How to Jar Tomatoes, Italian Style

Updated 07/27/21

When I was growing up, I always knew when it was almost the end of summer just by the smell of ground up tomatoes that filled the air. Yes, it was time to “do the tomatoes”, which meant that all the Italians on my block were busy grinding up tomatoes by the boxes and jarring them so that they would have homemade tomato sauce for the next year. And let me tell you, there’s nothing quite like eating homemade tomato sauce made from fresh tomatoes!

You can jar tomatoes anytime, but here in the Northeast they are harvested locally from mid-August to late September, and so are the freshest and cheapest to buy. A 20 lb. box of plum tomatoes yields about 9 jars of sauce. Make sure that the tomatoes are ripe. If they’re not, the sauce will be a little sour. Also, boil the jars or run them through the dishwasher before using them to kill any bacteria. You can reuse lids as long as the inner part that covers the jar has no scratches or rust on them.

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Cover the table and chairs (if you’re using them) with a big garbage bag so that it will be a little easier to clean up afterwards by just removing the bag.

25 lb. Boxes of Tomatoes

25 lb. Boxes of Tomatoes

Here are instructions on how we’ve always done it at home:

What you will need:
fresh basil leaves
box of salt
20 – 25 lb boxes of fresh plum tomatoes, depending on how many jars you’d like to make
Mason jars
tablespoon
ladle
sharp knife
2 or 3 large garbage bags
several large plastic bowls
2 or 3 large pots
towels, to clean up and also to wrap jars

1. Add about 3 fresh basil leaves and 1 T of salt to each jar.

Preparing the jars with salt and basil leaves

Preparing the jars with salt and basil leaves

2. Using a sharp knife, cut the tomatoes in half or in quarters, depending on the size, so that they are easier to put into the strainer.

Cutting the tomatoes to make it easier to grind.

Cutting the tomatoes to make it easier to grind.

3. Place one bowl to catch the tomato liquid/sauce, and one to catch the ground up tomatoes under the tomato strainer. Keep replacing bowls as needed. Slowly put in pieces of tomatoes into the strainer and push down on them with accessory provided.

Dad grinding the tomatoes

Dad grinding the tomatoes with an electric strainer/food mill

Grinding the Tomatoes for Sauce

Grinding the Tomatoes for Sauce

4. When the bowl is full of ground up tomatoes, throw the ground up tomatoes into a garbage bag. Using a ladle, scoop up the tomato sauce from the other bowl and fill each jar with it, leaving about 1 inch empty on top to give it room to expand when boiling.

Tomato sauce consistency

Tomato sauce consistency

5. Put each jar in a large pot then add enough water to cover up to where the tomato sauce is in the jar and boil for 20 minutes (see photo above and below).

Boiling pots of water with jars of fresh tomato sauce

Boiling pots of water with jars of fresh tomato sauce

6. Remove jars from the pot and place them in a warm oven. If there’s no more room to put them all in the oven, wrap jars with a towel.

As the jars cool, you will hear the tops of the lids “popping” as a vacuum is formed inside the jars. This is what preserves the tomato sauce for such a long time. You can then use the tomato sauce right out of the jar by heating it up, or adding meat, etc. to it.

Leave me a comment at the bottom if you’ve tried doing this and let me know how it worked out for you!

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Originally posted 10/20/17

Mangia Che Ti Fa Bene!! (Eat It, It’s Good For You!)

There’s nothing quite like eating a panino (small sandwich) of prosciutto sliced thinly and mouth-watering mozzarella made from buffalo milk, usually still warm when you buy it, while listening to the birds singing and the scent of jasmine and oleander wafting through the air. Just the thought of that makes me want to close my eyes and go, “Ahhhhhhhhhh…”, as I am transported back to Selvacava, standing on the balcony of my father’s house, looking at the other towns across the valley on a sunny summer day.

View from the balcony of my dad's house in Selvacava, province of Frosinone

View from the balcony of my dad’s house in Selvacava, province of Frosinone

A lot can be said about Italian cuisine. For one thing, the idea that Italians cook with a lot of garlic is not true. Garlic has a wonderful taste but it should not overpower the main ingredients of the dish. Also, Italians (in Italy) don’t eat spaghetti with their meatballs. The meat usually is eaten after the pasta, as the main course.

In fact, much of what Americans consider to be Italian dishes actually originated in the United States with the many immigrants who came here from Italy at the end of the 1800’s to the early 1900’s. These Italians were mostly poor and once they saw that they could actually buy foods here that were out of the question in Italy because they were so expensive, they adapted their dishes to include all these delicious meats, fish, etc.

But, getting back to real Italian cuisine, it can be traced back to before the Roman Empire, over 2,000 years ago. It started out as Etruscan, but was greatly influenced by the Greeks. It has evolved much over the years with influences from such places as Northern Africa as well as Northern Europe. Northern Italian cuisine has been influenced by Germanic culture, while Southern Italy was influenced by the Arabs. As Italy formed independent city-states during the Middle Ages, each region developed its own cuisine, which is why there are so many differences in typical dishes from one area of Italy to another.

It is believed that what is known today as French cuisine was actually inspired and built upon Italian cuisine. It was introduced to France in the 1600’s by Catherine de’ Medici, of the wealthy and prominent Medici family that came to power in Florence in the 13th century, who brought her personal chefs with her when she married King Henry II.

Today’s Italian cuisine varies from region to region. Because the climate is colder the farther north you go and, therefore, olive groves are scarce, olive oil is not used as much to cook with in the north, but rather the dishes are cooked in butter or lard. Cream or cheese sauces, such as pesto, are popular instead of tomato sauces since most of the dairy farms can be found in regions such as Lombardia and Emilia-Romagna. Polenta and creamy risotto dishes are common, as is filled pasta such as ravioli and tortellini, and game meat dishes, such as rabbit, and osso buco.

Italian Mushroom risotto

Mushroom risotto

In the south, olive oil is almost always used to cook with, and the sauces are mostly tomato based and spicy, eg. pasta all’arrabbiata. Agriculture plays a major part in the food industry here due to the warmer climate, as well as fresh seafood. Dried pasta is eaten every day, as well as fresh fruits and vegetables. Citrus fruits are grown in this part of Italy, along with wheat, olives, figs and peaches.  The meat dishes tend to be of lamb, mutton, or pork.

Prepared lamb with rosemary

Prepared lamb with rosemary, ready for cooking.

The cuisine from central Italy is what the rest of the world knows as Italian food. It is very simply made with few ingredients. The sauces are mostly tomato based and foods are cooked in olive oil. Meat dishes, as well as dried or fresh pasta, are eaten daily. This is where most of the well known cheeses and cured meats come from.

Making fresh pasta

Fresh pasta

Hanging Italian prosciutto

Hanging prosciutto

And by the way, it’s not gravy, it’s sugo (tomato sauce) or ragu (meat sauce)!

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Meatballs (plain or stuffed with mozzarella)

Contrary to what Americans (USA) think, spaghetti and meatballs are usually not served together in Italy, but rather the pasta is eaten first, then the meat.

I usually make meatballs in tomato sauce and either serve them together with pasta or make meatball parmesan sandwiches with Italian bread. This recipe uses bread crumbs but I sometimes use 1 or 2 slices of white bread, broken up into little pieces, instead. My mother used to add small pieces of butter or margarine to the meat which made the meatballs really tender and quite tasty, but I leave it out because it can make them a little greasy.

I like to make the meatballs stuffed with little cubes of mozzarella but you can leave that part out if you’d like. You can also bake or fry the meatballs and serve as appetizers.

Makes about 12 medium sized meatballs

Ingredients

1 lb ground beef, or 1/2 lb ground beef and 1/2 lb ground pork, or 1/3 lb beef 1/3 lb pork 1/3 lb veal
1/4 tsp salt or according to taste
1/4 small onion, minced
1/4 tsp garlic powder
1 T dried parsley (more if using fresh minced parsley)
1 large egg
2 T bread crumbs (seasoned or unseasoned)
mozzarella, small cubes

  1. in a large bowl, combine ground beef, salt, onion, garlic powder, parsley, and egg.
  2. add the bread crumbs and mix well.
  3. grab a small amount of mixture and roll into a ball (about the size of a golf ball). Make an indentation with your thumb and press a small cube of mozzarella in it then cover up the mozzarella.
  4. add to tomato sauce and cook until done.

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Tomato Sauce (Pasta Sauce)

Tomato sauce (pasta sauce, or some people call it gravy) is considered to be one of the five “mother sauces” that all cooks should know how to make, along with béchamel, velouté, hollandaise, and espagnole. If you can make these sauces, you can make any variations of them for every type of cuisine.

I like to use fresh herbs when they’re available but you can use dried herbs also. Just remember that dried herbs have a more concentrated and powerful flavor and so the quantities need to be adjusted (use more fresh herbs, less dried herbs). I add them in the beginning so that the sauce absorbs their flavors as it simmers.

I make either marinara, which is plain tomato sauce, ragù, which is a meat sauce (add meatballs, chicken pieces or sausages), or seafood (puttanesca, zuppa di pesce, etc.), depending on what we feel like eating.

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Ingredients
2 cans tomato puree or crushed tomatoes (non-GMO if you can find it)
1 T olive oil
2 small garlic cloves, smashed and sliced
1/2 tsp fresh rosemary
2 bay leaves
1/2 tsp ground dried sage
1/4 tsp dried oregano
1/2 tsp dried basil or 3 fresh basil leaves
1 T fresh chopped parsley
1 tsp onion powder
1/2 tsp garlic powder
1 1/2 chicken bouillon cube
a splash of red wine
salt (if needed)

  1. add olive oil to the pot and sauté the garlic cloves.
  2. add the rosemary and continue to sauté (this will give it a stronger taste which I love!).
  3. add the cans of tomatoes and stir.
  4. add the herbs, and onion and garlic powders, stir.
  5. add the bouillon cube and stir to dissolve.
  6. add a splash of red wine, stir.
  7. simmer for about an hour. Add salt if it needs more. If it gets too thick, add a little bit of water or wine.

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