This is my favorite plain jane, simple tomato sauce! The flavor is so pure and clean...I love it! it is also the base for so many tasty sauces (and even a soup). It freezes beautifully too...Enjoy!
Simple Tomato Sauce
2 lbs ripe Roma tomatoes or 2 cups good quality canned whole Roma tomatoes*
1/4 cup olive oil
1/3 cup onion, chopped
1/3 cup celery, minced
1/3 cup carrots, chopped
salt
If using fresh tomatoes, blanch in boiling water 30 seconds or so. Remove tomatoes with a slotted spoon and peel skins.
In a large dutch oven, heat olive oil over medium heat. Saute onions until pale golden brown. Add celery and carrots. Saute vegetables another 7 minutes, stirring occasionally. Add tomatoes and their juices to pot. Break up tomatoes with back of wooden spoon. Add a generous pinch of salt and stir. Simmer sauce for 1 hour, stirring occasionally. Remove sauce from heat and add additional salt to taste.
Your sauce is ready to serve at this point, but I prefer to puree the sauce with my immersion blender (food processor works great too).
Now comes the fun part...add a few tbsp of pesto (see recipe below)...add a 1/2 cup cream or half & half, some fresh Parmesan and some fresh basil...now you have delish tomato basil soup. Add some garlic, red wine and fresh oregano, thyme and rosemary for a bold red sauce (simmer a additional 30 minutes). Add some pesto, stir and ladle over homemade meatballs and spaghetti...yumm-o!
Below is my friend Dawn's pesto recipe...it is awesome! Thanks so much for sharing!
For the sauce I served earlier tonight, I added 1 1/2 frozen cubes of Dawn's pesto and stirred until cubes melted.
Dawn's Pesto
Process 1/4 olive oil, 2 c. loosely packed basil, 2 tbs. pine nuts, 2 cloves garlic, and 1 tsp. salt in a blender until smooth. Stir 1/2 C. freshly grated Parmesan cheese and 2 tbs. Romano. Sometimes I need to add more solids depending on the moisture in the basil. Spoon into ice cube trays and freeze 24 hours. I like to transfer 3 cubes in a ziploc snack bag, then place a few snack bags in a gallon sized bag.
**** If you use canned tomatoes (which is fine...sometimes all you can find are crappy tomatoes), make sure to buy imported Italian whole Roma or plum tomatoes.
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