ormandj
Assistant Cook
Hi,
I've been making a lot of food lately, cooking that is. I've got some great cookbooks I am really enjoying! A lot of the recipes call for reductions, however, and I'm having some problems.
For instance, homemade pasta sauce. That's an easy one! I had a recipe that called for those little plum tomatos, reduced down, with some other ingrediants. I don't remember all of them offhand, but it's not that important.
I reduced it in a pan, on a lower heat. I had cut up the tomatoes pretty finely, put them in with the other "goodies". I think I added some water, along with seasoning. Whatever the recipe called for. :p What ended up happening was the tomatos seemed to kind of "dry up" around the edges of the pan, into some semi-crusty material. The sauce wasn't very "sauce" like, it was more like tomato-water, very runny. I see a lot of people's homemade sauce and it looks wonderful, so I know I'm doing something wrong.
Could someone give me a (good tasting) recipe for a nice tomato sauce, along with directions on how to cook it, to make a nice thick, rich sauce, with good flavor? I think the problem was my cooking method, the book wasn't clear on it. Everything I've ever made from that book was excellent, though, so I think the ingrediants weren't the problem. I think it was my lack of experience.
Thank you,
David
I've been making a lot of food lately, cooking that is. I've got some great cookbooks I am really enjoying! A lot of the recipes call for reductions, however, and I'm having some problems.
For instance, homemade pasta sauce. That's an easy one! I had a recipe that called for those little plum tomatos, reduced down, with some other ingrediants. I don't remember all of them offhand, but it's not that important.
I reduced it in a pan, on a lower heat. I had cut up the tomatoes pretty finely, put them in with the other "goodies". I think I added some water, along with seasoning. Whatever the recipe called for. :p What ended up happening was the tomatos seemed to kind of "dry up" around the edges of the pan, into some semi-crusty material. The sauce wasn't very "sauce" like, it was more like tomato-water, very runny. I see a lot of people's homemade sauce and it looks wonderful, so I know I'm doing something wrong.
Could someone give me a (good tasting) recipe for a nice tomato sauce, along with directions on how to cook it, to make a nice thick, rich sauce, with good flavor? I think the problem was my cooking method, the book wasn't clear on it. Everything I've ever made from that book was excellent, though, so I think the ingrediants weren't the problem. I think it was my lack of experience.
Thank you,
David