Heirloom Tomato Salsa

Friday, September 9, 2011

Freshly canned salsa by Eve Fox, Garden of Eating blog, copyright 2011

Some like it hot...but I like it mild. That's one of the nice things about making your own salsa -- you can make it as spicy or non-spicy as you like.

Some like it hot - jalapenos by Eve Fox, Garden of Eating blog, copyright 2011

My own salsa-making journey was inspired by two jars of delicious salsa we received from my aunt Maggie last winter. They were so far and above even the best supermarket salsa money can buy, that we used each and every drop -- a radical departure from my norm which is to open a pint jar, use about half of it, put it back in the fridge, feel vaguely guilty while it begins to grow an entire colony of mold on it, then throw it out several months later in a fit of disgusted refrigerator cleaning.

These jars of homemade salsa were special enough to inspire me to find new ways to use them up - I even rediscovered western omelettes!

Heirloom tomato trio by Eve Fox, Garden of Eating blog, copyright 2011

So when tomatoes starting rolling in a couple of weeks ago, I thought, "why not make some really good salsa of our own to last us the whole long, cold, bleak, dreary, depressing winter?" (can you tell I do not care for winter?)

Cilantro by Eve Fox, Garden of Eating blog, copyright 2011

I asked Auntie Maggie what she does to create her awesome deliciousness and I have to admit that my enthusiasm for the whole project quadrupled when she said she just puts all the ingredients right into the food processor. After the previous week's tomato sauce canning bonanza with its requisite peeling, slicing and dicing, I was ready for this quicker, easier prep method.

Onions and garlic by Eve Fox, Garden of Eating blog, copyright 2011

The ingredients are simple - tomatoes, onions, garlic, cilantro, jalapeños, white or apple cider vinegar, sugar, and salt. You wash things off, chop them roughly, dump them in the Cuisinart, blend for a bit, cook for a bit and then can it all. Es tan fácil!

Salsa ingredients in the cuisinart by Eve Fox, Garden of Eating blog, copyright 2011

I am morally opposed to seeding tomatoes so my salsa was a bit watery when it came out of the food processor but I just cooked it down until it reached the perfect consistency.

Salsa simmering by Eve Fox, Garden of Eating blog, copyright 2011

As a result of the previous week's tomato sauce canning, when it came time to start sterilizing jars, we realized there was a serious shortage of pints... But the gods of serendipity were shining on our house that day as this potential tragedy led to a truly brilliant innovation - half-pint jars of salsa!

Sterilizing the perfectly-sized half-pint jars

No more rushing to use up a full pint of salsa, no more feeling guilty about wasting salsa, and no more feeling revolted by the mold colonies growing in our fridge - it's a win-win-win.

Heirloom Tomato Salsa Lines The Shelf by Eve Fox, Garden of Eating blog, copyright 2011

The cheerful jars lining the shelf in our pantry should help add some (mild) heat to the coming cold winter days.

-- print recipe --
Heirloom Tomato Salsa
Makes 6 pints (or 12 half-pints)

Ingredients

* 5 lbs heirloom tomatoes
* 1-2 jalapeño peppers, seeds, ribs and stems removed, finely diced (I recommend wearing gloves when working with these)
* 2 onions, roughly chopped
* 4 large cloves of garlic, roughly chopped
* 1 cup fresh cilantro leaves, washed, and dried
* 1 1/2 cups white vinegar
* 1/4 cup sugar
* 1 Tbsp sea salt

Directions

1. Place the tomatoes, onions, garlic, and cilantro in the bowl of a food processor and blend until it reaches the desired consistency.

2. Put the blended mixture into a large, non-reactive pot, add the jalapeños, sugar, salt and vinegar, bring to a boil and then simmer until it reaches the desired thickness. 

3. While the salsa is cooking, sterilize your jars and lids in the hot water bath for 10 minutes. Drain and remove the jars, ladle the hot salsa directly into the hot jars leaving 1/4" head space, wipe the rims with a clean, damp paper towel, apply the lids, and secure the bands.

4. Process in a hot water bath canner for 20 minutes, then remove from the water and let the jars cool on a rack or several dishtowels to avoid extreme temperature changes which can crack the jars. One cooled, check the seals (the lids must be popped down) and store in a cool dark place for up to one year. If any of the lids have not sealed properly, store the jar in the fridge and use within one week.

Not feeling totally confident about canning food yet? Check out my how-to post here for an overview of the process.

You might also like:



9 comments:

Unknown said...

i love canning! i did it for the first time making cardamon ginger blueberry butter (did i say i'm giving away 3 jars of the stuff??) a couple weeks ago and i absolutely adore the idea of making ourselves self-sufficient for the coming months of winter. Love this! They're beautiful!

Kirsten Lindquist said...

I love to make salsa like this! It looks beautiful.

Rob @ Howtocookhero.com said...

You know, I have a couple fairly similar recipes on my blog, but this is the first time I've truly regretted not including the jarring process.

It really makes the whole recipe far more practical.

Thanks for showing me the light.

Angela Watts said...

I rarely use anything bigger than a half-pint. Being two adults we don't tend to use much more quickly. Especially sweet things like jam, since my husband isn't likely to derivate from plain strawberry or maybe a marmalade.

I want to make this when my black krim and yellow pears finally start ripening....pickles I suck at but salsa is way easier. Good excuse to get the Vitamix back from my parents as well.

Unknown said...

any of you that like their salsa thicker drain them overnight in a steam pot with holes and set in big bowl the first drain will be tomato juice that I use for soup and the next will be clear liquid then add the rest of the goods and cook and can :)

Unknown said...

Hi! Can you substitute apple cider vinegar? also, is it necessary to cook the salsa when canning? thanks!

Eve Fox said...

Hey Gentry,
It's better to stick with white vinegar as you can be sure of the acidity content and it does not contain any sediment. Check this out for why: https://www.extension.umn.edu/food/food-safety/preserving/pickling/vinegar-for-pickling/ Of course, if you're not planning to can the salsa, feel free - the taste will be a little different but undoubtedly still quite tasty.

I would not recommend that you skip boiling the jars of salsa for 20 minutes as tomatoes are actually considered a low-acid food so the processing time is helpful to ensure that you kill any bacteria that could be in there prior to storing them.

All the best,
Eve

Donald Straight said...

Wow....This was easy to make, and delicious. Having no jalapeño peppers, I used a couple of my fresh hatch chilies instead. Will be making more in the near future to give to friends and co-workers. Yum, yum, yum!!

Eve Fox said...

so glad you liked it!

Friday, September 9, 2011

Heirloom Tomato Salsa

Freshly canned salsa by Eve Fox, Garden of Eating blog, copyright 2011

Some like it hot...but I like it mild. That's one of the nice things about making your own salsa -- you can make it as spicy or non-spicy as you like.

Some like it hot - jalapenos by Eve Fox, Garden of Eating blog, copyright 2011

My own salsa-making journey was inspired by two jars of delicious salsa we received from my aunt Maggie last winter. They were so far and above even the best supermarket salsa money can buy, that we used each and every drop -- a radical departure from my norm which is to open a pint jar, use about half of it, put it back in the fridge, feel vaguely guilty while it begins to grow an entire colony of mold on it, then throw it out several months later in a fit of disgusted refrigerator cleaning.

These jars of homemade salsa were special enough to inspire me to find new ways to use them up - I even rediscovered western omelettes!

Heirloom tomato trio by Eve Fox, Garden of Eating blog, copyright 2011

So when tomatoes starting rolling in a couple of weeks ago, I thought, "why not make some really good salsa of our own to last us the whole long, cold, bleak, dreary, depressing winter?" (can you tell I do not care for winter?)

Cilantro by Eve Fox, Garden of Eating blog, copyright 2011

I asked Auntie Maggie what she does to create her awesome deliciousness and I have to admit that my enthusiasm for the whole project quadrupled when she said she just puts all the ingredients right into the food processor. After the previous week's tomato sauce canning bonanza with its requisite peeling, slicing and dicing, I was ready for this quicker, easier prep method.

Onions and garlic by Eve Fox, Garden of Eating blog, copyright 2011

The ingredients are simple - tomatoes, onions, garlic, cilantro, jalapeños, white or apple cider vinegar, sugar, and salt. You wash things off, chop them roughly, dump them in the Cuisinart, blend for a bit, cook for a bit and then can it all. Es tan fácil!

Salsa ingredients in the cuisinart by Eve Fox, Garden of Eating blog, copyright 2011

I am morally opposed to seeding tomatoes so my salsa was a bit watery when it came out of the food processor but I just cooked it down until it reached the perfect consistency.

Salsa simmering by Eve Fox, Garden of Eating blog, copyright 2011

As a result of the previous week's tomato sauce canning, when it came time to start sterilizing jars, we realized there was a serious shortage of pints... But the gods of serendipity were shining on our house that day as this potential tragedy led to a truly brilliant innovation - half-pint jars of salsa!

Sterilizing the perfectly-sized half-pint jars

No more rushing to use up a full pint of salsa, no more feeling guilty about wasting salsa, and no more feeling revolted by the mold colonies growing in our fridge - it's a win-win-win.

Heirloom Tomato Salsa Lines The Shelf by Eve Fox, Garden of Eating blog, copyright 2011

The cheerful jars lining the shelf in our pantry should help add some (mild) heat to the coming cold winter days.

-- print recipe --
Heirloom Tomato Salsa
Makes 6 pints (or 12 half-pints)

Ingredients

* 5 lbs heirloom tomatoes
* 1-2 jalapeño peppers, seeds, ribs and stems removed, finely diced (I recommend wearing gloves when working with these)
* 2 onions, roughly chopped
* 4 large cloves of garlic, roughly chopped
* 1 cup fresh cilantro leaves, washed, and dried
* 1 1/2 cups white vinegar
* 1/4 cup sugar
* 1 Tbsp sea salt

Directions

1. Place the tomatoes, onions, garlic, and cilantro in the bowl of a food processor and blend until it reaches the desired consistency.

2. Put the blended mixture into a large, non-reactive pot, add the jalapeños, sugar, salt and vinegar, bring to a boil and then simmer until it reaches the desired thickness. 

3. While the salsa is cooking, sterilize your jars and lids in the hot water bath for 10 minutes. Drain and remove the jars, ladle the hot salsa directly into the hot jars leaving 1/4" head space, wipe the rims with a clean, damp paper towel, apply the lids, and secure the bands.

4. Process in a hot water bath canner for 20 minutes, then remove from the water and let the jars cool on a rack or several dishtowels to avoid extreme temperature changes which can crack the jars. One cooled, check the seals (the lids must be popped down) and store in a cool dark place for up to one year. If any of the lids have not sealed properly, store the jar in the fridge and use within one week.

Not feeling totally confident about canning food yet? Check out my how-to post here for an overview of the process.

You might also like:



9 comments:

Unknown said...

i love canning! i did it for the first time making cardamon ginger blueberry butter (did i say i'm giving away 3 jars of the stuff??) a couple weeks ago and i absolutely adore the idea of making ourselves self-sufficient for the coming months of winter. Love this! They're beautiful!

Kirsten Lindquist said...

I love to make salsa like this! It looks beautiful.

Rob @ Howtocookhero.com said...

You know, I have a couple fairly similar recipes on my blog, but this is the first time I've truly regretted not including the jarring process.

It really makes the whole recipe far more practical.

Thanks for showing me the light.

Angela Watts said...

I rarely use anything bigger than a half-pint. Being two adults we don't tend to use much more quickly. Especially sweet things like jam, since my husband isn't likely to derivate from plain strawberry or maybe a marmalade.

I want to make this when my black krim and yellow pears finally start ripening....pickles I suck at but salsa is way easier. Good excuse to get the Vitamix back from my parents as well.

Unknown said...

any of you that like their salsa thicker drain them overnight in a steam pot with holes and set in big bowl the first drain will be tomato juice that I use for soup and the next will be clear liquid then add the rest of the goods and cook and can :)

Unknown said...

Hi! Can you substitute apple cider vinegar? also, is it necessary to cook the salsa when canning? thanks!

Eve Fox said...

Hey Gentry,
It's better to stick with white vinegar as you can be sure of the acidity content and it does not contain any sediment. Check this out for why: https://www.extension.umn.edu/food/food-safety/preserving/pickling/vinegar-for-pickling/ Of course, if you're not planning to can the salsa, feel free - the taste will be a little different but undoubtedly still quite tasty.

I would not recommend that you skip boiling the jars of salsa for 20 minutes as tomatoes are actually considered a low-acid food so the processing time is helpful to ensure that you kill any bacteria that could be in there prior to storing them.

All the best,
Eve

Donald Straight said...

Wow....This was easy to make, and delicious. Having no jalapeño peppers, I used a couple of my fresh hatch chilies instead. Will be making more in the near future to give to friends and co-workers. Yum, yum, yum!!

Eve Fox said...

so glad you liked it!