The Roma type tomatoes are coming in right now! I picked half of a 5 gallon bucket full this morning. Hmm. What to do? Tomato sauce for dinner! I knew this was risky, since both my attempts at tomato sauce last summer bombed. But I had an idea of what I did wrong, and I really wanted to try again. Here's a photo showing what these tomatoes look like.
We have some friends that have been saving seeds from this variety for years. Every spring they start a bunch and give us some seedlings.
Last years' sauce was too watery and needed to cook a long time to thicken. By the time it thickened, it was very dark in color and almost caramelized. It didn't taste good. At all.
So here was my bright idea: after the tomatoes had cooked long enough to soften, pour the whole mess into my food mill. The liquid would pour though the mesh screen, leaving the solids up top to make the sauce with. It worked! And now I have tomato juice for my V8 loving Max!
The juice is sitting on one of my recycled wool potholders.
Okay, so then we (Max and I took turns) ran all the solid, pulpy stuff through the food mill to remove the skins and seeds. Here's what it looked like when we were done:
Then we went out to the garden to collect some basil and oregano and added those to the sauce.
Max chopped up some bell peppers (also picked this morning) with a special kids' knife he got for Christmas from uncle Peter and aunt Maire. He loves it and uses it all the time. In fact, he and Claire often fight about who is going to use it :)
We added the peppers and garlic to the tomato sauce and then used the pan to brown some ground venison. You don't really brown ground venison as it doesn't have any fat to speak of. You just cook it until it is no longer pink.
Then we added the venison to the rest of the sauce, added some sugar, salt and pepper, and cayenne pepper to taste, and let the whole thing simmer for a while until it looked like this:
We enjoyed it over whole wheat spaghetti. The kids picked out the peppers, but that was to be expected :)
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