Seasoned Advice Asked by IamSalsa on December 8, 2020
I’ve watched a lot of videos on YouTube: 90% of people doesn’t know anything about cooking. What they do is they make salsa in a blender (not in a food processor)!!! As a result, their salsa is not salsa, it’s sauce, puree, disgusting foamy substance (I’ve tried to make in a blender). Salsa must be chunky!
I want salsa like in jars from a store.
So, I have a few question:
1) How to prepare tomatoes? Tomatoes in jar salsa look like diced canned tomatoes. I can buy diced tomatoes and make them myself. How to do that myself? Should I roast/boil them and then chunk?
2) Do I have to simmer tomatoes/salsa? If I simmer tomatoes/salsa, should I add all ingredients at the beginning or at the end.
Salsa means sauce, but there are a great variety of salas to be had.
It sounds like you would like a fairly chunky tomato salsa.
There are many approaches to this, and an infinite variety of recipes. There is no single answer to how you would prepare your tomatoes.
Choose your preparation method based on the the outcome you like. Many tomato salsas are uncooked, so you would simply use raw tomatoes. You can also roast your tomatoes to intensify the flavor, or even put some dried tomatoes in with your salsa—there are no rules.
Some common options:
Use diced or whole canned tomatoes, further chopping them to your desired size. In the winter or when good tomatoes are not available, this is a good option.
Dice fresh tomatoes (and other vegetables) to the consistency that you desire.
You can also pulse some (or all) of your tomatoes, either fresh or canned, in a food processor, to get the consistency you desire.
You can also combine these methods, for example by pureeing part of the salsa for the body, and adding diced or chopped tomatoes and other vegetables in for texture.
Some salsas are cooked in which case you might only rough chop the tomatoes before simmering, and let them cooked down to the consistency you like.
Since you specifically mentioned jarred salsas as your model, I imagine that you may desire a lightly cooked salsa modeled after typical Mexican restaurant salsa. One easy way to do this is to start with canned tomatoes which are already cooked:
Take:
Place it all into the bowl of a food processor, and pulse until it is chopped to your desired consistency. If you let this sit for an hour or two in refrigerator, the flavors will blend and mature.
Pioneer Woman has a very similar recipe, in detail, with a great number of photographs. Note that you do not have to pulse yours as finely as she shows.
Note also that restaurants also often serve pico de gallo, which is essentially just chopped tomatoes and onions, perhaps with some chili peppers and other accents (probably including evil cilantro) that have been allowed to sit together a bit to marry. It has almost no sauce like body, but is more like a chopped salad. This is typically made from chopped, squeezed, fresh tomatoes.
Correct answer by SAJ14SAJ on December 8, 2020
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