Tomato Spackle

Tomato Spackle Categories:
Nb persons: 0
Yield: about 2 1/2 cups
Preparation time:
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Tomato Spackle Adapted from Charred and Scruffed (Artisan, 2012) I grew up thinking there were two kinds of tomato preparations used for finishers. The first was ketchup, which I know many people love, but it’s not one of my favorites. The second was tomato jelly, which is something that is often presented as a house gift, and then, years later, you end up saying, “Hey, honey, this has been on the shelf since 2004. Is it OK to get rid of it?” This spackle is as intense as ketchup but so much more layered and nuanced in flavor — just as things usually are when you make them from scratch. 1 PointsPlus® value per (2 Tbsp) serving Ingredients
    3 Tbsp  extra virgin olive oil
    5  garlic cloves, crushed and peeled
    1/2 cup  finely chopped Spanish onion
    1 tsp  sea or kosher salt, or to taste
    2 Tbsp  tomato paste
    5 cups  coarsely chopped, drained canned tomatoes
    1 cup  chopped, drained sun-dried tomatoes packed in oil
    2 Tbsp  red wine vinegar
    1 tsp  dried oregano
    1 Tbsp  granulated sugar
    1 tsp  garlic salt
      Freshly ground black pepper
    1/4 cup  finely chopped fresh flat-leaf parsley

Instructions
Heat 2 tablespoons oil in a large saucepan over medium heat until hot. Add garlic and cook until lightly browned, about 2 minutes. Add onion, season with salt and cook until translucent, about 3 minutes.
Add tomato paste and cook, stirring, for 1 minute. Add canned and sun-dried tomatoes, red wine vinegar, oregano, sugar, and garlic salt and cook until tomatoes have broken down and juices are reduced by half, about 10 minutes. Season with pepper to taste and additional salt if necessary.
Using an immersion blender, blitz mixture for 3 seconds, or just until coarsely puréed; spackle should still be chunky. Or transfer to a regular blender and pulse to a coarse purée.
Spread mixture in an even 1/2-inch-thick layer on a parchment-lined dehydrator tray (or trays) and dry in dehydrator at 105°F for 3 hours, or until spackle is consistency of tomato paste. Alternatively, spread on parchment-lined baking sheet, put in convection oven set at lowest setting, prop door ajar with handle of wooden spoon, and dry for 3 hours, or until spackle is consistency of tomato paste.
Using a rubber spatula, scrape spackle into a bowl or other container. Stir in parsley and remaining tablespoon of olive oil. Spackle can be used right away, but for best flavor, refrigerate in a tightly sealed container for at least 1 day, or up to 4 days, before using.

Recipe uploaded with Shop'NCook for iPhone.

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