The River Cottage Preserves Handbook
This was a simple recipe. Quarter the tomatoes, roast on a cake sheet with onions, garlic, oil, sugar, salt and herbs. Run it through the food mill. Heat to boiling, then process in sterilized jars. See the book for the official recipe as well as the recommended processing times and method. Then eat it plain as tomato soup (or with a bit of cream to be fancy), as a base for soups, curries, sauces, etc, or just look at it lovingly. So good.
27 pints and 12 quarts was the count for the three of us (mom, sister, self)-- we each did a quadruple batch of the recipe. Then a neighbor came over to do a quadruple batch while everything was out, then my sister in law put up her tomatoes the same way a couple days later. I have a feeling this will become a regular recipe in ways to use tomatoes at autumn's end.
I'm still trying to get caught up with the canning posts but instead am finding myself farther behind. As the harvest is coming to a close I am trying to get all the recipes in that I/we had bookmarked and promised to try this season with limited time after a full-time work schedule, out of state travel, trainings, and social lives. I think I'm averaging about one batch of preserves per week so stay tuned for delights like piccalilli, peach butter, and pickled onions as I work my way through the photos and scrawled notes.
PS. If it's possible, I think I'm falling head over heels for someone while we work our way through River Cottage and various other canning books. I never would have thought to label romance with glass jars, a delicate kitchen dance, messy hands and recipes... but it's perfect.

Aww :)
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