How to prevent liquid-y marinara sauce

How to prevent liquid-y marinara sauce - Modern medical equipment for safety taking of blood

I made marinara sauce using NYT Marinara Sauce Recipe, which recommends the 28oz of DOP certified San Marzano tomatoes for pizza sauce.

It tasted great, but unfortunately it had more liquid than I was hoping. So I was wondering where I went wrong..

  • Should I not have squeezed as much as I did?
  • Should I have used pan larger than 11 inch diameter? (it felt like the sauce wasn't that low).
  • Should I have pre-processed the squashed tomatoes through a strainer?


Best Answer

You could cook it longer, in a shallow pan, to evaporate some of the water.




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How do you keep marinara from getting watery?

Use all-purpose flour in a roux, and save cornstarch, rice flour, tapioca starch, or arrowroot starch for a 1:1 slurry. Add more tomato paste or tomato sauce: To thicken a sauce made with fresh tomatoes, use a tablespoon or two of canned tomato paste or one fourteen-ounce can of tomato sauce.

How do I stop my sauce from weeping?

In the early stage of cooking, the water is held rather "loosely" by the corn starch granules, and when the mixture cools, the water simply runs out. To stop weeping, just be sure to bring the corn starch mixture to almost a full boil over medium heat and, stirring constantly, for 1 minute.

How do I stop my pasta from being runny?

To avoid watery spaghetti on the plate, drain spaghetti, do not rinse. Dump the spaghetti into the sauce. Make sure its al dente. Wait about 10 minutes and serve.



Marinara Sauce the Easy Way | Chef Jean-Pierre




More answers regarding how to prevent liquid-y marinara sauce

Answer 2

Marinara sauce isn't ideal for pizza for the very reason you describe - it's too watery. Pasta sauces need to be runny enough to coat a great deal of surface area, also pasta will absorb a bit of water from the sauce even when fully cooked. A pizza has very little surface area compared to pasta, and the base isn't going to absorb much liquid so a thicker sauce is better.

Canned tomatoes vary in the amount of water in them, good quality tomatoes won't have added water, but the tomatoes may have a higher water content depending on a number of factors. Some tomatoes are thick enough to use for pizza straight out of the can, others need a bit of help. If it's not thick enough you can: - Cook the sauce down, uncovered to boil off the water. This is effective but takes time, how long depends on how much water needs to evaporate - Add tomato paste. A dab of good quality tomato paste will add some zesty flavor, and it's very quick. Just remember to add it at the beginning to some oil and fry it off to get rid of any bitter flavors

I personally use the second method and my pizza sauce takes all of 10 minutes to make. It's a squirt of tomato paste (it comes in tubes in the UK), a clove of garlic, a can of plain italian chopped tomatoes, a pinch of herbs, a small dab of honey, and a twist of fresh pepper. I fry off the paste in some olive oil along with the garlic, then add everything else and simmer for 5 minutes and comes out great every single time. I know of people who crush whole tomatoes and cook them for a couple of hours and they don't get a better result - it's the quality of the tomatoes that makes the difference.

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