Fresh Backyard Tomato Sauce with Farm Fresh Sausage

Standard
Fresh Backyard Tomato Sauce with Farm Fresh Sausage

This Sunday, I made the Fresh “Backyard” Tomato Sauce I got from my friend.  This year’s tomato crop wasn’t all that great according to some, but the backyard sauce I got from my friend Lauren was tangy, and I really like it that way.  Usually, I deglaze with red wine vinegar, but I don’t if the sauce is tangy already.  I knew this sauce could stand up to some extra flavorful ingredients and so I started with my “mire poire”.  Today I am also adding the farm fresh sausages to the sauce which I get from the Amish in Pennsylvania.

In a big pot (4 quarts or more) begin:

Cover the bottom of the pot with olive oil, how much? until the bottom is covered, then stop!

1 medium or large onion, sliced and sauteed in the oil over medium heat, always heat the oil before adding onions.

4 or 5 or 6 or even more cloves of crushed, sliced or minced garlic, added to the sauteed onions.

1 or 2 stalks of celery, cleaned sliced, diced, and practically minced. 2 or 3 small/medium carrots, also sliced, diced,  and practically minced.  Add celery and carrot to the browned onions and garlic.  We want everything to get nice and soft.  Stir it up at regular intervals.

1 package of Baby Bella mushrooms, rinsed and washed out in water, and sliced.  Add them to the pot and cook down the mushrooms stirring everything up, cooked well.

3 jars off “Backyard” Tomato Sauce added to the pot, mix it up to combine well.

Top the sauce with a bay leaf, some oregano and some fresh basil to your liking.

Add salt and pepper to your taste.

Simmer low and for at least an hour.

image

Sauteed onions, garlic, celery, and carrots in olive oil.

image

Cooking down the sliced mushrooms in the onion, garlic, celery and carrot mixture. I always get the Baby Bella (Crimini) mushrooms when they are available.

image

image

I add 1 bay leaf, lots of fresh basil and oregano to the sauce. Simmer, low heat stirring regularly.

image

This is my farm fresh sausage, cut up because the farm does not make links, just an average 1lb big sausage link you cut up yourself. I baked the sausage whole in the toaster oven at 350 for 30 minutes turning it once, and then I cut it up as you see before adding them to the sauce.

image

Sauce with all the ingredients mixed in.

image

Rigatoni with home made “backyard” sauce and fresh sausages from the farm. The basil was from my herb garden, the oregano from Italy, bay leaf is from my Aunt’s Laural Bay tree in Sicily. Yes I smuggled the bay leaves in.

Unknown's avatar

About The Sicilian Penthouse

I am a first generation Italian-American, who grew up in the Bushwick section of Brooklyn on Stanhope and Knickerbocker Avenue during the 50's and 60's. Growing up, we spoke English ("American") and our Sicilian Dialect from the town of Santa Ninfa. On our block we had many Sicilians who came from the same town as well as others who came from Castelvetrano, Santa Magherita, Cattabelotta, Mazzara, Castellamare del Golfo, etc... The "Americans" were mostly Irish Americans, and very little Spanish. We loved being American! and learning about being American. We loved going to school, PS86K on Irving Avenue, and making more American friends. It was a GREAT Era! We played on our block all day long and when we were done playing and hanging out on the stoop with our friends, we would go upstairs and have dinner with our parents. First we had a pasta dish, then we had a meat dish with a vegetable like asparagus or string beans or maybe cardones. We also would have some kind of a salad. Salads like tomato salad, or potato and green bean salad, or sometimes a regular lettuce and tomato salad. There were lots of vegetables in all our foods, like pasta piselli, pasta e fave, pasta "cu" broccolo, pasta e broccolo bianco. Stuffed peppers, stuffed artichokes, stuffed mushrooms, broccoli rabe, on and on.... I'm here to bring back these wonderful memories and the foods we ate. Hope you enjoy, "e mangia mangia!!!!" P.S. Olive Oil and Red Wine Vinegar IS Italian Dressing! Margaret Romolo Zukor

Leave a comment