Without an electric tomato strainer we had to come up with a way to make sauce. After washing the tomatoes, we cut out the stem base and put them into a food processor. We processed them until they turn into a pure liquid form. Then we poured them into a sieve that was over a big bowl. With a spatula we turned, scraped, and pushed the mash through the sieve leaving only the seeds and skins behind. After we had a good amount of juice, we poured into a pot, and brought it to boil on the cook top. As it reduced we kept adding more to the pot. Once we ran out of tomatoes we let it reduce to the desired consistency that we were looking for. One grocery bag of tomatoes made 2 1/2 qts. of sauce. We plan to make spaghetti sauce, pizza sauce, and ketchup out of the sauce later on, along with tomato soup, of course. With 40 plants we'll have plenty of sauce to make.
Thursday, September 6, 2012
Making Tomato Sauce
We planted 40 tomato plants this year, with about half of them being plum tomatoes. We plan to make salsa and other things out of them, but what we really wanted to do this year is stock up on tomato sauce.
Without an electric tomato strainer we had to come up with a way to make sauce. After washing the tomatoes, we cut out the stem base and put them into a food processor. We processed them until they turn into a pure liquid form. Then we poured them into a sieve that was over a big bowl. With a spatula we turned, scraped, and pushed the mash through the sieve leaving only the seeds and skins behind. After we had a good amount of juice, we poured into a pot, and brought it to boil on the cook top. As it reduced we kept adding more to the pot. Once we ran out of tomatoes we let it reduce to the desired consistency that we were looking for. One grocery bag of tomatoes made 2 1/2 qts. of sauce. We plan to make spaghetti sauce, pizza sauce, and ketchup out of the sauce later on, along with tomato soup, of course. With 40 plants we'll have plenty of sauce to make.
Without an electric tomato strainer we had to come up with a way to make sauce. After washing the tomatoes, we cut out the stem base and put them into a food processor. We processed them until they turn into a pure liquid form. Then we poured them into a sieve that was over a big bowl. With a spatula we turned, scraped, and pushed the mash through the sieve leaving only the seeds and skins behind. After we had a good amount of juice, we poured into a pot, and brought it to boil on the cook top. As it reduced we kept adding more to the pot. Once we ran out of tomatoes we let it reduce to the desired consistency that we were looking for. One grocery bag of tomatoes made 2 1/2 qts. of sauce. We plan to make spaghetti sauce, pizza sauce, and ketchup out of the sauce later on, along with tomato soup, of course. With 40 plants we'll have plenty of sauce to make.
You may already know this, but in case you don't... an easy way to remove the skins from the tomatoes is to dip them in a pot of boiling water for about 1 minute, then place the tomatoes in an ice bath. The skins peel off super easily.
ReplyDeleteWe had a bumper crop of tomatoes so far this year and have put up 19 pints of salsa already. I tried my hand at home made from scratch (and our garden) marinara, but didn't love the results. Would you post your recipe, if you liked it?
Thanks!
Sonja of http://lallybrochfarms.blogspot.com/
I love reading all that you guys come up with! I do the same as above, blanch and take the skins off. I make pasta and pizza sauce with the seeds included. It doesn't look as fancy as yours, but you get a bit more yield and it may be less work.
ReplyDeleteWe did the same thing last year with blanching the skins off. We wanted to step it up a notch by getting the seeds out of the sauce, and we wated to be as quick as we could so we skipped the step of blanching because we were already going to strain out the seeds. As far as the yield is concern, well we gotta feed the pigs something.
DeleteYes, our critters love the left overs from my canning projects, too!
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