Tomatoes are supposedly the most common home-garden vegetable grown in the
A plate of homemade pasta with ragu is reminiscent of Sunday lunch at Nonna’s house, sitting around the table with cousins. It’s family and home cooked into a plate of homemade ravioli, with a sprinkle of Parmesan adorning the top. It’s comforting and utterly delicious! This should go without saying that the ragu is not out of a bottle purchased at your local supermarket with a Prego sticker plastered across the front. This is traditional homemade Italian pasta sauce, with maybe a few slight adjustments made throughout the years to cut out some of the large quantities of butter previously used. Cutting out a stick of butter or not, it’s still fresh and homemade and would beat Prego any day of the week in a ragu sauce throw-down. It takes hours simmering on the stovetop, melding all the flavors together. But it’s one of the most delicious things to come out of
Personally, I’m more ragu than marinara when it comes to accompanying pasta. However, I realize that not everyone likes meat or simply has a preference for “plain” tomato sauce, which is an excellent reason to master the art of the marinara sauce, which usually consists primarily of onion and bay leaves for flavoring and crushed tomatoes.
Good tomato varieties:
Heirloom (an open-pollinated, non-hybrid tomato, which means that they are not genetically modified)
Beefsteak (good for sandwiches)
Roma (good for making sauces and canning, although San Marzano tomatoes are supposed to be the BEST for making sauces)
Tomato Resources:
Tomatoes paired with Mozzarella
Companion planting with Tomatoes
2 comments:
I loved reading your two posts! You have such a wonderful way of writing about something ordinary and making it so enjoyable and interesting. Keep them coming! I can't wait to try your pesto sauce!
What a great blog! Food writing sounds like a blast. Andrew and I went to a restaurant the other night and I had an heirloom tomato salad - it was amazing, and other than salt/pepper, only had four ingredients: yellow and orange heirloom tomatoes, balsamic vinegar, chopped basil and goat cheese. I'm going to make it at home as soon as I pick up a few things from the Farmer's Market.
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