Simple Tomato Sauce
- 8 cups (two 35-ounce cans) canned San Marzano or other Italian plum tomatoes, with juices
- 1 large onion, chopped in small pieces
- 1 medium carrot, chopped in small pieces
- 1 inner rib celery, chopped in small pieces
- 6 tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil
- 1 teaspoon salt, plus more to taste
- 2 cups water
- 2 bay leaves
- 1 teaspoon dried peperoncino (hot red pepper flakes)
- 1/2 teaspoon honey (optional, after tasting)
- A rotary food mill with a medium pureeing disk
- A heavy-bottomed saucepan, 6 quarts or larger, with cover
- Put the tomatoes through a food mill, using the medium blade, or a colander or sieve, set over a bowl.
- If youre sieving the tomatoes through a sieve or colander, push the flesh through, scraping against the sieve to extract all the pulp and juice.
- Put chopped onion, carrot, and celery pieces in the food processor and pulse several times, until you have very finely chopped small shreds.
- Or chop the pieces by hand into tiny bits.
- Pour the oil into the sauce pot, stir in the chopped vegetables, and set over medium-high heat.
- Sprinkle on the salt.
- Cook for 3 minutes or so, stirring frequently, as the vegetables start to sizzle and soften; dont let them brown.
- Pour the milled tomatoes and juices into the pan, and stir with the vegetables.
- Rinse out the bowl and the tomato cans with the water, and pour this into the saucepan as well.
- Stir in the bay leaves, honey, and peperoncino, turn up the heat, cover, and bring the sauce to a boil, stirring and checking it frequently.
- Adjust the heat to maintain an active simmer, with lots of small bubbles all over the sauce.
- Cover, and cook for about 45 minutes, stirring occasionally.
- Remove the cover; raise the heat so the sauce is still bubbling energetically and gradually reducing.
- Cook for another hour or so, stirring frequently to make sure nothings sticking to the bottom of the pot.
- Turn down the heat as the sauce thickens (and if the bubbles are bursting out of the pot).
- Taste for salt near the end of cooking, and add more if needed.
- When the sauce has reduced by about a quarter and is concentrated but still pourable, remove from the heat.
- Let the sauce cool; remove the bay leaves.
- Allow the flavors to mellow for an hour or two.
- Use however much sauce you need immediately; refrigerate or freeze the rest.
- Pastas
- Gnocchi
- Baked pastas
- Non-pasta dishes (such as the skillet meat gratinati, pages 281 to 287)
san, onion, carrot, celery, extravirgin olive oil, salt, water, bay leaves, peperoncino, honey, mill, saucepan
Taken from www.epicurious.com/recipes/food/views/simple-tomato-sauce-384440 (may not work)