No store bought spaghetti sauce compares with the taste of that made from your own tomatoes from your garden or fresh-picked from a local farm! In the middle of the winter, you can make a meal with your spaghetti sauce and taste the summer flavor of fresh tomatoes. This recipe is for spaghetti sauce WITHOUT meat, so you can use a water bath canner or a pressure canner. The USDA does not have a recipe for spaghetti sauce for a water bath canner (they only have one for a pressure canner, it's a bit different; if you have a pressure canner, you may want to see this page for spaghetti sauce using a pressure canner), but both the prepackage season mixes (like Ball's, Mrs. Wages) and the Ball Blue book do have a water bath canner version. The homemade version (Ball), which they call "seasoned tomato sauce" requires the addition of lemon juice (not vinegar) to help acidify it.
You can add meats, but that requires a pressure canner and a different set of directions (see this page for directions for spaghetti sauce with meat) And if you only want to make 1 quart of spaghetti sauce, see this page instead.
Here's how to do it, in easy steps and completely illustrated. This method is so easy, ANYONE can do this! It's a great thing to do with your kids!
I've added free labels for your jars here, in a Word format! Just download, edit, and print in label paper.
No store bought spaghetti sauce compares with the taste of that made from your own tomatoes from your garden or fresh-picked from a local farm! In the middle of the winter, you can make a meal with your spaghetti sauce and taste the summer flavor of fresh tomatoes. This recipe is for spaghetti sauce WITHOUT meat, so you can use a water bath canner or a pressure canner. The USDA does not have a recipe for spaghetti sauce for a water bath canner (they only have one for a pressure canner, it's a bit different; if you have a pressure canner, you may want to see this page for spaghetti sauce using a pressure canner), but both the prepackage season mixes (like Ball's, Mrs. Wages) and the Ball Blue book do have a water bath canner version. The homemade version (Ball), which they call "seasoned tomato sauce" requires the addition of lemon juice (not vinegar) to help acidify it.
You can add meats, but that requires a pressure canner and a different set of directions (see this page for directions for spaghetti sauce with meat) And if you only want to make 1 quart of spaghetti sauce, see this page instead.
Here's how to do it, in easy steps and completely illustrated. This method is so easy, ANYONE can do this! It's a great thing to do with your kids!
I've added free labels for your jars here, in a Word format! Just download, edit, and print in label paper.
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