Tomato Passata Recipe | Passata di Pomodoro (2024)

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Tomato passata recipe is made with only 1 ingredient: THE TOMATO. In fact, Italian passata is made from ripe, juicy, flavorful tomatoes cooked briefly and then removed from the seeds and skin.

The result is a pure tomato juice with its pulp and nothing else, used in Italy as a base for many traditional recipes.

Stored in glass jars or bottles WITHOUT the addition of preservatives, flavorings, salt or water. Sometimes it comes with some fresh basil leaves but nothing more.

Tomato Passata Recipe | Passata di Pomodoro (1)

Tomato passata or Passata di Pomodoro, as it's called in Italian, is prized for its vibrant red color, rich tomato flavor, and versatility in cooking. It serves as a convenient and quick way to add the essence of tomatoes to various dishes, especially when fresh tomatoes are not in season or readily available.

Tomato passata is often sold in bottles or cans at grocery stores and can be found in the pasta sauce or canned goods section. It's a popular ingredient in Italian cuisine and is a staple in many traditional recipes.

Tomato Passata Recipe | Passata di Pomodoro (2)

Traditionally in Italy tomato passata recipe is made right at the end of summer, when there’s a glut of ripe, juicy red tomatoes. Fortunately you can find red ripe tomatoes throughout the year. Just choose the best quality of tomatoes.

Making your own passata allows you to control the quality and flavor of the sauce, and it is a great way to use up any surplus tomatoes from your garden or local farmer's market.

Tomato Passata Recipe | Passata di Pomodoro (3)

Jump to:
  • Ingredients
  • Tomato Passata Recipe: Instructions
  • Storage
  • Kitchen Tools and Equipment
  • Variations
  • Tips and Curiosities
  • Recipe Recap

Ingredients

  • Prep Time: 20 Min
  • Cook Time: 20 Min
  • Servings: 10
  • 2 Kg (4 lbs 4 oz) very ripe red tomatoes (San Marzano or cluster tomato)

Tomato Passata Recipe: Instructions

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Step 1) - For this tomato passata recipe we opted for very red and ripe San Marzano tomatoes. Check the tomatoes one by one, removing rotten, stained or bruised ones. Then wash them very well under running water. Finally put them in a bowl and start cutting in half.

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Step 2) - With a knife, remove the seeds and all the inner part of the tomato, as to make small tomato boats. This inner part is very watery, therefore it would make the tomato passata too liquid. So itàs better to remove it. Now place the tomatoes in a rather large pot .

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Step 3) - Let them cook over low heat, covering the pot with a lid and stirring from time to time, until they are smashed. Do not add water, it is not necessary. The water you see in the picture is that of the tomatoes. Now take a tomato strainer machine and, with a ladle, begin to place the cooked tomatoes in the special slot.

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Step 4) - Turn on the tomato strainer and with the help of the stomper apply some pressure on the tomatoes, to make them go down and enter the machine. As you can see on the left, the skins of the tomatoes and the residual seeds come out, which will be discarded. Instead, lower down, the tomato passata comes out ready to be used. If the passata is still too liquid, pass it through a fine mesh strainer, stirring with a tablespoon, until you get the consistency you want.

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Tomato passata is ready! If you prefer you can add some fresh basil leaves.

You can use it immediately in your delicious recipes or keep it stored for when you need it. If you don't know how to properly preserve the tomato passata, in the next steps we are going to explain the most correct and used method.

Storage

Here is how to sterilize the jars for storing the passata:
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Step 1) - Take a rather large pot, fill it with cold water, then put a kitchen towel on the bottom. Get hold of some glass jars with vacuum seal button lids. Immerse them in the cold water. Turn on the heat and bring the water to a boil. This way you'll sterilize the glass jars.

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Step 2) - After about 10 minutes from the boiling, remove them with kitchen tongs (which you left a few minutes immersed in boiling water to sterilize them) and put the jars to cool on a kitchen towel.

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Step 3) - Now, with the help of a funnel, start filling the jars with the tomato passata, but not to the brim. For 2 kg/4 lb+4 oz of tomatoes you'll get from 500 ml to 700 ml of tomato passata, based on its consistency.

The bump in the middle of the cap is a safety. Now if you press it, it sinks in and you feel it click. This means that the jars are not under vacuum, there is still air inside and bacteria could form.

So to preserve the tomato passata, you can do 3 things:

  1. freeze the jars, taking care not to fill them to the brim, and keep them for up to 3 months.
  2. keep them in the fridge and use the tomato passata within 1 week.
  3. make the vacuum: that is to completely remove the air so that bacteria do not develop. In this way you can keep the jars in the pantry for up to 1 year.

So now let's see how to vacuum seal jars:

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Step 4) - Close the jars then bring a huge pot. At the bottom of the pot, put a clean cloth. Lean the jars on the cloth and try to wrap it around the jars (to not crash the jars during the boiling process).

Fill the pot with water. Make sure to completely cover the jars. Use a lid if necessary. Calculate 40 minutes from the moment of boiling. After this time, turn off the heat and let the jars cool in the water. Remove the jars from the pot ONLY when the water is cool.

Now the metal caps must appear slightly curved inwards and by pressing with your finger you should not hear the "click clack". The jars are now safe. It's possible to keep the jars of tomato passata in a cool dry place for one year.

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Tomato passata recipe needs some specific kitchen tools. The first and most important is the tomato strainer machine.

There are several types on the market. Some are manual, others electric. Let's see some of them:

  • The one we used is electric and is similar to Weston Deluxe Electric Tomato Strainer, that includes 3 stainless steel screens to process tomatoes. So you can make a tomato passata with different textures.
  • There is also the manual version to clamp to the table, for small quantities of tomatoes. Designed for manual use with an improved handle, you can replace that with the optional Electric Motor.
  • For small quantities of tomato, you can also use a simple food mill. We recommend OXO Good Grips Food Mill that includes 3 stainless steel grinding discs for preparing tomato passata of fine, medium and coarse textures.
  • If you want something more professional, for large quantities of tomatoes, we recommend this Electric Tomato Strainer Machine by Raw Rutes. All stainless steel.
  • If you have the KitchenAid stand mixer then you can consider buying the Fruit & Vegetable Strainer Attachment, which has a food grinder with fine plate for meats and coarse plate for firm vegetables like tomatoes.
  • Finally, you'll need a large pot to cook the tomatoes
  • A fine mesh strainer. This kitchen tool is really useful for a tomato passata with the consistency you prefer. For example, if the tomatoes are rich in water, the passata comes out too liquid. Then with a fine mesh strainer you can remove excess water. The more water you remove, the more thick and dense the tomato passata becomes. We recommend Cuisinart Set of 3 Fine Mesh Stainless Steel Strainers.

Variations

Passata Rustica

Passata Rustica is a rough, pulpy, coarse tomato passata that is excellent for making sauces to dress pasta. It has an excellent yield and cooks quickly with little loss of volume.

It's a perfect base for any recipe, it's great for making quick cooking sauces, adding ingredients directly as desired. In Italy, we also use it very often as a topping for pizza, meat and fish sauces, and to season pasta of all kinds.

To make passata rustica at home, you need ripe, juicy tomatoes, preferably of the San Marzano variety. These tomatoes are particularly good for making this sauce. To make an amazing rustic passata, the first step is to use excellent quality tomatoes!

Once washed and dried, cut the tomatoes in half lengthwise and remove the seeds like in step 2. Then you need to cook them for a few minutes like in step 3.

The first trick is not to overcook them to mush. When the skin comes away from the pulp, they are ready.

Now you have to pass them. And here's the second trick: pass the tomatoes through a food mill using the disc with the largest holes.

This will give you a coarse-grained, full-bodied and fragrant passata rustica that will make the best tomato sauce makers in the world jealous!

Tomato Passata with Canned Tomatoes

If you want to make tomato passata for your recipes but you don't have fresh tomatoes, you can use canned peeled tomatoes.

Our recommendation is that they are of excellent quality, possibly San Marzano quality, without preservatives or additives. So read the label carefully. Then proceed following the recipe from step 4.

If it's a single can of peeled tomatoes, better to use a food mill.

Passata with Herbs and Spices

Sure! You can add herbs such as basil or oregano that flavor the passata wonderfully!

If you then make a soffritto of onion or garlic and add the passata flavored with your herbs, you will get a mouthwatering pasta sauce!

You have to think of passata as a basic recipe made with just tomatoes, to add to your favorite dishes and ingredients!

There are many Italian recipes that require the use of the Tomato Passata recipe.

You can use it on pizza, which you can then season to taste.

You can make soups, like tomato soup.

Or you can just add it to many pasta sauces, such as Amatriciana, Penne alla Vodka, Bolognese sauce or Marinara, to name a few.

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READ: Tomato Passata, Tomato Sauce and Tomato Puree. Do you really know the difference?

Tips and Curiosities

How to Choose the Best Tomatoes for Tomato Passata

To make a delicious tomato passata recipe, it would be best to use "San Marzano" tomatoes.

This quality of tomatoes is especially good for making passata. They have a firm pulp with the right percentage of water.

If you cannot find them, you can use other types of tomatoes, such as cherry tomatoes or grape tomatoes, as long as they are juicy and ripe.

Always taste the fruit! If you find particularly good tomatoes, don't pass them up. Use them to make passata. That way you will savor the fresh, intact taste of tomatoes for a long time!

What if the tomatoes are not ripe enough? Let them ripen in the sun for a couple of days.

Meaning of "Passata di Pomodoro"

"Passata" is an Italian word that comes from the verb "to pass." Passata is made through a mechanical process whereby tomatoes pass through the blades and holes of the machine used to make passata. This is where the Italian name Passata comes from.

Pomodoro is the rich, juicy fruit you know as "tomato."

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Recipe Recap

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YOU CAN FIND THE FULL RECIPE WITH PHOTOS, TIPS AND VARIATIONS ABOVE!

Tomato Passata Recipe (Passata di Pomodoro)

Tomato passata recipe is made with only 1 ingredient: the tomato. In fact, Italian passata is made from ripe, juicy, flavorful tomatoes cooked briefly and then removed from the seeds and skin.

The result is a pure tomato juice with its pulp and nothing else, used in Italy as a base for many traditional recipes.

Stored in glass jars or bottles without the addition of preservatives, flavorings, salt or water. Sometimes it comes with some fresh basil leaves but nothing more.

Course Sauce

Cuisine Italian

Keyword passata, passata recipe, tomato passata

Prep Time 20 minutes minutes

Cook Time 20 minutes minutes

Total Time 40 minutes minutes

Servings 10

Calories 36kcal

Ingredients

  • 2 Kg Tomatoes ~4 pounds - very ripe red ones, such as San Marzano or cluster tomato

Instructions

  • Check the tomatoes one by one, removing rotten, stained or bruised ones. Then wash them very well under running water. Finally put them in a bowl and start cutting them in half.

  • With a knife, remove the seeds and all the internal part of the tomato, like to make small tomato boats. Now place the tomatoes in a rather large pot.

  • Let them cook over low heat, covering the pan with a lid and stirring them from time to time, until they are smashed. Now take your tomato strainer machine and, with a ladle, begin to place the cooked tomatoes in the special slot.

  • Turn on the tomato strainer and with the help of the stomper apply some pressure on the tomatoes, to make them go down and enter the machine. If the passata comes out too liquid, pass it through a fine mesh strainer, stirring with a tablespoon, until you get the consistency you want.

Nutrition

Calories: 36kcal | Carbohydrates: 8g | Protein: 2g | Fat: 0.4g | Saturated Fat: 0.1g | Polyunsaturated Fat: 0.2g | Monounsaturated Fat: 0.1g | Sodium: 10mg | Potassium: 474mg | Fiber: 2g | Sugar: 5g | Vitamin A: 1666IU | Vitamin C: 27mg | Calcium: 20mg | Iron: 1mg

Tried this recipe?Mention @recipesfromitaly or tag #recipesfromitaly!

Tomato Passata Recipe | Passata di Pomodoro (2024)

FAQs

How do you use passata di pomodoro? ›

The passata can be incorporated into any cooked dish or used to make a full-fledged sauce by combining it with aromatics like onion, garlic, and herbs.

Is passata di pomodoro the same as tomato sauce? ›

Unlike heat-and-serve tomato sauce, which is cooked down to a noodle-coating consistency and heavily seasoned with salt, sugar, and herbs, passata is much less of a finished product—it's a building block that delivers bright, unadulterated tomato flavor.

What are the best tomatoes for making passata? ›

Homegrown, organic/market-bought Roma or San Marzano are the best varieties. Cut the green part out from the top of each tomato along with any bruised or black parts before cutting them in half then add to a large pot. Add water to one of your passata bottles until it is half full.

How much tomato is in passata? ›

Tomato Passata is pureed, strained tomatoes usually sold in bottles. It's 100% tomato, no additives or flavourings, but sometimes contains added salt. It's uniform and smooth unlike crushed or chopped tomatoes, and makes gorgeously thick tomato-based sauces. It's known as Tomato Puree in the US (here's a photo).

How long does passata need to be cooked? ›

Method. Put the tomatoes, garlic and olive oil in a saucepan over a medium heat. Cover and cook for 10 mins, shaking occasionally, until the tomatoes have collapsed completely.

What do you use tomato passata for? ›

An invaluable ready-to-use kitchen ingredient, passata is a super smooth tomato sauce strained of seeds and skins—somewhere between strained tomatoes and tomato purée. Its fresh tomato flavor is perfect for pasta and pizza sauces, stews and soups... even Bloody Marys and savory co*cktails.

What is a substitute for passata di pomodoro? ›

You would not want to substitute either product if passata is called for in your recipe. If you cannot find it in your store, the best substitution is tomato purée or take plain canned tomatoes and run them through a sieve or a food mill.

What is Passata called in USA? ›

Often called tomato purée in the US, passata is simply puréed tomatoes that have been strained (using a food mill) and packaged, typically in a small glass bottle. The best brands contain only tomatoes and just a dash of salt.

What is passata di pomodoro in english? ›

Passata di pomodoro (or passata for short) is the multi-purpose tomato purée that every aspiring Italian cook should learn how to make.

Is passata just blended chopped tomatoes? ›

The flavour: passata is simply a pureed tomato liquid, which means it doesn't enjoy as much of a full bodied flavour as chopped tomatoes. The texture: as it is sieved, the texture is smooth. Due to its smoothness, it often doesn't hold additional flavourings such as garlic as well as chopped tomatoes do.

Is passata just crushed tomatoes? ›

What is Passata? Passata is simply puréed, strained uncooked tomatoes… that's it. There are no fillers and no distractions. Just 100% tomatoes.

Can I use canned tomatoes for passata? ›

You can use any tinned tomatoes for this, whether they're whole, diced or crushed. Open the can and pour off excess juice using a strainer. Keep this excess liquid to add to other dishes like soups and stews. Process the solids in a blender or food processor until smooth.

Do you need to add tomato puree to passata? ›

Ready to use: you do not need to puree passata or alter it in any way! It's ready to use right out of the jar, and once you try using it rather than canned tomato puree, you will never go back due to its natural and delicious taste.

Does tomato passata need to be cooked? ›

Passata is perhaps the easiest way to cook with Mutti products, as it only requires heating or can be eaten cold. It is ideally suited to short cooking times and gives great flavor for pasta sauces, eggs, and white meat. Passata withstands heat well, so it's perfect for a red sauce, pasta sauces and on bread.

Can I use passata instead of whole tomatoes? ›

Yes, it's possible, e.g. passing through a food mill, or blanching and peeling plus retaining only the flesh, but having it already done is a whole lot easier. Passata is usually much thicker too, so it won't need as long a cooking time to reduce into a non-watery sauce as fresh tomatoes.

What is passata pomodoro? ›

Passata, also known as passata di pomodoro is a delicious tomato juice made from ripe, juicy, flavorful good quality tomatoes. I am going to cover everything from ingredients and equipment to step-by-step instructions and creative uses. Get ready to embark on a delicious journey through the art of passata-homemaking!

What is the meaning of passata di pomodoro? ›

Passata di Pomodoro - tomato sauce.

Does passata need to be cooked? ›

Passata is perhaps the easiest way to cook with Mutti products, as it only requires heating or can be eaten cold. It is ideally suited to short cooking times and gives great flavor for pasta sauces, eggs, and white meat. Passata withstands heat well, so it's perfect for a red sauce, pasta sauces and on bread.

Is passata the same as tomato paste? ›

It's the perfect addition to pasta sauces and will provide the same thick texture as passata. Tomato paste is created at a higher concentration, giving it a smoother consistency. It still provides a similar thickness and taste as passata but often has added salts and herbs to the mixture.

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