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| General Cooking (rec.food.cooking) For general food and cooking discussion. Foods of all kinds, food procurement, cooking methods and techniques, eating, etc. |
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Ted Campanelli wrote:
The longer you simmer the sauce the less bitter/acidic the sauce will be. In addition it blends the flavors more. The longer, or the shorter. Rule of thumb is to cook fresh tomatoes either less than 15 minutes or more than 3 hours. In between is when the sauce is most likely to have a bitter tinge. Especially in the summertime when good tomatoes are available, I like to cook the non-tomato components of a sauce (like the onions, garlic, mushrooms, or whatever) first, then add the tomatoes and fresh herbs at the end for no more than about ten minutes. -aem |
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tried using sugar but it was only slightly effective.
Add a carrot or two. Whole (so you can remove it) or cut into retrieveable pieces. They have natural sweetness and will also add some flavor to your sauce. This is an old Italian Granny type trick. I think I picked it up from Lidia Bastianich. |
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"rosso" wrote in news:FEEcg.19743$M94.15423@newsfe3-
gui.ntli.net: I find some tomato sauces very bitter and acidic. I don't have easy access to cheap tomatoes so I use canned ones. How do I ensure my sauces will not be bitter? I tried using sugar but it was only slightly effective. Someone told me to use fromage freis. Does this work and it must change the character and colour of the sauce? Caramelize some onions, they will sweeten the sauce naturally. -- Charles The significant problems we face cannot be solved at the same level of thinking we were at when we created them. Albert Einstein |
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