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Oven-Roasted Red Sauce

So, yesterday I made the first batch of my favorite oven roasted red sauce of the season.
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Start with some tomatoes.  It doesn't matter what type, or variety of types, you use.  If you use sauce type tomatoes, or a lot of them in your mix of tomatoes, you'll get a thicker sauce.  I used a combination of a San Marzano and Amish Paste.
 
Slice them in half lengthwise (pole to pole) and lay them cut side up on a sheet pan or some sort of shallow baking sheet that has edges.  A shallow pan will allow your liquid to cook off more quickly than a deeper pan.  Sprinkle each pan with salt and pepper (I use only coarse Kosher salt), yesterday I used dried Mediterranean oregano, torn fresh Genovese basil, a big pinch of last year's dried Arbol pepper flakes, 3 or 4 whole, peeled garlic cloves per sheet, then drizzled the whole pan with extra virgin olive.
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Roast them at 250F for 4 hours, until the tops are dry and the tomatoes themselves are still meaty and moist.  Yesterday, I got impatient and after two hours upped the temp to 300 for an hour.
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When I want a chunkier sauce, I use the coarsest blade on my OXO food mill to grind the roasted tomatoes.  There were some caramelized bits on the sheet pans, so I used a small amount of really hot water to scrape and dissolve that and put it in the sauce, too.  Since it's just my husband and I, I freeze 1/2 cup portions of the sauce.
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Usually, I have tons more tomatoes to do in a single sitting.  Yesterday, I only did two trays, which made about 5 cups of sauce.  Total, that took about 45 minutes of working time.
 

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Looks delicious.  :clap:
 
Aesthetically, would it have been better to add the basil and oregano after roasting to avoid the black specks?
 
I take it you are freezing those vac-packed portions for later use?
 
Shorerider said:
Looks delicious.  :clap:

Aesthetically, would it have been better to add the basil and oregano after roasting to avoid the black specks?

 
Thanks! Probably, I suppose you could, but I'm a lazy cook. Plus, I tell myself it tastes better with. LOL   Maybe you could pull the cooked basil and add fresh before freezing or canning it?  But, it would turn dark then, too. Maybe just put it back in when you use the sauce.
 
 I take it you are freezing those vac-packed portions for later use? 
 
That's correct!  I don't like canning my red sauce, simply because I don't care for the flavor of the extra citric acid you need to add to make it safe for water bath canning.  I bought a good pressure canner last year, but I'm not confident using it yet.  I can't get a handle on how to maintain the pressure.  I either set my heat too high or too low.
 
nmlarson said:
So, yesterday I made the first batch of my favorite oven roasted red sauce of the season.
attachicon.gif
20180811_201337.jpg
 
Start with some tomatoes.  It doesn't matter what type, or variety of types, you use.  If you use sauce type tomatoes, or a lot of them in your mix of tomatoes, you'll get a thicker sauce.  I used a combination of a San Marzano and Amish Paste.
 
Slice them in half lengthwise (pole to pole) and lay them cut side up on a sheet pan or some sort of shallow baking sheet that has edges.  A shallow pan will allow your liquid to cook off more quickly than a deeper pan.  Sprinkle each pan with salt and pepper (I use only coarse Kosher salt), yesterday I used dried Mediterranean oregano, torn fresh Genovese basil, a big pinch of last year's dried Arbol pepper flakes, 3 or 4 whole, peeled garlic cloves per sheet, then drizzled the whole pan with extra virgin olive.
attachicon.gif
20180811_161937.jpg
 
Roast them at 250F for 4 hours, until the tops are dry and the tomatoes themselves are still meaty and moist.  Yesterday, I got impatient and after two hours upped the temp to 300 for an hour.
attachicon.gif
20180811_193659.jpg
 
When I want a chunkier sauce, I use the coarsest blade on my OXO food mill to grind the roasted tomatoes.  There were some caramelized bits on the sheet pans, so I used a small amount of really hot water to scrape and dissolve that and put it in the sauce, too.  Since it's just my husband and I, I freeze 1/2 cup portions of the sauce.
attachicon.gif
20180811_193659.jpg
 
Usually, I have tons more tomatoes to do in a single sitting.  Yesterday, I only did two trays, which made about 5 cups of sauce.  Total, that took about 45 minutes of working time.
Where did you get the bags to portion those individual amounts?! That's awesome! Will definitely try this!

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Totally awesome! I learned from a restaurant once you roast them on sheet pans cut in half, slice side down, when they are down, you take two fingers and just pinch the skins off. They crack and turn upward and you just pinch em and get the whole thing. :)
 
I made this twice back in Aug/Sep and pressure canned it. Smelled insanely good roasting and turned out awesome. Thanks to nmlarson for the recipe and inspiration!
 
Did the pinch trick too with the sliced side down and it worked pretty darn well. A few skins stuck at the top and tore, but not many. Fingertips started to feel it by the end of the 2nd sheet though. Ha! Been a bit too long since I worked in a kitchen I guess.
 
YAMracer754 said:
Where did you get the bags to portion those individual amounts?! That's awesome! Will definitely try this!

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It's the vac bags on a roll, get bulk quantities from Uline. Cut them whatever size you need. If, like me, you only need a couple of rolls at a time, you can get onsies and twosies on Amazon.

Two 8"X50' Rolls of FoodVacBags 4 mil Commercial Grade Vacuum Sealer Bags - Make Your Own Size Bag! - for Foodsaver, Seal-A-Meal, plus other mac https://www.amazon.com/dp/B00CPS32MI/ref=cm_sw_r_em_apap_MhyXhvEC7sFSA
 
I grew some Heinz sauce tomatoes 3402 I think they are called. Got a very large crop. 
Removed seeds.
Put them under a medium grill until black on top with garlic cloves, mixed box peppers and Basil also.
I have then simmered them down with brown sugar, Worcestershire sauce, Balsamic vinegar and cider vinegar, salt and my final addition......Chilis.
A mix of Orange Habaneros and Dorset Nagas. Not too much as when it reduces....it gets hotter!
I then use my soup making hand held blender to smooth it.
Finally, a teaspoon of Pectin. But this year, I used crab apples.
It sets like a thick Jam.
I have called it "Proper Bastard" as it is quite cheeky. My locals in the Pub cannot get enough of it.
For anyone interested, this takes me all day to do and gets messy when it starts to bubble.
 
 
nmlarson said:
It's the vac bags on a roll, get bulk quantities from Uline. Cut them whatever size you need. If, like me, you only need a couple of rolls at a time, you can get onsies and twosies on Amazon.

Two 8"X50' Rolls of FoodVacBags 4 mil Commercial Grade Vacuum Sealer Bags - Make Your Own Size Bag! - for Foodsaver, Seal-A-Meal, plus other mac https://www.amazon.com/dp/B00CPS32MI/ref=cm_sw_r_em_apap_MhyXhvEC7sFSA
Do you vac seal them with a vac machine or how do you seal yours? Could work with oxygen absorbers for dried and spice powders I was thinking too.. Hmm

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I have an old FoodSaver. All it does is vac & seal. No accessories, no cutting, no storage. If I had to make a guess, I would say yes to using an absorber in it, as long as it wouldn't puncture the bag under vacuum.
 
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