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San Marizano Tomatoes
Hook_emHornsfan_74
Posts: 1,504
Question everyone. We have had an insane amount of rain out here in West Texas so our tomato plants have gone crazy. Does anyone have a suggestion on what I can do with all these tomatoes? I don’t want them to go to waste.
Midland, TX XLBGE
Comments
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I can sauce with the red ones and Piccadilly for hot dogs with the green. Those plants grow crazy up here,, 12 foot plus and loadedHook_emHornsfan_74 said:Question everyone. We have had an insane amount of rain out here in West Texas so our tomato plants have gone crazy. Does anyone have a suggestion on what I can do with all these tomatoes? I don’t want them to go to waste.fukahwee maineyou can lead a fish to water but you can not make him drink it -
Sure wish they shipped easily....

@Larry K, do you know of any recipes for lacto-fermenting tomato juice? I haven't seen anything like that, but it sounds intriguing."First method of estimating the intelligence of a ruler is to look at the men he has around him."
- Niccolo MachiavelliOgden, UT, USA
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Had an abundance of San Marzanos last year when a neighbour unexpectedly gave me a huge Home Depot pail full at the end of last season. I blanched them, peeled them, then vac sealed them (likely in 1lb portions, I am guessing, though I could be wrong) and froze them. Then used them at my leisure for spaghetti, chili, and various other cooks. Not a morsel was wasted and all was thoroughly enjoyed.I probably documented it here somewhere. Maybe our resident sleuth @Canugghead can find the post. 😉 He’s like A.I. without the “A”.
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You sure can, larger tomatoes , quarter put in containers add basil or whatever, 3% brine for a week transfer to refrigerator….. I’d go as far as blitzing it up and make a fermented ketchupBotch said:Sure wish they shipped easily....
@Larry K, do you know of any recipes for lacto-fermenting tomato juice? I haven't seen anything like that, but it sounds intriguing.Visalia, Ca @lkapigian -
Back when we lived in IA, caliqueen grew 80 lbs of tomatoes annually. We started out blanching, and freezing, some. Then, we'd just freeze them, to make it simple. Still good in all kinds of stuff.A frozen tomato from your garden, will beat a store bought tomato, any damn day (fresh tomatoes still win for certain things, but you know what I mean).#1 LBGE December 2012 • #2 SBGE February 2013 • #3 Mini May 2013A happy BGE family in Houston, TX.
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I peel half and can with salt and a little lemon and basil to use for any dish with canned tomato. Never lasts the winter. If I had a big freezer I would go that route and have done that in the past with ziplocks and cherry tomatoes.GrateEggspectations said:Had an abundance of San Marzanos last year when a neighbour unexpectedly gave me a huge Home Depot pail full at the end of last season. I blanched them, peeled them, then vac sealed them (likely in 1lb portions, I am guessing, though I could be wrong) and froze them. Then used them at my leisure for spaghetti, chili, and various other cooks. Not a morsel was wasted and all was thoroughly enjoyed.I probably documented it here somewhere. Maybe our resident sleuth @Canugghead can find the post. 😉 He’s like A.I. without the “A”.fukahwee maineyou can lead a fish to water but you can not make him drink it -
You could make s great Arrabbiata Pasta Sauce (Spicy) for your next pasta night?
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Thanks!lkapigian said:
You sure can, larger tomatoes , quarter put in containers add basil or whatever, 3% brine for a week transfer to refrigerator….. I’d go as far as blitzing it up and make a fermented ketchupBotch said:Sure wish they shipped easily....
@Larry K, do you know of any recipes for lacto-fermenting tomato juice? I haven't seen anything like that, but it sounds intriguing.
"First method of estimating the intelligence of a ruler is to look at the men he has around him."
- Niccolo MachiavelliOgden, UT, USA
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Thanks for this too. I'd read years ago that "there is no way to economical way to freeze a tomato", and the fact that you can't buy frozen tomatoes in the market bears that out, but, doing it at home levels sounds like it works.caliking said:Back when we lived in IA, caliqueen grew 80 lbs of tomatoes annually. We started out blanching, and freezing, some. Then, we'd just freeze them, to make it simple. Still good in all kinds of stuff.A frozen tomato from your garden, will beat a store bought tomato, any damn day (fresh tomatoes still win for certain things, but you know what I mean).
Here in UT we're halfway thru green chile roasting season. Last year I was thinking about buying a chest freezer for the basement, but didn't make the jump. I need to do this, both to buy my annual bushel of chile (two, as I actually want to try icing a separate bushel immediately after roasting, as someone here (who sells his own salsa) recommended (sorry I can't remember your name/handle!).
Knowing I could freeze tomatoes while they're still in season, and make more homemade sausage than I currently have room for (that damn freezer compartment in my kitchen fridge shrinks every time I open it) makes this purchase even more urgent. Need to go shopping again tomorrow..."First method of estimating the intelligence of a ruler is to look at the men he has around him."
- Niccolo MachiavelliOgden, UT, USA
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@GrateEggspectations Found these, don't recall reading your canning post last year

https://eggheadforum.com/discussion/comment/2742976#Comment_2742976
https://eggheadforum.com/discussion/comment/2742472#Comment_2742472
canuckland -
@Canugghead
I knew you’d come up with something. Not sure if I didn’t post, if I posted in a prior year, or if I posted numerous times on separate threads. 😉 -
Peeled and canned whole. I use the hunts San marzano ones for anything that needs tomatoes.
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You could quarter them and dehydrate them if you have a dehydrator. They can be tossed into soups or chilies later.
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I just freeze mine rinsed whole with the stem scar cut off if I don’t have time to pressure can sauce or salsa. I just use zipper bags because I usually use them in a couple months so they don’t need the airlock. I keep the green and reds in separate bags just to minimize future hunting for the color I want.
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I canned several jars of tomato juice and several jars of salsa this summer. Both turned out great. Was going to do pasta sauce but ran outta tomatoes
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LBGE,SBGE, and a Mini makes three......Sweet home Alabama........ Stay thirsty my friends .
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Botch,Botch said:
Thanks for this too. I'd read years ago that "there is no way to economical way to freeze a tomato", and the fact that you can't buy frozen tomatoes in the market bears that out, but, doing it at home levels sounds like it works.caliking said:Back when we lived in IA, caliqueen grew 80 lbs of tomatoes annually. We started out blanching, and freezing, some. Then, we'd just freeze them, to make it simple. Still good in all kinds of stuff.A frozen tomato from your garden, will beat a store bought tomato, any damn day (fresh tomatoes still win for certain things, but you know what I mean).
Here in UT we're halfway thru green chile roasting season. Last year I was thinking about buying a chest freezer for the basement, but didn't make the jump. I need to do this, both to buy my annual bushel of chile (two, as I actually want to try icing a separate bushel immediately after roasting, as someone here (who sells his own salsa) recommended (sorry I can't remember your name/handle!).
Knowing I could freeze tomatoes while they're still in season, and make more homemade sausage than I currently have room for (that damn freezer compartment in my kitchen fridge shrinks every time I open it) makes this purchase even more urgent. Need to go shopping again tomorrow...
Just my 2 cents here on the chest freezer. Go with an upright unit if you have the vertical space. They take-up approximately the same footprint and are much easier to access and organize. The the chest freezer I had you needed to move 4 things around to get to one, then all the others would fall to the bottom. Mine was a manual defrost so during that time I found all the artifacts that hit the bottomRick in Tampa
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