Sauce Tomate – Marinara
http://cooking.nytimes.com/recipes/1015987-classic-marinara-sauce
Classic Marinara Sauce
Homemade marinara is almost as fast and tastes immeasurably better than
even the best supermarket sauce — and it's made with basic pantry
ingredients. All the tricks to a bright red, lively-tasting sauce, made
just as it is in the south of Italy (no butter, no onions) are in this
recipe. Use a skillet instead of the usual saucepan: the water
evaporates quickly, so the tomatoes are just cooked through as the sauce
becomes thick.
Ingredients
-
1
28-ounce can whole San Marzano tomatoes, certified D.O.P. if possible
-
¼
cup extra-virgin olive oil
-
7
garlic cloves, peeled and slivered
-
Small dried whole chile, or pinch crushed red pepper flakes
-
1
teaspoon kosher salt
-
1
large fresh basil sprig, or 1/4 teaspoon dried oregano, more to taste
Preparation
- Pour tomatoes into a large bowl and crush with
your hands. Pour 1 cup water into can and slosh it around to get tomato
juices. Reserve.
- In a large skillet (do not use a deep pot) over medium heat, heat the oil. When it is hot, add garlic.
- As soon as garlic is sizzling (do not let it
brown), add the tomatoes, then the reserved tomato water. Add whole
chile or red pepper flakes, oregano (if using) and salt. Stir.
- Place basil sprig, including stem, on the
surface (like a flower). Let it wilt, then submerge in sauce. Simmer
sauce until thickened and oil on surface is a deep orange, about 15
minutes. (If using oregano, taste sauce after 10 minutes of simmering,
adding more salt and oregano as needed.) Discard basil and chile (if
using).
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