Lazy Cook’s Fresh Tomato Sauce

When you have tomatoes but no time, try the Lazy Cook’s Fresh Tomato Sauce! It’s simple, easy, fast, but keeps the wonderful fresh flavor of your tomatoes.

When you have tomatoes but no time, try the Lazy Cook's Fresh Tomato Sauce! It's simple, easy, fast, but keeps the wonderful fresh flavor of your tomatoes.

Well, maybe the cook isn’t lazy. Maybe the cook is just tired, or rushed, or harried. Maybe s/he is already elbow deep in another project, but just noticed that the tomatoes are starting to go soft and should be used at once. Maybe the cook simply has better things to do tonight…

There are great recipes for fresh tomato sauce. This isn’t one of them. This is a perfectly pleasant, very useful basic tomato sauce that you can use on its own, or season further for other recipes. It preserves the fresh tomato flavor. It preserves tomatoes that need to be used Now. It preserves your sanity and energy when it is not a good time to launch into serious cooking…

When you have tomatoes but no time, try the Lazy Cook's Fresh Tomato Sauce! It's simple, easy, fast, but keeps the wonderful fresh flavor of your tomatoes.

Most recipes for fresh tomato sauce tell you to remove the peel and seeds, and give you a method to do so. Classically, you cook the tomatoes and then pass it through some sort of strainer, so you get all the flavor but without the texture issues. We’re just going to skip that, put it all in a food processor., and accept that we won’t have a beautifully smooth sauce. (This does mean that you should only do this if everyone who will eat it can eat whole raw tomatoes. Not an issue for most people, but there are some who have issues with seeds or peels – don’t make this for them.)

When you have tomatoes but no time, try the Lazy Cook's Fresh Tomato Sauce! It's simple, easy, fast, but keeps the wonderful fresh flavor of your tomatoes.

Start with roughly a quart of diced tomatoes – that seems to be a good workable amount in most food processors. I’m not going to tell you how many tomatoes that is, because that will vary. Are they large or small? Are they juicy and heavy?  (Did you have to cut out soft or even moldy parts? Because that might be the reason you’re using this method…) Plum tomatoes will give you a thicker sauce, but you can use slicers, you just may need to simmer them longer, later, to get the texture you want. I would not tend to use cherry or other small tomatoes, here – the ratio of skin to pulp is a bit high. (On the other hand, I pop them in the freezer!) So really, if you get much less than a quart, fine, you may just want to adjust other ingredients. If you have more, do it in more than one batch.

Actually – start with an onion. Chop it roughly, heat oil in a pan, and let the onion cook while you wash, trim and chop your tomatoes. Add two cloves of garlic at the end (it can get bitter if it overcooks.) I used a large onion… If you want to add fresh hot peppers, or anything like that, this would be the time.

When you have tomatoes but no time, try the Lazy Cook's Fresh Tomato Sauce! It's simple, easy, fast, but keeps the wonderful fresh flavor of your tomatoes.

So your onion is cooking gently, you just added the garlic, and you stir it every so often. You have trimmed your tomatoes, and chopped them very roughly. Just dump them all in the food processor and puree. Now, if you have fresh basil and/or oregano, pull the leaves off the woody stems and add it. (And that is what I will write in the recipe.) I had some I’d already pureed and frozen, so I added it later. If you have none fresh, you can add a teaspoon each of dried, now. Toss in the salt, too. Add the onion and garlic. Puree some more – you want the peel very finely chopped, but you still have a little texture – it is sauce, not juice.

Now pour it all back into the saute pan or frying pan in which you cooked the onion. A wide flat pan is best, because you want to have some of the liquid cook away rapidly, without overcooking the tomato. Bring it to a boil, and stir.

When you have tomatoes but no time, try the Lazy Cook's Fresh Tomato Sauce! It's simple, easy, fast, but keeps the wonderful fresh flavor of your tomatoes.

This will vary considerably, depending on how pulpy or liquid your tomatoes are in the first place, and what you want your sauce to end up like. I had very dense, large plum tomatoes with relatively little juice, so I brought it to a boil and boiled, stirring, for only a few minutes before I had a thick sauce. But if you have very juicy tomatoes, this could take as long as ten minutes. It will probably be somewhere in between. Do stir often – that helps release steam. (This, by the way,  is when I added the frozen pureed herbs.) The goal is minimal cooking to retain the fresh flavor.

And there you have it.

This is, for cooking purposes, what you use as a better form of the canned tomato sauce, not a full, seasoned pasta sauce. I simmered pork chops in it, I used it with eggs…  If I wanted to serve it over pasta, I’d add a little something – it’s a good base for Pasta Puttanesca. I asked Rich what he thought of it, and he said “Nice, but you’ve made better.” And, well, I know that – but this is just a base. But the lightly cooked, fresh tomato flavor is so different from canned! There is a pint of it  in the freezer now… that will be the base of a quick meal, one of these days. If you know you will want to use it as is,  you may want to just increase the aromatics – more herbs, more garlic, hot pepper… whatever you prefer in a sauce. But one goal is to avoid the long simmer of classic tomato sauce – keep that fresh flavor!

And be able to do it when you have only twenty minutes to deal with a basket of tomatoes.

When you have tomatoes but no time, try the Lazy Cook's Fresh Tomato Sauce! It's simple, easy, fast, but keeps the wonderful fresh flavor of your tomatoes.

When you have tomatoes but no time, try the Lazy Cook's Fresh Tomato Sauce! It's simple, easy, fast, but keeps the wonderful fresh flavor of your tomatoes.

Lazy Cook’s Fresh Tomato Sauce

Anne Murphy
When you have tomatoes but no time, try the Lazy Cook's Fresh Tomato Sauce! It's simple, easy, fast, but keeps the wonderful fresh flavor of your tomatoes.
5 from 1 vote
Prep Time 10 minutes
Cook Time 10 minutes
Total Time 20 minutes
Course Sauce
Cuisine American, Gluten Free
Servings 3 -4 c

Ingredients
  

  • olive oil for the pan
  • 1 onion chopped
  • 2 cloves garlic minced
  • 1 quart diced fresh tomatoes not peeled
  • 2 T fresh basil
  • 2 T fresh oregano
  • 1 t salt

Instructions
 

  • Heat oil in a wide fry pan. Saute the onion while you wash, trim, and dice your tomatoes. Then add garlic to the pan.
  • Process tomatoes in a food processor. Add herbs and salt, and the onion mixture. Process some more until the sauce is relatively smooth.
  • Pour tomatoes back into the pan in which you cooked the onion. Bring to a boil, and boil, stirring often, to let liquid evaporate. This will probably be only a few minutes, until you get the consistency you want.
  • Serve, or use as a base in another recipe.
Tried this recipe?Let us know how it was!

 

When you have tomatoes but no time, try the Lazy Cook's Fresh Tomato Sauce! It's simple, easy, fast, but keeps the wonderful fresh flavor of your tomatoes.



20 thoughts on “Lazy Cook’s Fresh Tomato Sauce”

    • Oh, yes – this was going to happen this fast, or it was not going to happen! There was too much else going on last week (some of which was totally unexpected) – and I needed to start getting through the tomatoes before they went soft!

      But still – nothing like that fresh tomato flavor…

  • Fresh tomato sauce can be so versatile. I often make big batches of tomato sauce and then use it throughout the week. Also, the color on that sauce is so vibrant.

    • Right – this batch went into 3-4 meals that week. And I might not have bothered to use tomatoes in them otherwise.

      Isn’t it bright! And that’s the real color – didn’t tweak it at all.

    • It was just the wrong week in my life to get a basket of tomatoes… LOL But I had to do something with them. Then I realized that tomatoes wait for no cook, and other people might like this!

      And thanks – the flavor is different, but good…

  • This is perfect! My son hates chunks so I even have to puree the meat sauce! I love the simple ingredients used in this recipe. I bet this sauce is light, fresh and flavorful.

    • Thank you!

      And for me, the attraction is that I only have good fresh tomatoes 2-3 months of the year – the rest of the time, canned are really a better option than the flavorless lumps in the supermarket. So, aside from dealing with the sudden influx, it’s nice to have something that is not trying to replicate the long simmered sauces I can easily make with canned tomatoes, but a recipe that takes full advantage of the bright, fresh flavor! If you can make this all year, that’s wonderful!

    • Oh, I think we all have such a person… though circumstances may determine how dominant!

      But I do really enjoy the fresh flavor, so it’s a good thing, right?

    • LOL – it’s that time of year. My table is covered with tomatoes, again – I see another batch of this in my immediate future!

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