As well as the luscious Marmande variety, I also grow the Roma tomato so with these two varieties I make my paste. Homemade tomato paste has a deep, mellow, caramelized flavor quite unlike the acidity of store-bought tomato paste. It makes the world of difference when added to your favorite dishes. I core and quarter my tomatoes, depending on the variety but you can just quarter and remove the stem end.–Rosetta Costantino

A metal sheet pan covered with spread-out tomato paste.

Homemade Tomato Paste

4.73 / 43 votes
Homemade tomato paste is surprisingly easy to make at home and a great way to use up lots of tomatoes. All you need are tomatoes, salt, olive oil, a food mill, and a flair for classic Italian goodness.
David Leite
CourseCondiments
CuisineItalian
Servings32 servings | 1 pint
Calories29 kcal
Prep Time50 minutes
Cook Time5 hours 10 minutes
Total Time6 hours

Equipment

  • 1-pint canning jar

Ingredients 

  • 10 pounds very ripe plum or regular tomatoes, cored
  • 1 to 4 tablespoons kosher salt, depending on personal preference
  • 1 tablespoon extra-virgin olive oil for the baking sheet, plus more for topping off the jar

Instructions 

  • If you're using plum tomatoes, cut them in half lengthwise. If you're using round tomatoes, cut them into quarters.
  • Remove the seeds with your fingers. Place all the tomatoes in an 8-quart stainless steel pot and bring to a boil, stirring occasionally, until the tomatoes release their juices. Boil briskly for 30 minutes until the tomatoes soften and the juices reduce.
  • Pass the tomatoes through a food mill fitted with a fine disk to remove the skins and any remaining seeds.
  • Return the tomato purée to the same pot and place it over high heat. Stir in the salt, reduce the heat to medium-ish, and simmer, stirring frequently, until the purée has reduced to about 1 quart (4 cups), 45 to 55 minutes. You'll need to turn the heat down as the purée thickens to prevent it from furiously bubbling and splattering.
  • Lightly slick a 12-by-17-inch rimmed nonaluminum baking sheet with oil. Using a rubber spatula, spread the thick tomato purée in an even layer. It should cover the entire baking sheet.
  • Preheat the oven to 200ºF (93ºC) and turn on the convection fan if you have one. Position a rack in the center.
  • Place the baking sheet in the oven and bake for 30 minutes.
  • Remove from the heat (keep the oven on) and stir the purée with the rubber spatula so that it dries evenly and doesn’t form a crust. Respread the purée with the spatula into a rectangle about 1/8 inch thick. Be fanatical about spreading it evenly; if any part is too thin, it may burn. Because of evaporation, the purée will no longer cover the baking sheet. With a paper towel, remove any bits of tomato that cling to the edges or exposed bottom of the baking sheet.
  • Return the baking sheet to the oven and continue baking until the tomato purée is no longer saucelike but very thick, stiff, and a little sticky, about 3 more hours. Every 20 minutes, stir and carefully respread the purée as before. The rectangle will become progressively smaller as the remaining water evaporates. Taste and, if desired, add more salt.
  • Let the tomato paste cool to room temperature.
  • Use a spoon and move the paste to a clean jar, tamping it down to make sure there are no air pockets. Level the surface with the back of the spoon. Cover the surface completely with olive oil so that the paste isn't exposed. Screw the lid on the jar and refrigerate. It will keep in the refrigerator for at least a year.
  • When using this homemade tomato paste, dole it out by the teaspoon to add depth to dishes. Always wait to salt the dish until after you've added the tomato paste as it will bring quite a lot of concentrated saltiness. Each time you scoop out some tomato paste from your jar, level the surface of the paste and top it with more oil so the remaining tomato paste is completely submerged.

Notes

Sun-Dried Tomato Paste variation

In Calabria, even today, conserva, or tomato paste, is dried under the hot Mediterranean sun. The tomato purée is simply spread on a large wooden slab and brought inside at night. It dries to a thick paste in 3 to 4 days. If you’re expecting several consecutive days of 100ºF (38ºC) weather, you can dry the tomato purée under the sun instead of in the oven. Follow the recipe in every other respect, and set the baking sheets out in the sun at step 4. Be sure to bring the baking sheet in at night to protect the tomatoes from getting damp.
My Calabria

Adapted From

My Calabria

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Nutrition

Serving: 1 tablespoonCalories: 29 kcalCarbohydrates: 6 gProtein: 1 gFat: 1 gSaturated Fat: 1 gMonounsaturated Fat: 1 gSodium: 225 mgFiber: 2 gSugar: 4 g

Nutrition information is automatically calculated, so should only be used as an approximation.

Tried this recipe?Mention @leitesculinaria or tag #leitesculinaria!
Recipe © 2010 Rosetta Costantino. Photo © 2010 Sara Remington. All rights reserved.


Recipe Testers’ Reviews

Finally, something new to do with summer’s bounty of tomatoes. The instructions for this homemade tomato paste recipe look daunting but its simplicity itself to make providing you set aside the time.

As it was too early for my tomatoes when I tested this recipe, I cut a deal with the local farmers’ market for overripe tomatoes. Coring and seeding the tomatoes was a simple matter, as was cooking them down until the juice was released. I think a food mill was the best choice to remove the skins from the cooked tomatoes, as it did a bang-up job providing me with a smooth purée with nothing extra in it.

I used a slotted spoon to remove the tomatoes from the pot to avoid excess liquid going through the mill. The recipe didn’t specify whether or not to add the excess juice back to cook down with the purée, so I left most of it in. I let it cook down for a full hour because it was so runny. The timing was spot-on, baking it low and slow with no burning. For all that work, I got three 125-milliliter jars of tomato conserva.

I used the full amount of salt and they’re not kidding when they say it’s salty. I’ll definitely be making this again when tomato season is here, but I might cut down on the salt a little, as 1 heaping teaspoon paste seasoned an entire large pot of lamb ragu such that I didn’t need to use any additional salt. I can’t wait to use this in more dishes.

It’s time-consuming but very satisfying to make your own tomato paste and so much better than store-bought! Now I know why my Calabrese grandmother took the time to do this, even though she single-handedly raised seven children who each had different food preferences and each received a personalized meal every evening. She never really left her kitchen except to sleep or garden or tend the chickens, so I guess she didn’t mind the time it took to make her tomato paste from scratch.

Of course, she dried her purée under the sun, never in the oven as I did. And she used her own homegrown Jersey tomatoes, which are full of flavor and taste like actual tomatoes.

I was fortunate enough to have a few pounds left in my freezer from my harvest last season, and so I used them, prorating the recipe based on the number of tomatoes I had on hand, which was about 3 pounds. This produced a fairly small amount of paste, but at least I was able to experience the process and know I can be successful with larger amounts in the future.

The only suggestion I have is to use an offset spatula when spreading and respreading the paste on the baking sheet. This tool will give you a nice even layer, just like spreading icing on a cake, which is important for the paste to develop evenly in the oven.

Every year come late summer, a delivery truck would arrive at our neighbor’s, and bushel after bushel of Roma tomatoes would be unloaded and carried down the narrow urban driveway into their backyard. A peek between the webbing of our rear fence revealed a stunning sea of shiny, plump red jewels nestled in straw-colored wooden-slat baskets arranged in neat rows at their basement kitchen door.

This is where Signora Catania’s annual canning assembly line began. In her cool, dark basement with the red custom terrazzo floor were oversized kettles and tools, most of which I’d never seen in my own mother’s kitchen. I’d ask my mother, “Why do they need so many tomatoes?” She answered that they were “putting up the sauce.”

Not until I was older did I understand that she was preserving the fleeting fruit for use during winter when no self-respecting Italian homemaker would use the pink, mealy hothouse tomatoes that came in cellophane-wrapped green plastic baskets.

I now practice my own scaled-down version of the preservation ritual, but it never occurred to me, being an apartment dweller and all, that perhaps making conserva di pomodori (homemade tomato paste) would be more efficient and versatile given my limited storage space. This recipe sparked a new approach in my household.

Since this was an experiment, I halved the recipe and used the best plum tomatoes I could find at the market. To speed production, I used an apple corer to spear the tomatoes, deftly removing the stems and cores in neat cylinders. The times were accurate, even for half the recipe. I used a 1/4 sheet pan (9 by 13 inches) rather than a 12-by-17-inch one and evaporated the purée on a rack in the bottom third of the oven. After it was cooled, the final product fit in a sterilized half-pint Ball jar. This is the perfect amount for me to use until late summer ushers in the stars of the crops.

The final conserva is indeed salty (I used the full amount of salt) but it has a wonderfully rich, sweet, and complex tomato flavor when compared to store-bought versions of tomato paste. I love learning new techniques and this is a very valuable recipe when endeavoring to preserve summertime.




About David Leite

I count myself lucky to have received three James Beard Awards for my writing as well as for Leite’s Culinaria. My work has also appeared in The New York Times, Martha Stewart Living, Saveur, Bon Appétit, Gourmet, Food & Wine, Yankee, Los Angeles Times, Chicago Tribune, The Washington Post, and more.


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162 Comments

  1. Can you can the above recipe in jars and cook in water to preserve so you don’t have to keep in the refrigerator.

    1. Hi Yolanda, this is my go-to resource for canning questions, http://nchfp.uga.edu. You could also freeze the paste in ice cube trays and have recipe sized portions ready for use.

    2. Hi Yolanda. First, for any food safety question like this one should use a discussion thread like this as a source of ideas to research, but not as an authority. Yes, chase the canning links, don’t bet your life on anything we say here.

      That said, botulism is the primary canning risk, and is less of an issue below threshold pH acid levels. I ferment my own hot sauce, and use a pH meter to insure that even at the start botulism is not a threat. Tomatoes are generally acidic enough that one doesn’t worry, and these tomatoes are unusually concentrated, increasing that acidity.

      Now, look at tradition. These preserves were not chilled in Sicily; it wasn’t an option. On the other hand, they were much more heavily salted than our modern formulations. They were often stored without air contact, if one counts the layer of oil as protection.

      The classic trap is to apply modern improvements to traditional recipes, without understanding the consequences. Most botulism deaths in Alaska come from using a plastic pail where a seal skin would have been used before.

      1. Thank you, Dave. And, Yolanda, I cannot stress enough what Dave says: We are a source of recipes, but we are not health experts. We do our damnedest in researching, but you should always, always go to the health pros if you have questions.

  2. Dear David. I’m so happy to find your site. I’m interested in your grandma’s recipe. I love rustic old school cooking. Larousse has been my go to forever. Anything old school is important to new school. I have used your site to train my daughter. Thank you.

    1. steve, welcome! I so glad you found us. And if there is anything your daughter needs, please let me know.

  3. 4 stars
    I actually used a scale and weighed ten pounds of tomatoes. I ended up with one pint. It didn’t look like it was going to fill a pint, but it did. I thought the salt was needed to help preserve it? If not, next time I will just cut the salt down a bit. I covered the jar with evoo. Used it yesterday in my pot roast gravy. Was fine..just didn’t have to add more salt. I’m tomatoed out! Made 8 quarts of sauce and 22 pints of ketchup, plus the paste! I give the ketchup out as gifts. Just can’t beat homemade (sorry Heinz, you can keep your high fructose corn syrup). Other than being a bit salty, it was still good. I will follow this recipe again and just cut back on the salt next time.

    1. Vicki, wow! I thought I was a tomato-product nut. (I’m not crazy about eating raw tomatoes.) I think you have done your Love Fruit duty for the season. Re: the salt, my guess it’s used more for drawing out the liquid so that that the tomatoes can concentrate in flavor and texture. If you make it again let me know how it turns out.

    2. Vicki, I am looking for a good ketchup recipe to replace the Heinz ketchup (or Masterfoods Big Red in Australia). Would you be willing to share yours?

        1. Thanks David, I have am processing 10kg of romas into paste as I type, so I will see what that comes down to and work back with your recipe.