For the past few years, there’s been some tension in my marriage, and the cause, oddly enough, has been tomato sauce. Almost every time I’ve made spaghetti and used sauce from a jar, my husband takes a taste and says very seriously, “We’ve got to do something about this sauce situation.”
We’ve looked up ways to liven up a canned sauce by adding extra ingredients, and they did help some, but he was still insistent that we find another way to solve the flavorless “sauce situation” crisis.
While we were home visiting my parents over Christmas, my foodie sister mentioned that they started making a really easy (and really delicious) homemade tomato sauce, and we told her that we were desperate to try it.
She sent us the recipe after we returned home, and we made it that night with high expectations—let me tell you, it did not disappoint!
I was a little bit skeptical because the ingredient list looked a little too simple and the recipe sounded too easy to be good, but the secret is that it’s made with a type of plumb tomatoes called San Marzano tomatoes, and they fill the sauce with a sweet and tangy flavor.
We thought that San Marzano was a brand of tomatoes, not the type, so we were a little confused at first, but we found them pretty easily near the canned tomatoes at our local grocery store. If you can’t find that particular type near you, just go with plum tomatoes and it should still be delicious.
Easy (+ Delicious) Homemade Tomato Sauce, makes about 2 quarts.
Recipe slightly adapted from The Mozza Cookbook‘s Basic Tomato Sauce
1/4 cup extra virgin olive oil
1 large yellow onion, finely diced (or a Spanish onion if you can find one)
1 tablespoon kosher salt
1/2 teaspoon black pepper
5 garlic cloves, chopped
Half a medium carrot, peeled and shredded
3 tablespoons fresh thyme leaves
2 28 oz cans of whole peeled plum tomatoes (including their juices), preferably San Marzano
Add the oil to a large pot and heat over medium heat. Add the onion, salt, and pepper, and cook (stirring occasionally) until the onions are soft and translucent (about 7-10 minutes). Add the garlic and stir often for 1 minute.
Don’t let the garlic brown during this step, so keep an eye on it. Add the carrot and thyme leaves and cook for 5-8 minutes, stirring often, until the carrot is tender.
Add the tomatoes and their juices, bring to a boil, and reduce heat allowing the sauce to simmer for 30 minutes. You’ll want to stir the sauce every few minutes so that it doesn’t burn (tomatoes can burn easily). So make sure you are checking back often during that time. The whole tomatoes will break down as the sauce simmers and the sauce will thicken a bit as it cooks.
Season to taste with more salt and pepper once the 30 minutes is up. The recipe suggests that you run the sauce through a food mill (or you could use a blender as well) to smooth out the chunky sauce, but I really like chunky sauce.
So I just mashed it a bit with a handheld potato masher and skipped the blending step. The sauce can be frozen for up to six months, so you can make a giant batch and keep it around until you need more.
While we have been using this sauce simply on top of pasta, it can be used in any recipe that calls for a tomato sauce (like lasagna or other Italian dishes).
I can’t tell you how glad we are to have discovered this recipe (thanks, Sis!), and I’m planning on adding thyme to my back porch garden this summer just so we can use it for this sauce.
Finally, there is peace and quiet in our house on spaghetti nights, but that may also be partially because our mouths are too full of delicious sauce to talk! xo. Laura
Hi Leigh Ann,
I leave it chunky but it’s a personal preference. Try mixing the sauce with some fresh ricotta cheese. The flavour is milder and more delicate, a hit with the kids.
This looks great!
What would be the best way to go about freezing it? Would it be like boiling jars when you make jam, and then sticking the jar in the freezer?
I do not cook and I made this yesterday! SOOO easy and good! I’m sharing the recipe and linking back on my blog as a healthful sauce to add to chicken and veggies for those watching their macros. Thanks! doodleturtles.blogspot.com
My mother taught me this great trick – after you make the sauce, and it’s almost done, add sugar. It helps cut down on the acid.
I just made this to go with some gnocchi and it is so so delicious!! Thank you for posting this wonderful recipe!
Looks and sounds yummy!
I will save this recipe 🙂
I saw an episode of Giada where she made a super easy tomato sauce using San Marzano tomatoes. Ever since then I stopped using jar sauce or canned tomato sauce and go for a can of these. Best thing ever and super easy!
The recipe looks great! I would like to know the brand of your cast iron dutch oven and any reviews would be good too.
The recipe looks great! I would like to know the brand of your cast iron dutch oven and any reviews would be good too.
Thanks,
wow.. that looks so tasty! I think I`ll love it 😉
I always do this. So much better! Do you put chunky sauce in a blender or just leave it chunky? I also like to add cream to mine to make a pink sauce.
Is your husband your best (and worst) critic too? 🙂
I’m glad to hear of a particularly good tasting can of tomatoes. The tomatoes around here, even when in season, are pitiful and flavorless. However, we did have a cherry tomato plant that produced so many tomatoes they were coming out of our ears.
Eventually I couldn’t pick them any longer because I was in my third trimester and I could no longer climb over the pool pump and up on the retaining wall to go harvest them. (I did try though haha)
I’m sure that plant will come back (and with a vengeance), at which time I’ll have to make some of this homemade sauce. 🙂
Thanks for this wonderful recipe. I do have my go-to tomato sauce, but I will def. be trying this one soon and who knows, maybe it will replace my old go-to!
Rae | love from berlin
Mmmmm. This looks so delectable. I always enjoy a homemade tomato sauce over a store bought one. This will definitely go on the list to make for our next pasta night. 🙂
-Jenni
www.jennihaikonen.com
This looks SO incredibly amazing! I can’t wait to make it myself!
I also just recently discovered how simple tomato sauce can be! I got a great recipe from the Kitchn Cookbook. An immersion blender is another way to smooth out your sauce if you have one – that way you don’t need to take it out of the pot.
www.boxesandjars.com
homemade sauce is the best!
xx nikki
www.dream-in-neon.com
The caramelized onions are an amazing addition to a sauce! My mother has been doing that for years, but she will let them caramelize on a low heat for 30+ minutes and it brings out such a nice, sweet flavour. It’s amazing and makes the biggest difference! We also love adding beans to our sauce because it adds fiber and a few other nutrients in there 🙂
Monica – Mocha and Moccasins
Thanks for the tip Antonella, I’ve never tried it that way!
Laura 🙂
Good thought Hilary! I’ll have to try that!
Laura 🙂