| Total Time | 4 hours |
| Yield | 4 qt. |
This is a recipe to make in the summer — for winter. I use whatever tomatoes I have that are ripe and sweet, usually a blend of Romas and cherry tomatoes, with a few heirlooms thrown in. If you are using tomatoes other than Romas, expect the sauce to be pretty wet, unless you cook it down for a long time. I like to drain off excess tomato water — which I drink chilled or work into another recipe — so I don’t have to cook the sauce for a long time. I’d rather have a slightly runny sauce that tastes of fresh tomatoes than a thick sauce that tastes of cooked tomatoes.
This quantities specified are open to variation; feel free to tweak the sauce to your taste. The only real necessity? A food mill.
| 4 to 5 | lb. tomatoes, washed and dried | |
| 2 | heads garlic, broken up but not peeled | |
| 2 | yellow onions, peeled and quartered | |
| 4 | red bell peppers, sliced in half lengthwise, seeds shaken out | |
| ~ | Extra-virgin olive oil | |
| ~ | Salt to taste | |
| 1 to 2 | bunches fresh basil, washed, dried, and finely chopped | |
| 8 to 10 | quart-size freezer bags, labeled and dated |
For more on making tomato sauce, check out the story “Tomato time.”
This content is from the Culinate Kitchen collection.
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