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I've been searching online for a recipe for a robust garlic marinara sauce to no avail. Does anyone have any tips on how to make this kind of thick, hearty sauce from scratch?

This is what I've tried so far:

Tomato Paste (I don't have a blender)
1/2 teaspoon butter
1 cup diced onions
1/4 cup diced red chilies
1/4 cup whole milk cream
3 cloves of garlic
Fresh Basil

I fry the garlic and onions in olive oil and then add the tomato paste, chilies, basil and cream. It has not turned into the hearty kind of sauce one imagins on an Italian dinner table. Does anyone have any tips?

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4 Answers

up vote 12 down vote accepted

Ditch the cream and onions, and don't use tomato paste. Take a whole bulb of garlic, peel the cloves and leave them whole.

Heat a cup of good olive oil over medium heat and add the garlic, stirring occasionally until very lightly brown and blistered: be careful not to burn it!

Then add 4 28oz cans of chopped/crushed Italian tomatoes and some chilli, being careful of bubbling oil, and simmer very gently for 4 hours. Season well.

This method produces a thick, intense sauce that you can use for pretty much anything. Keep in the fridge for a week or the freezer for months.

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also found this recipe online. looks similar, and might help at the "Season well" part : thepioneerwoman.com/cooking/2012/09/spaghetti-sauce – codeninja Jan 24 at 16:25

I have always used crushed tomatoes (from a can) in addition to tomato paste. It comes out fairly chunky, but I can still ladle it and pasta will hold it.

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Crushed or chopped tomatoes will be much better than cream, just simmer for ages and put through a sieve if you want it to be smooth. – vwiggins Nov 16 '12 at 10:18

I always use the whole tomatoes in the can, crushing each just a bit by hand as I dump them into the pot. It always cooks up very thick and hearty, and the occasional small chunks of tomato that remain are soft enough to be almost sauce consistency, yet add wonderful, tangy flavor bombs throughout the meal.

Use those and the whole garlic cloves that @ElendilTheTall recommends in his/her excellent answer, and you won't find out how delicious it is after having been frozen and reheated, because you won't have any leftovers!

I've always had great results with Hunts canned tomato products, and America's Test Kitchen confirmed this when its experts and novices all picked Hunts when they blind-tested six brands at various price points.

I won't recommend for or against on the cream, as I can't stand the taste of dairy products once they've been heated up, so go with your preferences and/or the experts in here as to whether you keep using it as you fine-tune your recipe.

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You can save money making a sauce similar to thick and Hearty steak sauce at home.

Take two small jars, place 3/4 cup orange juice, 1 cup raisins and zest from one orange in a sauce pan. Turn heat to high and bring the mixture to a boil. Turn off heat. Let the mixture cool for 30 minutes.

Move the raisins mixture into the blender. Add one clove of garlic and 3 tbsp. mustard. Puree for two minutes. Pour back into the sauce pan.

Using the mixing spoon, add 1/4 cup vinegar, 4 tbsp. tomato puree, 4 tbsp. chili sauce, and 3 tbsp. honey. Bring to a boil and simmer for five minutes.

Take a clean spoon and taste the sauce. If it needs more honey, add another tablespoonful. Add salt and pepper to taste. Divide the steak sauce into the jars. Screw on the lids. Let cool before placing in cupboard or refrigerator.

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this seems to be a recipe for steak sauce, consisting primarily of orange and raisin flavours. How is that relevant to a request for pasta sauce consisting primarily of tomato and garlic flavours? – Kate Gregory Dec 28 '12 at 19:56

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