August 19, 2015 | #61 |
Tomatovillian™
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I learned this a few years ago, my secret is to use 1/2 for sauce, and the other 1/2 only 3 sec in a machine. I used onions and Thai Basil .
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August 19, 2015 | #62 |
Tomatovillian™
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Location: Georgia
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August 17, 2017 | #63 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Mar 2009
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This recipe is my go-to for roasted tomato sauce. I thought I'd bump this thread up for anyone that hasn't seen it yet. I don't believe a better sauce exists.
Sadly, the settfest website is history, but the waybackmachine captured several of it's incarnations: http://wayback.archive.org/web/20110...-tomato-sauce/ |
August 17, 2017 | #64 |
Tomatovillian™
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This recipe is very similar to Craig L's recipe in Epic Tomatoes except he doesn't bother with a food mill. I will try this with a food mill to see if I can get rid of some of the seeds that tend to add a bit of bitterness from my experience.
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September 25, 2017 | #65 | |
Tomatovillian™
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Location: Vancouver, BC, Canada
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Thank you very much for the bump. I made a batch last night and processed it this morning. We could not believe how good it is, the best one ever. I never cared for the taste of over cooked tomatoes, but roasting them is the game changer!
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September 25, 2017 | #66 |
Tomatovillian™
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Thank you very much for the posts and sharing this process, this is going to be my way of processing any sauce now, simplely the best!
I did not peel or remove seeds before roasting, then I processed it in a food processor, turns out to be the best sauce we've ever had! Absolutely no need for sugar. QUOTE=TheClaw;138340]So this recipe is from the SETTFest... http://www.settfest.com/2009/06/oven...-tomato-sauce/ And I made two batches this weekend. And I learned an important lesson... *NEVER ADD SUGAR* if you are cooking with heirloom tomatoes. The first batch is a bit on the sweet side. The second batch is heavenly. We added about a tablespoon of sugar to the first batch against six and a half pounds of peeled and cored tomatoes. Then we went to Williams Sonoma and bought the 50 dollar OXO food mill. The second batch had about 5 pounds of tomatoes but both batches yielded about two and a half pounds of sauce. And the manual food mill saved about an hour of prep. Here are the before and after pix. First batch before: First batch midway: Second batch before: Second batch after: Then through the food mill using the medium blade. No pix of that yet.[/QUOTE] |
September 25, 2017 | #67 |
Tomatovillian™
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I'm glad you tried it! I have some in my freezer I know I'll be grateful for in the upcoming months.
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September 25, 2017 | #68 |
Tomatovillian™
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September 25, 2017 | #69 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Jun 2015
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Roasting has been our method for some time now. Made our last
batch yesterday. Freezer is just about full. Double batch last weekend was a bit different. Some I pureed in the monster blender for ready to go tom soups. One batch had more onion, garlic, poblano and hot peppers and frozen chunky to use for other recipes... My basil is over this season but I can get fresh all winter... I just make sure I label every packet as some batches are pretty spicy. Yesterdays batch was roasted in the turkey roaster so pretty full. We did 3-4 hours at 250. Some smaller batches that are roasted for just an hour or two, like for salsa. Every oven is a bit different. I saved a quart from yesterday and soaked some mixed dried chilis I will puree for a nice rich sauce, almost like a paprika paste and freeze flat-pack so I can break off an ice cube size bit to add to chowders and soups. (I'll do that tonight) No real recipes as you can make it to suit your taste for salsas. Make it as chunky or thick as your family prefers. I roast 2/3rds of the toms, onion, poblano, etc and add to fresh lime, cilantro, peppers, fresh tomatoes, etc. A tbsp or two added to avocado for guacamole. For a party it is easy to take out the first fresh cuisinart blending and put in three or four bowls, then add more chilis to one, chunky chopped less spicy to another, blender puree a cup of the roasted mix to make one thicker, etc. (without cleaning out the cuisinait container if starting with less hot peppers first). Can even start with no cilantro for those 'soap' people. |
September 25, 2017 | #70 |
Tomatoville® Recipe Keeper
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Mmm, oakley, that all sounds so delicious! And 'soap people' - lol! It is amazing how different taste buds can be among various people. Me, I love cilantro.
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September 25, 2017 | #71 |
Tomatovillian™
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Got it Oakley, merci! I'll borrow the idea of mixing the preserved and the fresh.
Do I see green tomatoes in your first pic? I think I need to add something acidic to my super sweet sauce, some green tomatoes may do the trick. |
September 25, 2017 | #72 |
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"Second batch after" is mighty photogenic. Tasty too I'm sure. Outstanding.
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September 26, 2017 | #73 | |
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Quote:
I harvested a basket, all the basil...then another greenie basket last weekend. Wow, Sept 3rd was three weeks ago. Warm again now but that was a chilly few days (in the mountain garden). Some are GWR and some ripened that had some blush...also a 1/2 dozen tomatillos in that batch. If the weather holds warm I should have one last batch of mostly tomatillos, sweet and hot peppers, for a winter green salsa. Hope to lightly smoke that last batch on the far cooler end of the smoker, long and slow, covered loosely for a mild smoke. |
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September 27, 2017 | #74 |
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oakley, how do you store / save your basil ?
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September 27, 2017 | #75 |
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