5 Reasons Why You Need 100 Pounds of Tomatoes
by Daisy Luther
Here’s my recommendation for your end-of-summer food preservation.
You need 100 pounds of tomatoes.
100 pounds? Are you insane, Daisy?
Widget not in any sidebars
Yes – 100 pounds, and more if you can get them. No other item of produce increases in nutrients when cooked and stored like tomatoes. Canning them is like loading your shelves with vitamins. These vitamins have the delicious bonus of providing tasty meals throughout the winter, when fresh fruits and veggies are expensive (and scarce for many of us if you prefer to consume foods grown close to home.) I got most of my tomatoes from local friends who had an over-abundance, so I didn’t pay a lot for them. You can often find tomatoes by the bushel for $1-2 per pound at your local farmer’s market. (Find a farm or market near you at Eat Local Grown.)
So here are your five reasons, as well as instructions and recipes for prepping and canning these vitamin-laden goodies.
- Simple sauce with tomatoes, onions, and garlic
- Tomato broth
- Italian marinara
- Salsa
- Ketchup
- Excelsteel 16 Quart Stainless Steel Stockpot With Encapsulated Base
- Ninja Mega Kitchen System (BL770)
- Presto 01781 23-Quart Pressure Canner and Cooker
- Natural Flour Sack Kitchen Towels
- Roma Food Strainer and Sauce Maker for Fresh Fruits and Vegetables
- Granite Ware 0718-1 Enamel-on-Steel Canning Kit, 9-Piece
- ExcelSteel 242 5-Quart Stainless Steel Colander
Prepping tomatoes for canning
The first step for all of these recipes is to wash and peel your tomatoes.
I always soak my fruits and veggies in a baking soda wash, whether they are organic or not. Add one cup of baking soda to tepid water, soak, then rinse well.
Next, you have to peel your tomatoes. The easiest way to peel tomatoes is to take them from boiling water to an ice bath and then squeeze the guts out of them, as follows.
First, put water on to boil in a large non-reactive stock pot. (I prefer stainless steel.) You don’t need to wash or cut the tomatoes before blanching them. In batches, place the tomatoes into the boiling water for about 3 minutes. (This time is not engraved in stone – don’t panic if you go over the time by a little bit.)
You can test them by gently using your tongs to see if the skins have loosened. After you scoop the tomatoes out of the boiling water, place them directly into an ice bath and leave them there for at least 3 minutes. I like to use long tongs for this because you transfer less of the hot water into your ice bath.
Once the tomatoes are cool enough to easily handle, use your fingers to dig the stem end out of the tomato and discard it. Then, squeeze the tomato over your blender – the skin should slide right off and leave you with a blender full of pulp. You don’t need to remove the seeds.
Now you’re ready to can tomatoes.
#1 – Simple Tomato Sauce
This thin puree is as simple as running your tomatoes through the blender, and possibly adding some garlic, onions, and salt to them. It can be used as a base for soup, chili, spaghetti sauce, enchilada sauce, or any other purpose that requires crushed tomatoes. I like to can this because it’s pretty neutral and can be used in so many different recipes throughout the year.
I didn’t give measurements, because this simple sauce can be made from any amount of tomatoes that you happen to lay hands upon. It is also a great way to use up soft or overripe tomatoes quickly.
Ingredients:
- Peeled tomatoes (any variety)
- 1/2 a small onion per jar
- 1 clove of garlic per jar
- Sea salt or canning salt to taste
- Lemon juice
Directions:
1. Peel tomatoes and place them directly into the bowl of your food processor or pitcher of your blender. Approximately 3 cups of unprocessed tomato will fill a quart jar. If you’re using onions and garlic, add those to the food processor at the same time.
2. Use the pulse option on your processor until the mixture reaches your desired consistency.
Pour this into a sanitized quart jar.
3. Repeat until you have a canner load of sauce.
4. Add a dash of salt to each jar. If you are water bath canning, add 2 tbsp of lemon juice to each jar. If you are pressure canning, the lemon juice is not necessary.
5. In a water bath canner, process your sauce for 40 minutes at sea level, adjusting for altitude.
6. Alternatively, you can process the sauce in your pressure canner for 25 minutes at 10 pounds of pressure, adjusting for altitude.
The Whole Buffalo Theory of Tomatoes
I’ve been experimenting with ways to get more mileage from my food this year, something my daughter refers to as “using the whole buffalo.” I began straining my fruit purees before making jam and had great results, so instead of cooking my tomatoes down for hours and letting all of that goodness just evaporate, I decided to use the same method with some of my tomato products.
When processing my tomatoes for marinara, salsa, and ketchup, I decided to see if I could cut down the cooking time and preserve the extra liquid for a vegetable broth base for soup or cooking rice.
After I pureed my veggies, as per the directions in all of the recipes, I poured the puree into a colander that was resting over a large stockpot.
I left it to drain for anywhere from 2 hours to overnight. The longer it drains, of course, the less liquid will remain in the sauce. The liquid that drains off can then be processed as a tomato broth for soup.
This is what you’ll be left with – thick tomato-ey goodness that doesn’t require a half day of cooking to reach the proper consistency! What you do from here is based on what you plan to make. For salsa, I use the tomatoes as they are. For marinara sauce or ketchup, I run it through the blender again to get nice smooth puree.
That’s not the only way you can extend your tomatoes. Did you know that you can make a thick sauce from the peels? As with most fruit, this is the part that contains the most pectin.
When peeling your tomatoes, simply peel them over a small pot in order to catch any extra juice. When you’re done, simmer the peels in the juice for few hours. At this point, you have two options.
- Allow the mixture to cool. Strain it over a mesh colander into a pot, then squeeze out the peels to get the thick tomato paste from them.
- Use a mill like this one to separate the paste from the peels. (This is the most effective method and will net you the most sauce.)
Learn more about making sauce from tomato peels HERE.
#2 – Tomato Broth
Strain your liquid as described above.
Pour this into a sanitized quart jar.
Add a dash of salt to each jar. If you are water bath canning, add 2 tbsp of lemon juice to each jar. If you are pressure canning, the lemon juice is not necessary.
In a water bath canner, process your sauce for 40 minutes at sea level, adjusting for altitude. Alternatively, you can process the broth in your pressure canner for 20 minutes at 10 pounds of pressure adjusting for altitude.
The liquid will separate,as you can see in the photo above, and you will have tomato “sediment” at the bottom. This is perfectly normal. This broth can be used as a base for soup, in place of liquid for cooking meat in the crock pot, or for cooking rice.
Now, with your drained tomatoes, you can make the following products.
#3 – Marinara
If you have already drained your tomatoes, gauge your recipe to approximately 3 cups of rough puree per quart jar.
For a 7 quart batch, you will need 2 bell peppers, any color, 2 onions, and 1-2 heads of garlic.
In batches, puree your tomatoes and veggies until smooth, then add them to a large stockpot.
Add the following seasonings – the first amount is per pound of tomatoes, and the second amount is for a 7 quart batch of sauce.
- 1 tbsp – sugar – 1/3 cup
- 1 tsp – sea salt – 2 and 1/2 tbsp
- 1 tsp – thyme – 2 and 1/2 tbsp
- 1 tbsp – oregano – 1/3 cup
- 1 tbsp – basil – 1/3 cup
- 1 pinch – powdered clove (trust me!) – 1 tbsp
- black pepper to taste
- 1 pinch – paprika (smoked Hungarian if you can find it) – 1 tbsp
- 2 tbsp – extra virgin olive oil – 2/3 cup
With the lid off, bring the sauce to a simmer for about an hour, stirring occasionally. This will allow all of the seasonings to meld into the sauce.
If at serving time your sauce is still runnier than you prefer, simply stir in a small tin of tomato paste to thicken it.
- Fill sanitized quart jars with sauce, allowing 1 inch of headspace.
- Wipe the lip of your jars with a cloth dipped in white vinegar and then place the lids on.
- Process the sauce in your pressure canner for 25 minutes at 7 pounds of pressure, adjusting for altitude.
- Allow the jars to cool undisturbed for at least 12 hours or until cooled. Test the seals before putting them away.
- 14 cups of drained tomatoes
- 4 bell peppers, seeded
- ½ cup of jalapeno peppers, with center removed (leave in seeds for super-spicy salsa, reduce or even eliminate amount of jalapenos for milder salsa)
- 2 medium onions
- ½ cup of lemon or lime juice
- 4 cloves of garlic
- ¼ – ½ cup of fresh cilantro leaves (if you HATE cilantro, you’re weird, but use parsley instead)
- 1 tbsp of turbinado sugar
- 1 tsp of chili powder
- ½ tsp of cumin powder
Directions
- Dump your drained tomatoes into a large mixing bowl.
- Using your food processor, add the tomatoes, peppers, onion, garlic, and cilantro. Process on the “chop” function until you’ve reached the desired chunkiness, then pour each batch into the mixing bowl with the tomatoes.
- Once all of your veggies are in the bowl, stir in your lemon or lime juice and all of your seasonings until they are well combined.
- Ladle the salsa into the prepared jars that are eagerly awaiting it.
- Wipe the lip of the jars, place the flats and rings on them, and lift them into the vigorously boiling water bath.
- In a water bath canner, process your salsa for 25 minutes at sea level, adjusting for altitude. Alternatively, you can process the sauce in your pressure canner for 15 minutes at 10 pounds of pressure, adjusting for altitude.
#5 – Ketchup
Once you try this taste-of-summer condiment, those little packets and squirt bottles will never satisfy your ketchup craving again. Plus, it’s real tomato-y goodness without all of the additives.
Ingredients
- 12 cups of drained tomatoes
- 2 onions, quartered
- 2 sweet peppers
- 1-1/2 cups of cider vinegar
- 1/2 cup of brown sugar
- 1 tbsp of salt
- 1 tsp of celery seed
- 1/2 tsp ground allspice
- 1 tsp ground cloves
- 1/4 tsp ground cinnamon
Directions
- Using your blender, puree your drained tomatoes with the peppers and onions – you will have to do numerous batches. Pour each pureed batch into a large stock pot.
- Bring the mixture to a boil, then reduce heat and simmer it for one hour, uncovered.
- Stir in the vinegar and spices and continue to simmer with the lid off. It will take 1-2 hours to reach a desirable consistency.
- Once the ketchup is at your preferred consistency, ladle it into pint jars.
- Lid the jars and process them in a water bath canner for 15 minutes, adjusting for altitude.
Boom….100 pounds of tomatoes in your pantry!
See? 100 pounds of tomatoes isn’t actually unrealistic at all. If you are lucky enough to have even more of a tomato harvest, simply rinse and repeat the above recipes. My goal is to stockpile enough heirloom tomato products that there’s no need to purchase the nasty, high-frutctose corn syrup, BPA-tainted storebought items all winter.
If you happen to have extra tomatoes, slice them up and put them in the dehydrator. You can store these in olive oil for delicious gourmet additions to pizzas and salads.
How do you preserve your tomatoes?
Resources
- Excelsteel 16 Quart Stainless Steel Stockpot With Encapsulated Base
- Ninja Mega Kitchen System (BL770)
- Vitamix 5200 Series Blender, Black
- Presto 01781 23-Quart Pressure Canner and Cooker
- How to Pressure Can Food
- How to Can Food in a Boiling Water Bath
- Roma Food Strainer and Sauce Maker for Fresh Fruits and Vegetables
- Granite Ware 0718-1 Enamel-on-Steel Canning Kit, 9-Piece
- Natural Flour Sack Kitchen Towels
- ExcelSteel 242 5-Quart Stainless Steel Colander
Daisy Luther is a freelance writer and editor. Her website, The Organic Prepper, where this first appeared, offers information on healthy prepping, including premium nutritional choices, general wellness and non-tech solutions. You can follow Daisy on Facebook and Twitter, and you can email her at [email protected]