My tomatoes are ripening and we’re fighting the blackbirds for
them. Hubby and I discussed the
priorities for things to do with tomatoes and I started with tomato sauce. I think with each picking, I’ll cycle through
these recipes. I’ve certainly got plenty
of tomatoes, well, that is if the blackbirds don’t eat too many more.
I love my old Good
Housekeeping Board cookbook for this type of recipe. The recipes that I find in modern cookbooks
just don’t seem to work the same. Their
tomato sauces are light and bland in comparison to the thick, rich, spicy
sauces that come from the older books.
The added bonus for me was that for the first time ever, it’s
purely my own tomatoes, apples and onions going into this. I’ve had to use red onions as my brown onions
didn’t have a very good season and I’ve got red onions to spare.
Tomato Sauce
1.5kg tomatoes, roughly chopped
600g apples, cored and roughly choppped
Tomato Sauce Right at the Start |
500g onions, roughly chopped
600g raw sugar
2 tbsp salt
Tie together in a muslin bag (or chux-style cloth):
1/2 tbsp cloves
1/2 tbsp allspice
1/2 tsp peppercorns
1/2 tsp ground ginger
1/2 tsp cayenne
Boil all together for an hour.
Strain and bottle when cool.
This came to 1.75 litres of thick rich tomato sauce. I don’t strain my sauces as such, I put them
through a mouli with the smallest holed blade.
In the past, I’ve left the spices loose in the sauce and processed them
with the fruit and veges. It doesn’t
seem to make a great deal of difference either way.
Processing Through the Mouli |
Next on the list is Spaghetti.
I made some a few weeks ago as a test batch - first time I’d tried my
father in law’s recipe. Hubby had
requested it as he and Miss Seven eat a lot of spaghetti.
Spaghetti
12 lb tomatoes
1 lb onions
3/4 C sugar
3 tbsp salt
1 tsp pepper
1 lb spaghetti noodles
Boil tomatoes and onions.
Simmer for 1 hour, then mouli.
Cook spaghetti in boiling salted water, drain and rinse in cold
water.
Bring tomato pulp to boil, add spaghetti, salt, sugar and
pepper. Boil for 20 mins. Bottle.
Tomato Sauce and Two of the Jars of Spaghetti |
They liked the test batch, although the comment was made that I
needed to process the sauce better - I’d used the coarse blade in the mouli,
the smallest holed one would have been better.
Also that there was a lot of sauce at the top of the jar. The ratio of spaghetti to sauce wasn’t right.
I’ve made some more and I more than doubled the amount of
spaghetti noodles. Hubby and Miss Seven
like it a lot better.
The other thing that I make and use a lot of is a tomato puree
which can also be easily made into tomato paste.
The quantities are completely random, based on what you have,
but I like to have a similar ratio of tomatoes to onions as both the sauce and
spaghetti recipes. I also add in garlic,
basil and oregano.
Boil all together, mouli and pour into an oven dish. Put your oven on it’s lowest setting, usually
somewhere between 50 and 100 degrees Celsius and leave slowly
thickening for hours. Until it reaches
the right consistency. As it thickens,
the colour will darken and the flavour will get stronger.
Tomato Paste Just Out of the Oven |
I’ve never put this in jars, it doesn’t have either vinegar, salt or
sugar as a preservative, so I like to put it into margarine pots and freeze
it. A 500g margarine pot works out to be
an ideal size for a meal.
See the links below for more inspiration and ideas.
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