Tomato tradition continues with oven-roasted sauce

A few years ago, my novice attempts at vegetable gardening produced more than I imagined. In a matter of days, my kitchen filled with tomatoes and then fruit flies. Following my family tradition of gardening and preserving I stepped into the world of canning and have not looked back.

My mom planted raspberries and a few vegetables in the back yard of my childhood home. The vegetables were very stubborn and rarely produced anything of notable size. The raspberries, on the other hand, were delighted with their location and produced pints of melt-in-your-mouth thimble-shaped berries. At the peak of their season it didn’t take long to pick enough berries to make a batch of jam.

Every summer my mom turned strawberries, blackberries, prunes and apples into sweet spreads we enjoyed all year long. I loved watching my mom set up the kitchen for jam making. She had gigantic pots and strange tools that only came out of the basement for this specific task; they seemed mysterious and wonderful.

On what were inevitably the hottest days of the year we mashed, sugared, boiled, and preserved the flavor of summer into sparkling jars. Later in the year when we broke the seal on a new jar of jam it smelled like those hot summer days and felt like magic.

Shortly after raspberry season ended tomato season began. My grandpa was something of a “tomato whisperer.” While the days were still dark and soggy, he started his tomato plants on a newspaper-covered ping­pong tabletop.

By the time late summer arrived the plants were heavy with fruit in his back yard. My sister and I had free rein to pick all the bright red cherry tomatoes we could stuff in our cheeks. We learned how to eat to keep the juicy seeds from squirting out of our mouths, then we learned how to aim.

The skin on Grandpa’s tomatoes had a powdery roughness I never noticed on the ones we bought at the grocery store. They smelled like soil and hot hose water but tasted like candy.

We were never empty handed leaving grandma and grandpa’s house in the summer. They made sure to send us home with bags of tomatoes of all sizes. We ate them mixed into a salad or sliced on sandwiches. When summer was gone so were the tomatoes. Oddly, my grandma always seemed relieved at the end of tomato season.

A few years ago I started my own vegetable garden. The first year I planted a modest number of tomato starts, the summer was cool and very wet. We didn’t get to pick anywhere near the number of bright red cherry tomatoes I envisioned. By October I was coaxing green tomatoes to ripen in paper sacks all around the kitchen.

The next summer I played the odds and planted significantly more tomatoes. I hoped more plants would mean more ripe fruit, even if the weather refused to cooperate. However, the weather did cooperate. Before I knew what hit me I was harvesting baskets full of full-size tomatoes along with bite sized Cherry and yellow Sungolds.

The tomatoes I grew had the same rough skin and earthy smell I remembered from my grandpa’s garden. My son ate them like candy, but he has yet to master aim.

It wasn’t long before the harvest outpaced our appetite. I had never made sauce from fresh tomatoes, but I knew it was possible. I thought about my mom and her jams and realized as much as I wanted to capture the flavor of summer; I did not want to tend a pot of splattering sauce.

While combing the Internet for inspiration, I came across a reference to oven-roasted tomato sauce and knew I had to give it a try. Within minutes of sliding the roasting pan into the oven our house smelled like the heart of Little Italy.

Oven-roasted tomato sauce is so simple. The ingredients are adjustable and, best of all, making it does not require standing over a hot stove in the middle of summer. On my first attempt, I accidentally cooked the sauce too long and made the most amazing thick spreadable paste. It was the perfect base for homemade pizza. That first year, I froze everything and my family enjoyed the flavor of fresh tomatoes and garden vegetables well into winter.

The next year, I planted even more tomatoes and decided to try canning the sauce. By that time I had my own supply of mysterious oversized pots in the garage. Canning meant standing over a hot stove in the middle of summer, but the dozens of jars on our shelf were well worth the perspiration. The homemade sauce made lovely gifts at the holidays.

Growing tomatoes feels like coming full circle. My children get to experience the joy of eating the sun-ripened fruit straight from the vine and, I carry on the tradition of preserving the best of summer in our pantry all year long.

Oh, and, this summer I planted a few raspberries, so stay tuned.

Oven-roasted tomato sauce

4 pounds of fresh tomatoes

3 large celery stalks

1 green bell pepper

1 large white onion, cut into 1/8th wedges

1 small bulb of garlic, separate and peel the cloves (more or less to taste)

11/2 teaspoon kosher salt

1/2 teaspoon red chili flakes

1/4 cup olive oil

1 big handful of fresh basil (more or less to taste)

No need to stand over a bubbling pot to make a winning garden fresh tomato sauce to be enjoyed long after the harvest is complete. Oven roasting intensifies the flavors and your house will smell like an Italian grandma has moved into the kitchen. Spread the finished sauce on bread, toss with pasta, use it as the basis for pizza or thin with a little stock and turn it into a soup that take you straight back to summer in an instant. Meatier tomatoes preferred but any peak of season tomato will work — try a blend of varieties — you can even toss in a few green ones at the end of the season.

Heat the oven to 450 degrees.

Chop the vegetables into large pieces and arrange them in a single layer in a large roasting pan with the garlic cloves. Sprinkle over the salt and chili flakes. Drizzle olive oil over everything, give it a gentle stir then place the pan in the hot oven.

Roast vegetables for approximately 1 hour. The vegetables will reduce and the liquids will bubble. Remove when the vegetables have begun to caramelize (turn deep brown) around the edges. For a thicker sauce leave in the oven until most of the liquid has cooked away.

Allow the vegetables to cool slightly before adding the whole basil leaves and pureeing everything into sauce either in a standard blender or with an immersion blender in a large heat safe bowl.

Use immediately or allow the sauce to cool and portion in to freezer-safe containers to store for up to six months. This sauce will be shelf stable if canned using proper safe canning procedures.

Prep time: 15 minutes. Cook time: 1 hour. Yield: Approximately 5 cups of sauce

Approximate nutrition for 1/4 cup: 53 calories, 3g fat, 192mg sodium, 6.5g carbohydrate, 1.5g fiber, .2g sugar, 1.2g protein. Weight Watchers Points Plus 1.

Rose McAvoy blogs at Light for Life at www.heraldnet.com/lightforlife and at halfhersize.com. Email rose@halfhersize.com or find her on Twitter at www.twitter.com/halfhersize.

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