Anyway, being one of the best and most popular vruits for home gardeners to grow and maintain, tomatoes are also one of the best for preserving.
On two separate occasions this week we canned (jarred) plain tomato sauce (we also did a few with some homegrown dried herbs). We first quartered the tomatoes and put them into a stock pot. As we added the quartered tomatoes to the stock pot we smashed them with a potato masher. Once the entire mixture was smashed pretty well we ran them through a food mill to remove the seeds and skins, then proceeded to cook the sauce for another 20 minutes before proceeding with the canning process. We added lemon/lime juice and salt to the jars, and then processed them in a boiling water canner for approximately 35 minutes. 1 tablespoon of lemon/lime juice and 1 half-teaspoon of salt for pints, 2 tablespoons of lemon/lime juice and 1 teaspoon of salt for quarts. Also, if you're adding dried herbs add them to the jar prior to adding the sauce. We did a tablespoon of Rocky Mountian Oregeno in some, and a tablespoon of Lemon Basil to others.
For our third batch of sauce we did a roasted tomato and garlic sauce. We first roasted the quartered tomatoes with a drizzle of olive oil and a sprinkle of salt.
They were roasted at 425 degrees for approximately 35 minutes.
Roasting the tomatoes releases flavors not found when simply cooking them down in their own sauce. You dudes really need to download the Smellzilla browser so that you can enjoy the fragrence of these beauties
We then put the roasted tomatoes into a roaster pan, and cooked them on high heat for about 30 minutes.
Once the tomatoes got to the consistency show above, we threw some garlic (2 full heads of average sized garlic) into the oven and roasted it with some olive oil for approximately 20 minutes. While the garlic was roasting we ran the tomato mixture through a food mill to remove the seeds and skins.
Compost that.
We returned the cleaned tomato sauce to the roaster along with the roasted and smashed garlic and cooked it for approximately 1 hour until it thickened slightly.
We added lemon juice and salt following the amounts listed above, then added the jars to a boiling water canner for 35 minutes. Doneso. Yumso. Fresh tomato sauce all winter long for pennies per jar.
Can't beat it.
So to recap the week in food preservation:
28 jars of various tomato sauces.
2 gallon size freezer bags of frozen green beans.
1 gallon sized freezer bag of Silver Queen sweet corn, off of the cob.
4 jars of TCT Yellow Tomato BBQ sauce.
...and more pepper canning and Acorn and Butternut Squash baby food are being done this evening.
In conclusion, please take some beans! Make some soup, eat them fresh, make a casserole, freeze them, whatever - anything you want. I will personally hand deliver them to you wearing nothing but a bean-leaf loin cloth. Or I can wear clothes. Whichever you prefer.
We also have a million Straight and Crooked Neck Yellow Squash if anyone is interested or knows of someone in need.
Keep it saucey.