Adcock
Categories Vegetable
Time 2h20m
Yield 6 pints
Number Of Ingredients 8
Steps:
- In a large pot cook tomatoes until soft.
- Press through a food mill.
- In a saucepan combine all of the other veg and add enough water to just cover.
- Cook to tender, drain and put veg thru a food mill.
- Now combine the two puree's and add salt and herbs.
- Bring to a boil, reduce to a simmer and cook slowly until thick, stirring frequently to prevent sticking.
- Remove bay leaf.
- Ladle into clean hot jars leaving 1/2 inch head space.
- Process in a pressure caner 20 minutes at 10 pounds pressure at altitudes up to 2000 feet.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 152.6, Fat 1.3, SaturatedFat 0.2, Sodium 853.5, Carbohydrate 33.3, Fiber 9.6, Sugar 20.2, Protein 6.2
GARDEN TOMATO SOUP-CANNING
Posted in response to a request for soups to can. Adapted from The USDA Canning site. The source was told to come from The Best of Friends Cookbook.
Provided by Sharon123
Categories Vegetable
Time 1h20m
Yield 6-7 quarts
Number Of Ingredients 15
Steps:
- Put all of the ingredients in a large kettle. Bring to a boil, turn down to simmer and cook until the celery is soft, about 15 minutes; then add the butter sauce and brown sugar paste.
- Mix the sugar and flour together in a bowl. Add enough of the hot soup to make a paste, then stir this into the hot soup and bring to a boil until soup thickens, about 10-15 minutes.
- If the soup is thicker than you prefer, add a little water. Adding the red pepper flakes makes the soup zingier. If too sweet, add a little more salt.
- Pour soup into quart jars and can in a pressure canner for 25 minutes at 10 pounds pressure.
- Yield: 6-7 quarts, depending on size of tomatoes.
CANNED TOMATO SOUP
I Love to can, and I went to the Depot and saw that there were tomatoes on sale .50 cents a pound, I just had to buy 100 lbs, that's right!! 100 pounds!! LOL, my poor hubby thought I was crazy, until he saw the result of my madness :) I use Tomato soup in almost everything I cook, and its almost $1.75 a can these days and it's...
Provided by Elizabeth Lancaster
Categories Other Sauces
Time 2h15m
Number Of Ingredients 10
Steps:
- 1. In a very large soup pot, sauté the chopped onions and celery in the 1/2 cup of water till tender. Watch that the pieces don't start to burn. After about 10 minutes, add the chopped garlic and cook another 3 minutes. If needed, add a small amount of water to keep it all from sticking.
- 2. Now you can do what you will, but I prefer the food possessor! I pureed my tomatoes with the basil at the same time BEFORE cooking, and then added them to the celery,onion,garlic mix! (IF YOU ARE GOING TO USE THE FOOD PROCESSOR,JUMP TO STEP #5) OTHERWISE PROCEED WITH #3
- 3. Otherwise chop all the tomatoes and add basil (if using), stir well, and cover. Cook on medium until the tomatoes are tender (about an hour). **************************************************** Scoop out about 2 cups of the tomatoes into the colander and, using the back of a large slotted spoon (works best), press down on the tomatoes so that the juice runs down through the colander into the bowl below. Keep doing this until you've pressed all the juice out of the tomatoes. What you're doing is a) collecting juice and b) getting rid of all the skins, which have a very unappealing texture if left in the soup. Now that you have a giant bowl full of tomato juice, put it all back into your soup potand cook over medium heat for a few minutes to heat back up. Take about a cup of the juice and pour it over the butter/flour mixture in your other bowl. Stir well to smooth it out into a creamy paste. Then pour that butter/flour/soup mixture into the big soup pot with all the rest of the juice, and stir well. Cook for ten minutes.
- 4. At the end of the cooking time, taste and add 1 to 2 TBSP of sugar to smooth out the taste.
- 5. (IF YOU PROCESSED YOUR BASE FOLLOW THESE STEPS) Cook on medium for about an hour. **************************************************** At the end of the cooking time, taste and add 1 to 2 TBSP of sugar to smooth out the taste. **************************************************** Place all of the cooked tomato soup back into the processor and blend until smooth,Now that you have a giant bowl full of tomato juice, put it all back into your soup pot and cook over medium heat for a few minutes to heat back up. Take about a cup of the juice and pour it over the butter/flour mixture in your other bowl. Stir well to smooth it out into a creamy paste. Then pour that butter/flour/soup mixture into the big soup pot with all the rest of the juice, and stir well. Cook for ten minutes.
- 6. At this point, you have soup base. You can cool it and store it in freezer bags, or you can can it in a water bath(dont add milk yet) , or you can serve it up on the spot. Whichever way you go, when it comes time to cook and serve the soup, just mix two parts soup base to one part milk.
- 7. If canning........ DON'T ADD MILK YET!!!!! Sterilizing your jars and rings, there are many ways to do this, here is a selection you can choose from, I do mine in the dishwasher ! Much faster! Dishwasher Method This method is great if you're short on time. Wash the jars in the dishwasher and then simply leave them there until ready to fill. Keeping the door to the dishwasher closed keeps in the steam and heat. Remove the jars a couple at a time as needed. Stove Top Method 1.Place your jars in a canner right side up. 2.Then, fill the canner with water, stopping an inch above the jars. 3.Bring the water to a boil and continue boiling for 10 minutes. 4.Reduce the heat and keep the jars in the hot water until you're ready to fill them. Tips: If you live above 1,000 feet in altitude, add one minute of boiling time for each 1,000 foot increase in elevation. Oven Method 1.Preheat your oven to 225 degrees Fahrenheit. Make sure to adjust the oven racks to accommodate the jar's height. 2.Arrange your jars, lids, and bands on the cookie sheets. Leave space between them for the hot air to circulate. If you're reusing Mason jars from previous years, remove the lids and bands from those jars so that everything is open and separated before you put your equipment in the oven. 3.Place the cookie sheets with your jars, lids, and bands on them in your preheated oven. Set a timer for 10 minutes, and do not remove anything or open the oven door before these 10 minutes have elapsed. If more than 10 minutes elapses, that's OK, but 10 minutes at that temperature is all you need. 4.Turn the oven off and leave the jars, lids, and bands in the oven to keep them warm until you're ready to use them for canning. Although 225 degrees is a comparatively low oven temperature, always use oven mitts or thick hand towels to handle anything you take out of your oven.
- 8. in a small sauce pan boil about 2 c of water and remove from heat, place your lids in this water and leave until ready to seal your jars Clean rims of the jars with a hot,clean cloth or coffee filter.
- 9. Fill jars, leaving 1/2-inch headspace. Adjust lids and process jars.
- 10. Put in canner & process 30 minutes (start timing when it's at a 'rolling' boil). Remove and set them upright on a towel to set for 12 hours. LEAVE THE RINGS ON, YOU WILL HEAR POPPING NOISES, THIS IS WHAT YOU WANT TO HEAR!!! ONCE JARS HAVE SET FOR NO MORE THAN 12 HOURS, (VERY IMPORTANT) REMOVE THE RINGS, THIS IS THE ONLY WAY TO EVER KNOW IF YOUR JARS SEALED PROPERLY,OTHERWISE YOU WONT KNOW YOUR FOOD IS SPOILED UNTIL YOU SMELL SOMETHING HORRID IN THE CUPBOARDS! TRUST ME!!!
- 11. Don't forget to date your jars and use within 3 years!! Enjoy!
- 12. Some people say this isn't long enough in a canner, some people say you should only pressure can this recipe. I'm happy with it and am quite comfortable making it and processing it in this way. If you're uncomfortable with this method use whatever canning method you're comfortable with.The USDA has new recommendations and you can choose which is best for you,pressure canning,water bath and gives new timings of each method to choose from!
Tips for Canning Tomato Soup
- Choose ripe, firm tomatoes for the best flavor and texture.
- Use a large pot or Dutch oven to make the soup in, as it will need to hold a lot of ingredients.
- Simmer the soup for at least 30 minutes to allow the flavors to meld.
- Use a food mill or immersion blender to puree the soup until it is smooth.
- Add salt, pepper, and other seasonings to taste.
- Process the soup in a boiling water bath for 25 minutes (for quart jars) or 40 minutes (for half-gallon jars) to ensure that it is properly sealed.
- Store the canned tomato soup in a cool, dark place for up to 1 year.
Conclusion
Canning tomato soup is a great way to preserve the fresh flavor of tomatoes and enjoy it all year long. With a few simple steps, you can easily make and can your own tomato soup at home. Be sure to follow the tips above to ensure that your soup is properly canned and safe to eat. Enjoy!
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