Using Canned San Marzano Tomatoes Vs. Regular Canned Tomatoes
I have never used San Marzano tomatoes yet. I recently bought a cookbook and most of the recipes call for San Marzano Tomatoes. They are more expensive. Is it really worth paying the extra money for them?
USA Prices
$3.82 28 oz. can Centos brand D.O.P. Certified San Marzano tomatoes From my local market. D.O.P. Certified is guaranteed they are grown in the Mount Vesuvius Volcanic soil.
$1.44 28 oz. can Contadina brand tomatoes from local market.
What is so special about these? I get mixed reviews on the net. One person says it is a bunch of high brow people showing off and others say you can take a can of these and grind them in a food processor and drink it like tomato juice.
I would like a concrete answer from somebody that has used San Marzano tomatoes enough times to say definitely worth it or not. I will be making Pizza Sauce and Spaghetti Sauces.
Best Answer
San Marzano tomatoes are generally preferred for Italian tomato sauces because they are denser, fruitier, have a slightly lower acidity, and break down well when cooked. I've made both fresh and fresh-cooked tomato sauces from the San Marzanos my mother-in-law grows, and would prefer these over just about any other tomato variety for sauce-making (dry-farmed Early Girls are also pretty good).
However, in my personal experience trying several of the canned and boxed varieties of San Marzanos available to me, they're not worth paying more than double what more common varieties of tomatoes cost. For example, last week I made my standard "quick tomato pasta sauce" using boxed San Marzanos, and did not find it notably better than other high-quality boxed tomatoes (such as ones from Pomi) which cost $2 less. My judgement is that many of the qualities which make them a superior tomato when cooked fresh are destroyed in the canning process.
On the other hand, you're comparing them to Contadina, a rather low-quality brand. Given that specific comparison, I would expect the San Marzanos, even the mass-market Italian brands, to be notably superior in quality. So if that's your actual comparison, I would say go for the San Marzanos.
According to an article in Cook's Illustrated from several years ago (CI archives are behind a paywall, so no link), this is partly because San Marzanos, like other imported tomatoes, need to be canned at higher temperatures in tomato puree instead of at lower temperatures in tomato juice due to obscure US produce import restrictions. So it's also possible that canned San Marzanos can, in fact, be excellent, just not the ones commonly available in the USA.
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Quick Answer about "Using Canned San Marzano Tomatoes Vs. Regular Canned Tomatoes"
Besides their sweetness and lower acidity, San Marzano tomatoes have firm pulp, easily removed skin, and less seeds. Authentic San Marzano tomatoes are only sold canned peeled whole or cut in half, so if they're puréed, chopped, or diced, then they're not the real deal (see the following point).Can San Marzano tomatoes substitute?
If you cannot find San Marzano Tomatoes or do not have time to prepare them, we recommend using either Cherry Tomatoes, Roma Tomatoes, Sun-dried Tomatoes, or Tomato Paste. As with any ingredient substitution, make sure you know the differences in flavor and texture before deciding what to use.Can I use San Marzano tomatoes instead of crushed tomatoes?
So, if you happen to have some fresh tomatoes on hand, you can easily make your own. Paste tomatoes, like Roma and San Marzano work best, but any tomato will do. You'll need approximately 2-3/4 pounds of tomatoes for every 28-oz. can that you need to replace.Are San Marzano tomatoes that much better?
We taste-tested to find out if the fancy regional Italian tomatoes really are better than other canned varieties. We've heard it all before. San Marzanos are the best canned tomatoes in the world, the cr\xe8me de la cr\xe8me, the gold standard by which all others must be judged.What is so special about Marzano tomatoes?
They are prized in Italy and across the world for their thick flesh and sweet flavour. The tomatoes also have a lower water content and fewer seeds than some others, which makes them a great choice for canning and using whole in rich tomato pasta and pizza sauces.What Tomato Do I Use? | Fake food vs real San Marzano
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Answer 2
I think San Marzanos have more taste but that's subjective and also based on the season. Canned tomatoes are frozen in time. Right now, the supermarket Romas are probably at their peak.
I have had cow's milk mozzarella and buffalo mozzarella. They taste different and are both good but I am perfectly OK with cow's milk mozzarella. It's like wine. Is red wine better than white? Even if you pick one, what was best might not be next year...or next bottle.
Store bought fresh vs. canned.
I will say making sauce from fresh romas is a softer more subtle and fresher taste. It's also more work. You have to ripen them and then steam/boil them to remove the skins. I core out the stems and seeds. The chefs on TV seem to throw the whole thing in, stems and all. Canned Marzanos may still have skins as each can can vary in quality. I like to dice half of the fresh ones and puree the other half. When I buy my Romas, I know what I am getting. That said, I don't always know what I am getting because sometimes store bought romas have no taste.
A typically use La Valles which are DOP and Centos which are not. I came across another brand in the store which I need to try. I avoid American made canned goods due to the possibility of BPA in the can liners. The Euros have banned BPA.
To be honest I have used San Marzanos almost exclusively for so long that I can't even remember what "plain ol'" canned tomatoes taste like on pizza.
I make my own yeast dough from scratch with Antimo Caputo tipo 00* flour (blue bag) and I do a 3 day cold rise. My sauce also contains salt, pepper, basil, oregano, garlic and red wine vinegar. Caputo is an Italian company but some of its flours are actually American grown.
My toppings are usually pecorino-romano, mozzarella, mushrooms, red and green bell peppers and red onions...and of course tomato sauce. You have to go easy with the pecorino and it's very tart and can overwhelm the pizza if you use too much. And of course, you will have a nasty body odor if you use too much garlic. Garlic and onions are also prime instigators of IBS, irritable bowel syndrome.
So the answer: To me they are worth it. To somebody else, maybe not. To somebody else, the idea of eating pizza without buffalo mozzarella might be unthinkable.
- Tipo 00 just means the flour is milled very finely...not coarse. You wouldn't use Tipo00 for say...Irish soda bread but the flour could be milled to Tipo 00.
Answer 3
I can't speak to the canned variety, but my neighbor grows San Marzanos and gave me a big bag last fall. They were fantastic, much better for sauce than any of the other tomatoes I've grown. I'll be planting them myself this year.
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