This is part two of the only Meat Sauce recipe you’ll ever need. It’s an extremely detailed (but still simple and easy) recipe for my Grandma’s homemade, Italian Sunday Sauce and this seriously is the very best sauce you’ll ever taste. This second part is all about adding the meatballs and fall-apart-tender pork for your sauce as well as the secret ingredient and putting it all together!
Course dinner, Entree
Cuisine Family, Italian, Sunday Sauce
Prep Time 15 minutesminutes
Cook Time 3 hourshours
Total Time 3 hourshours
Servings 42-ish meatballs, a whole bunch of pork and a ton of sauce!
6 28oz.cans of tomato puree- each can is 1 lb. and 12 oz.my mom says she learn it as 3 cans of tomato puree and 3 cans of tomato sauce
Baking soda
1large onionremove the skin and leave it whole (note from Jessy- I cut off the ends as close to the root as possible and just peel off the first layer so that it doesn't fall apart as the sauce cooks. Rosie always told me to poke holes with the tip of your knife all over the onion so that the juices come out. Don't use a purple or red onion!)
Basil
Romano cheese
Instructions
Put the tomato puree into a big sauce kettle. Rinse the cans out with water by flushing water between each can. In the end you end up with about 1 ½ cans of water- red water from the puree that is left in the cans. (note from Jessy- you’ll start with a half can of water because as you flush it through the other cans it doubles in volume. As you flush them through and the cans fill up add then into the pot and then fill another half can with water and start the process over. So you’ll fill approximately 1 ½ cans of water in all).
You pour these 1 ½ cans of water into the kettle of sauce- how much water you add determines how thick your sauce will be. If you end up with more water it's ok, it will cook down.
Now cook the kettle of sauce on the stove. Start the stove on high and as soon as it boils put the stove down to medium. You don't want to keep it boiling because it will burn the sauce.
Then you stir it a little- see if it's the right thickness. You may think the sauce is too thick- if it is, then add water by the glass until it's the thickness that you want.
(note from Jessy- This is important:) The sauce must boil first.- you can taste it with your finger and you'll notice a sour tomato taste- it's the acids from the tomato.
Then add 1 level teaspoon of baking soda into the kettle of sauce and stir it- this takes the acid out. You'll notice it starts to foam up at the top of the sauce. You can scrape the foam off its too much. (note from Jessy- then you'll reduce the heat to medium low).
Then when the sauce stops boiling and settles down you taste it again. If it's still to tomato-ey or sour or acidy add a little more baking soda. It takes about 10-15 minutes for the foam to cook down- that is, if you don't remove it. You can also start out by adding ½ teaspoon of baking soda at a time and test the taste of the sauce and continue to add small amounts of baking soda because too much baking soda will make the sauce bitter (note from Jessy- This is SUPER important- trust me, you don't want it to be too bitter!).
Keep checking the sauce- you don't want it to boil too long or it will burn. As soon as it boils, reduce the heat so the sauce settles.
After the meatballs and pork brown and are taken out of the fry pan, drained and the bits and pieces of onions and things from the pan are removed, add the meat to the sauce along with some of the liquid gold and mix everything well (note from Jessy- It doesn't give a measurement of how much liquid gold to add but it was about half of the liquid gold that I made and then I froze the rest.). When its cooked the grease will come to the top in a couple hours.
Now add a whole onion- don't cut it- into the sauce kettle. Peel the skin off and put it in whole and let it cook in there. The onion gives the sauce a "sweet taste." (note from Jessy- I also remember Grandma adding a few pieces of peeled garlic that she;s poked with the tip of her knife into the sauce and then picking them out at the end. I usually press the garlic in)
Then add ½ tablespoon of dried sweet basil or 5-6 leaves of fresh basil- you tear them and put them in. (note from Jessy- I remember my Grandma telling me a while ago to wait until the end to add the basil because it adds a bitterness to the sauce at it cooks down. Do what you think is best but I always wait until the end).
Then add Romano cheese- this is in place of salt. You sprinkle it on and stir it in. (note from Jessy- I always wait until the end for this step as well).
Then Bring the sauce to a boil again and as soon as it boils lower the heat, put on a cover and let it simmer for a couple of hours. Do not let it through again- so check it every now and then.
When it's all cooked the grease will come to the top- it's done! Taste it to be sure!
Notes
Some people add sugar instead of baking soda and all this does is make it sweet and we don't want that!Never add salt to the sauce because there's salt in the grease and salt in the cheese.The other half of the liquid gold is great to save for the next time you make sauce or if you want to make extra sauce. You start out by putting the grease into a fry pan- it has all the flavors- and then add it to a pot of tomato puree as if you're starting over. ie- if you want to make a couple cans of puree, add onion etc.