hangin'witthepeeps
Deeply Rooted
Italian Style Sauce:
I never measure (when people tell me that I get mad), I just know there are a lot of tomatoes that need canning or they will go bad. So I put a large 12 quart stock pot with water to boil. When it boils I put 4 or 5 large tomatoes in and scald them for 1 minute. I dip them out and lay them on cookie sheets to cool as I scald the others. I then cut off the tops and any bad spots an put that in one container for the chickens. I put the peels in the other. If you scalded them good (water boiled) and they were ripe, they will slip out nice and easy. I cut the tomatoes in another 12 quart stock pot until I have all my tomatoes done and turn them on medium high to cook. I then put the peels, one big onion, 2 or 3 large bell peppers, a hand full of fresh oregano leaves, two small basil tops, a hand full of parsley, and whiz it all up until the peels are mush. Sometimes I add a bit of the tomato juice to get things moving along. I then add this to the cooking tomatoes and tasted the product and added salt and pepper. I cooked over 8 quarts for about an hour and it reduced to 6 quarts and I jarred it up in quarts and then processed in a water bath for 20 minutes.
eta: Forgot the garlic, 4 or 5 small cloves in the food processor with the peels.
With is recipe you can't go wrong, just make what you like adding fresh herbs or dried. Make it to suit your tastes. The key is no oil or meat, only fresh veggies. If your tomatoes aren't very acidic, add a 1/2 cup of vinegar to the pot. If I use a bay leaves, I take them out before canning. To me, it goes bitter canned.
I never measure (when people tell me that I get mad), I just know there are a lot of tomatoes that need canning or they will go bad. So I put a large 12 quart stock pot with water to boil. When it boils I put 4 or 5 large tomatoes in and scald them for 1 minute. I dip them out and lay them on cookie sheets to cool as I scald the others. I then cut off the tops and any bad spots an put that in one container for the chickens. I put the peels in the other. If you scalded them good (water boiled) and they were ripe, they will slip out nice and easy. I cut the tomatoes in another 12 quart stock pot until I have all my tomatoes done and turn them on medium high to cook. I then put the peels, one big onion, 2 or 3 large bell peppers, a hand full of fresh oregano leaves, two small basil tops, a hand full of parsley, and whiz it all up until the peels are mush. Sometimes I add a bit of the tomato juice to get things moving along. I then add this to the cooking tomatoes and tasted the product and added salt and pepper. I cooked over 8 quarts for about an hour and it reduced to 6 quarts and I jarred it up in quarts and then processed in a water bath for 20 minutes.
eta: Forgot the garlic, 4 or 5 small cloves in the food processor with the peels.
With is recipe you can't go wrong, just make what you like adding fresh herbs or dried. Make it to suit your tastes. The key is no oil or meat, only fresh veggies. If your tomatoes aren't very acidic, add a 1/2 cup of vinegar to the pot. If I use a bay leaves, I take them out before canning. To me, it goes bitter canned.