tigress’ canned tomatoes: sauced

October 5, 2011

ok, ok, you twisted my paw. this post is about my favorite way to can tomatoes. there, you got me! yes, i used to can only pristine paste tomatoes; san marzano, or amish paste were my chosen few. blemish free, uniform in size, dropped in a hot pot, skinned, jarred and boiled for 85 minutes.

you probably know the drill.

but who among us hasn’t chased a few of those slippery-slide-y little buggers around the counter top, only to have them escape onto the kitchen floor the split second after you thought you’d won? who has squirted tomato guts in thine own eyes when pressing the last one into the jar? trying as you might to reach that perfect-lined headspace with terribly unwilling fruits.

and who (here’s the clincher) when putting your beautiful blood red jars on display the morning after has had to fiddle about in an effort to hide the worse offenders in the back.

don’t pretend you don’t know what i’m talking about.

fruit float!

there, i said it. and please, don’t get me started on siphoning. you know, it’s when you’ve absolutely made sure the headspace was exactly what it was supposed to be when the jars went into the canner, and…

where did all that liquid go?

yes, there’s ways to work toward eliminating all of the above mentioned mishaps. it can be done, and perhaps we’ll talk about it another day. but more importantly, when you’ve got fall breathing down your back, tons of every variety less-than-perfect tomatoes falling from your vines, neighboring farmers begging you to take them, all of them, apple, pear and herb pairings to attend to, pumpkins to pie, and let’s face it;

you chop up all those damn tomatoes when you use ‘em anywayz…

  • Olga says:

    Your little vintage jars are adorable. Where do you get them? I am going to go broke buying up weck jars… need to find an alternative.
    Nice post, but I am DONE with tomatoes this season… 53 pounds processed + some tomatillos. Don't want to see tomatoes until next year…

  • tigress says:

    olga – the vintage wire bails have been a 2 year effort at tag sales, ebay and friends and neighbors. just start looking! i hear you on being done with tomatoes. i thought twice about putting this post up at such a late date, but the tomatoes came in so late this season that i really did do those last two boxes (up there) this past weekend, so i thought i couldn't be the only one! :)

  • Tug's Girl says:

    I've always wanted to can in my vintage bail jars but have always been afraid to do so. Where were you able to find new rubber seals? Now I want to can in mine!

  • JavelinWarrior says:

    I'm terrified of canning anything for fear of poisoning my friends – but I really should get over it because it would free up space in my freezer instead of keeping gallons of marinara sauce frozen! I'm putting that preserving book on my Christmas wishlist :)

  • Tug's Girl says:

    I've been working my way backwards through missed posts and just found the answer to my question about the rubber seals – and another awesome looking recipe to try with my apple surplus!

  • Two by the Sea says:

    Brilliant! I hesitate to can the whole tomatoes anymore. This is the way to go. Thanks!

  • tigress says:

    javelinwarrior – yes do it! like anything it can seem scary if you don't know about it. but get that book, and also read 'canning 101' and acid and the b word' in the right side bar on this page under essentials. that's a good place to get started. you can do it! :)

  • Head Gardener says:

    great post on task. and so funny

  • Mia says:

    I wish you had put this up about a week earlier! I was given over 30 pounds of tomatoes from a local farmer. And just an FYI, the link to oyur favorite food mill doesn't work.

  • tigress says:

    mia – oh no! what did you do with them? and thanks for letting me know about the food mill link – it's fixed.

  • Mia says:

    I roasted the tomatoes first. Since I had a lot of heirloom ones, I decided to run them through the mill and canned the pulp and juice in a WB with citric acid in the jars. Basically close to your way. The Romas I had were not that great and the roasting improved their flavor.

  • Anonymous says:

    Love this. Imma going to try it.
    I like Mia's idea of roasting at least some of them first to give it a fuller flavour.
    (Javelin: if you're really unsure you can always store your jars in your beerfridge)
    Thanks for posting Ms.T.
    Cheers
    @torontoviewer

  • Beth says:

    Great post! I do pretty much the same thing, but I have discovered that wyou can run the tomatoes through the squeezo even before cooking them and then cook the sauce down and can it. Since I have a squeezo, that’s what I do now. I have a food mill too, but using it a lot less than the squeezo for this kind of thing these days.

  • Dianna says:

    I am not a fan of squeezo product, preferring my tomatoes to be much pulpier, but I will try the food mill method. I just skin mine by cutting off the stem end, plopping them in hot water for three minutes then in cold water and squeezing them out of their skins. It works, I’ve been doing it for decades and it ain’t no thing. My squeezo gathers dust.

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