gmonkey wrote:So I recently discovered the beauty of the canned San Marzanos for making my own tomato sauces, which has worked out beautifully except that it's more watery than what I prefer.
So my question, should I not be using the juice from the can? Is supplementing with tomato sauce enough?
stevez wrote:I have a related question for LTH at large: Which of the myriad brands of San Marzano tomatoes are your favorite and where do you buy them?
stevez wrote:I have a related question for LTH at large: Which of the myriad brands of San Marzano tomatoes are your favorite and where do you buy them?
gmonkey wrote:... Plus, being in the desert, and because all the good restaurants seem to have first pick of the good produce before the grocery stores, canned tomatoes are consistent for me.
Antonius wrote:gmonkey wrote:... Plus, being in the desert, and because all the good restaurants seem to have first pick of the good produce before the grocery stores, canned tomatoes are consistent for me.
Yes, indeed, the consistency, the convenience, they're hard to beat. And the quality too. The best brands from Italy offer beautifully ripe tomatoes with relatively low acidity. Aside from the late summer, I use only imported Italian tomatoes (usually San Marzano, but there are other excellent tomatoes from Italy).
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Steve,
I liked Nina for a long time for the larger cans but lately the only product from them is peeled tomatoes packed with the thick puree, which I don't like especially. I like just the plain old whole tomatoes with nothing more in the can than a basil leaf; any necessary thickening and adjusting I do by my own methods. Carmelina is very good (Whole Foods, Italian stores); so too La Bella San Marzano which is widely available (all the Italian stores) but the price has gone way up in the last few years, probably on account of all the non-Italians getting wise to the quality of our San Marzano's.![]()
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I have some Italian non-San Marzano brands that I know and love and are still relatively cheap but I want them to stay that way...
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I remember seeing the people on America's Test Kitchen extol the virtues of Muir Glen and I gave them a try (they claimed that MG was vastly superior to any Italian imports, if I remember correctly) but from the perspective of this Italian palate, they're certainly good tomatoes but the texture and the flavour are not what I want for my Italian dishes.
When I have more space for growing and processing, I'll do my own bottling as my cousins in Italy do... someday...*
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*I should do as CG does and dry some tomatoes from the garden out. Thanks for the reminder!
tem wrote:Carmelina = $2.39 at Bari.
Jamieson22 wrote:Perhaps it is new, or perhaps I just never noticed, but they also have 91 oz cans of Carmelina for $5.89 (think that was price, know it was < $6). There had 2 be 100+ cans lined up under the organic produce display along same wall they have the olive bar.