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« Reducing a canning recipe | Main | I'll drink to that »
Friday
Aug202010

Orange tang ketchup

I’m not going to lie; you gotta want to make ketchup. I see it like Mr. Izzard’s description of certain career paths:

Not to liken ketchup-makery exactly to the life path and career choices of taxidermists or beekeepers, but I’m just sayin’ it’s not an “oh, whatever” kind of thing. There’s some work involved.

It’s totally worth it though. After we made a standard red ketchup at our Canvolution party a couple weekends ago (and I proceeded to spoon my portion right out of the jar) I was hooked on homemade ketchup. When orange heirlooms appeared last week in our CSA (farmshare), I figured why not shake things up in my limited ketchup experience.

Julia, our August hostess, granted me a new ninja name, Small-batch Kickass. I gleefully accept.

In line with my reduction-ist history, I made do with what I got from the CSA and added a few extra heirlooms from my co-op to make about half of what the recipe calls for.

Orange Tang Ketchup

Reduced and modified (slightly) from Linda’s Hot Orange Ketchup recipe in The Joy of Pickling

yield four sealed quarter-pint jars plus some change in a half pint fridge jar

CSA ‘maters; beauty-queen cherries thrown in for visuals (not used in ketchup)1. Prepare your tomatoes for the puree process. I started with:

 3lbs 6oz whole tomatoes

Slice an ‘X’ into the bottoms with a steak or paring knife.

2. Bring a pot of water (I used a 6-quart pot) to a full boil and then dip your X-marked tomatoes into the water for about 20 seconds. This helps loosen their skins so you can peel them easily. Peel carefully since they’ll be hot.Peeling tomatoes is cathartic after a long day at the computer.3. Core the tomatoes (aka remove the hard, middle portion of the tomato where it was attached to the vine).

4. I don’t have either of the tools Linda says are helpful (a food mill or Vita-Mix) for tomato pureeing, so I had to get crafty. (Please read the section in her book about the best way to prepare tomato puree should you happen to have either of these cool tools.) Here’s my improvised food processor method that worked out just dandy:

Chop the skinned tomato into a few large chunks and toss them into a food processor; I did it in two batches. Also, I’m a seeds-in kind of girl, but I bet you could strain most out using a mesh strainer as you pour the puree into the cooking pot.

Pour puree directly into a large, heavy-bottomed stainless steel or enameled cast-iron pot. I ended up with about 5 cups of tomato puree.

5. Prepare rest of veggies and throw them directly into the tomato puree pot:

  • 4 or 5 assorted hot peppers, seeded and chopped (I used two of the yellow ones above and each of the other varieties) [You might consider gloves for this task, I’ve made one too many enchilada sauces to do it bare handed any longer]
  • half of a medium-sized yellow onion, chopped (or 5 oz if you’re weighing it out)
  • 7 garlic cloves, chopped

Simmer tomato puree and veggies for 15-20 min, until the veggies are tender.

6. While tomato and veg puree is simmering, prepare spice bag (or use kitchen twine to tie a scrap of cheesecloth around the following):

  • 1 lemon zested in strips
  • 1.5 tsp mustard seeds
  • 1.5 tsp coriander seeds
  • 5 whole cloves
  • cinnamon stick broken into a few pieces
  • 2 thin slices of fresh ginger

Set aside.

7. When veggies are tender, remove tomato puree and veg mixture from heat. Ladle out cupfuls of the mixture into your food processor (or blender) until you hit the ‘liquid fill line’ marked on most processor bowls. Trust me, you’re going to want to do this in shifts (or you’ll shoot pureed tomato juice and bits around the kitchen). I did it in three batches.

8. Return the new and improved puree to the pot and add:

the juice from your zested lemon, strained

3/4 cup white wine vinegar (I didn’t plan well, so I added 1/2 cup cider vinegar to my measly 1/4 cup, bottom-of-the-bottle white wine vinegar)

1.5 tsp pickling (or 2 tsp Kosher) salt

spice bag you prepared above

9. Simmer ketchup until it thickens up. The smaller the batch, the faster it will thicken. Mine took about a half hour, but my burner was up too high in the beginning (oops). Low and slow is the general rule for thickening. Stir occasionally to incorporate all portions of the mixture and keep bottom from scorching.

10. Remove spicebag and ladle hot ketchup into hot jars leaving 1/4” headspace and seal with two-piece lids. Process for 15 minutes in a waterbath.

Alternatively you could stash it in the fridge if you’ve had enough of the stovetop for the evening. It’s high in vinegar and should keep fine for a few months.

Aaaaand the taste…It’s not hot, by any means. There’s no sugar in it, so it won’t taste like your standard ketchup, but this tangy condiment adds a tasty vinegary zest to whatever you dare dollop.

Reader Comments (12)

Sounds fantastic and love the color and the Izzard connection (of course!). Nice!

August 20, 2010 | Unregistered Commentermeg

It's gorgeous and sounds delicious! That orange is amazing. And yes, I love that Izzard clip. I love him!

August 20, 2010 | Unregistered Commenterjulia

ok i almost didn't open it because when you said 'tang' i'm thinkin' astronaut tang from when i was a kid. sheesh girl!

August 20, 2010 | Unregistered Commenterecogrrl

Thanks Jules and Meg!
Teehee, I just like saying the word 'tang'. It makes me think of that juice-like substance that was around when I was a kid.

August 20, 2010 | Registered CommenterKate

I, too, thought of Tang the drink, except I was thinking, "Really? Hmmmmm...."

The ketchup sounds amazing - I like my ketchup like I like my women... orange & spicy! :)

August 21, 2010 | Unregistered Commenterkaela

I worked at a camp in Maine in college and the kids always wanted "Tangwich" sandwiches. Which was tang on white bread. Ugh.

August 21, 2010 | Unregistered Commentermeg

Any fan of Eddie Izzard is a friend of mine. Pretty please will you post this to Punk Domestics?

August 25, 2010 | Unregistered CommenterSean

This sounds delicious. I love yellow/orange tomatoes. I make an awesome tomato soup with yellow tomatoes. this is something I think I am going to make! I made ketchup for the first time this past weekend. I used a slow cooker. Turned out good! But here's my August canjam submittal (I follow along): http://www.canningwithkids.com/blog/2010/08/nicely-spicy-peach-salsa.html

August 30, 2010 | Unregistered CommenterPaige

I am green with envy that your ketchup retained that lovely yellow color while my efforts resulted in what can be charitably (or by the color blind) called deep orange: http://bit.ly/9qpymn But totally agree, the taste is amazing.

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October 22, 2010 | Unregistered Commenterreplica watches

I made this on Wednesday night, and I will admit to being totally skeptical about making ketchup in the first place - but no longer! You were 100% right about the labor of love - I simmered my ketchup for almost 90 minutes before it came to any sort of consistency I liked! But, I tasted it yesterday and I cannot believe how awesome it is! It is still more of a very thick sauce consistency - is yours pretty spreadable like ketchup in a jar? I ended up getting 3.5 1/2 pint jars out of the batch. I will very much enjoy this! Thanks for the recipe!

October 29, 2010 | Unregistered CommenterLindsay

Hey Lindsay!
I'm so glad you tried it out and loved it, too. Yeah, I'd say mine was a really thick sauce more so than the consistency found in commercial ketchup. I think it's how you puree the mixture that determines the ultimate consistency. Enjoy!!

October 29, 2010 | Registered CommenterKate

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