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watergirl
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Today at 11:10 am
amother OP wrote: | Ok so what is the difference between jars of tomato sauce, pizza sauce, marinara sauce?
In my experience, they're all pretty similar |
Tomato sauce is just tomatos, sometimes salt, and water.
The difference between pizza and marinara is the seasonings and the size of the tomato and onion
chunks. Pizza sauce is heavier on oregano and is more finely blended. Marinara sauce usually has more basil (I buy with as little basil as I can, I hate basil) and is often chunky.
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thankyou1
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Today at 11:11 am
zaq wrote: | Bragging rights, OP, bragging rights. You could say the same about anything. Why do some ppl make challah from scratch (some grow their own wheat, too, but not many), some buy defrost-and-bake, and some buy ready-made? Why do some buy pizza from the shop, some buy defrost-and-bake, some buy pizza dough and add sauce and toppings, and some make it all from scratch including growing the tomatoes?
Of course there are other reasons ranging from preferring the taste of homemade to cost-effectiveness to avoiding ultra-processed foods to avoiding specific ingredients such as sugar, salt, preservatives or allergens.
There are plenty of cookbooks with names like "Practically Homemade" that rely on mostly store-bought prepared ingredients, for people who like the illusion of homemade from scratch but don't like to patchke. For example, fill a store-bought graham cracker pie crust with chocolate pudding made from a mix or bought ready-made in a tub, top with whipped cream swooshed out of an aerosol can, drizzle with chocolate syrup, et voila, "homemade" chocolate cream pie.
What I can't fathom is making kneidlach from a mix. It saves maybe ten seconds of measuring matzah mehl and seasonings, that's it. But I can understand buying ready-made kneidlach. |
Love your descriptions
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amother
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Today at 11:13 am
watergirl wrote: | Tomato sauce is just tomatos, sometimes salt, and water.
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Maybe that's the cans, but not the jars I see
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amother
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Today at 11:23 am
amother OP wrote: | Maybe that's the cans, but not the jars I see |
The jars will usually say tomato sauce for... and they add spices, sugars and perservatives accordingly.
you can get ones that just say tomato sauce and they also have the above just very subtle taste so its good for everything.
In Israel the easiest to get is tomato paste and I just dilute with water.
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amother
Pearl
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Today at 11:26 am
amother OP wrote: | In general I'm a homemade type of gal and make most things from scratch. Always bake my own challah, baked goods, etc,
But this just seems so easy and not that expensive at $1.99 a jar that I am wondering if there is a reason others don't do it. |
How do you know that they don't? I certainly do!
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amother
Grape
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Today at 12:28 pm
Just check the ingredients some are full of additives.
My best hack is to use canned crushed tomatoes with basil and garlic.
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mathbrain
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Today at 12:36 pm
watergirl wrote: | Tomato sauce is just tomatos, sometimes salt, and water.
The difference between pizza and marinara is the seasonings and the size of the tomato and onion
chunks. Pizza sauce is heavier on oregano and is more finely blended. Marinara sauce usually has more basil (I buy with as little basil as I can, I hate basil) and is often chunky. |
This exactly. Different brands also taste different.
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amother
Slategray
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Today at 1:29 pm
amother OP wrote: | I keep seeing recipes for the sauce of meatballs, I've always used jarred marinara sauce, somtimes add a little water.
Is there anything wrong with that?
Wondering why it's not so commonly done... |
I like to mix a jar of marinara with a jar of jellied cranberry sauce for a sweeter tangyer sauce.
Nothing wrong with hacks.
When I want a good Italian meatball, I start my sauce an hour before dropping in the meatballs. I don't have time for this often.
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