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Old August 26, 2013   #1
Paul R
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Join Date: Nov 2009
Location: Avilla IN
Posts: 300
Default Recipe help

I printed " Mary's Marinara Sauce " recipe and have the tomatoes reduced by half. Now I can't find the post or remember the title. Can anyone help me out?

Thanks
Paul R
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Old August 26, 2013   #2
dustdevil
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Here ya go Paul:

Mary’s Marinara Sauce

5 gallons processed tomatoes (no skins, no seeds.)
6 Cloves Garlic Minced
4 Smallest Cans Tomato Paste
2 Pounds Sweet Italian Sausage
2 Pounds Ground Beef
½ Cup Red wine Vinegar
2 Pound Sliced Mushrooms (fresh or canned)
4 Large Carrots Peeled & Grated
6 Large Bell Peppers, Any Color, Seeds Removed, Diced
6 Tablespoons Italian Seasoning (or 2 Tablespoons each of fresh Basel, Oregano, Parsley)
2 Cups Sugar
¼ Cup Olive Oil
4 Tablespoons Salt
¾ Cup Lime Juice


Bring tomato sauce to boil. Lower heat and simmer until liquid is reduced by half.
Add tomato paste, stir well.

Saute sausage, ground beef. Drain off grease thoroughly. Saute onion, peppers mushrooms (if fresh mushrooms) garlic and carrots in olive oil until translucent.
Add meats and vegetables to sauce mixture. Add all spices, salt, sugar, vinegar and lime juice to tomato mixture. Simmer 20 minutes on VERY LOW HEAT (be careful…this is thick and will scorch easily.) Fill appropriate number of “2-quart volume” freezer containers or process quarts, 90 minutes at 15 pounds in pressure canner for quarts (the time and lbs is for my area, above 4,000 feet.) THIS MUST BE PRESSURE CANNED if using jars. The meats in it make it unsafe to just hot water bath can.

The lime juice and vinegar are what keep this sauce tasting very fresh after freezing and canning. They keep the ingredients from breaking down. The carrots neutralize the acidity.

This is a robust and flavorful sauce. It is my own recipe that I have used for more than 20 years.
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Old August 26, 2013   #3
ginger2778
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He beat me to it!
Oh well, here's the link: http://www.tomatoville.com/showthread.php?t=29521
Its post # 14
The whole thread is about sauce.

Marsha
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Old August 27, 2013   #4
Paul R
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That be it. Thanks for the help.

Paul R
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Old August 29, 2013   #5
kenny_j
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That sounds like a delicious recipe. I have never used lime juice, will try it. I am glad to see someone else puts carrots in their sauce. My wife keeps telling me they don't belong in it. I have The Frugal Gourmet cook book from many years ago and carrots were in his "Italian Gravy" recipe. Other things to add from that recipe are Chicken soup stock, dry red wine(in place of vinegar), minced celery (I use celery seed instead), rosemary, bay leaves. This is classic Southern Italy Gravy.
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