Marcella Hazan's Tomato Sauce with Onion and Butter
Author Notes: The most famous tomato sauce on the internet, from Marcella Hazan's Essentials of Classic Italian Cooking. - Genius Recipes
Serves 6, enough to sauce 1 to 1 1/2 pounds pasta
For the Sauce
- 2 pounds fresh, ripe tomatoes, prepared as described below, or 2 cups canned imported Italian tomatoes, cut up, with their juice
- 5 tablespoons butter
- 1 medium onion, peeled and cut in half
- Salt to taste
- Put either the prepared fresh tomatoes or the canned in a saucepan, add the butter, onion, and salt, and cook uncovered at a very slow, but steady simmer for about 45 minutes, or until it is thickened to your liking and the fat floats free from the tomato.
- Stir from time to time, mashing up any large pieces of tomato with the back of a wooden spoon.
- Taste and correct for salt. Discard the onion before tossing with pasta. Serve with freshly grated parmigiano-reggiano cheese for the table.
Making Fresh Tomatoes Ready for Sauce
- fresh, ripe plum tomatoes (or other varieties, if they are equally ripe and truly fruity, not watery)
- The blanching method: Plunge the tomatoes in boiling water for a minute or less. Drain them and, as soon as they are cool enough to handle, skin them, and cut them into coarse pieces.
- The freezing method (from David Tanis, via The Kitchn): Freeze tomatoes on a baking sheet until hard. Thaw again, either on the counter or under running water. Skin them and cut them into coarse pieces.
- The food mill method: Wash the tomatoes in cold water, cut them lengthwise in half, and put them in a covered saucepan. Turn on the heat to medium and cook for 10 minutes. Set a food mill fitted with the disk with the largest holes over a bowl. Transfer the tomatoes with any of their juices to the mill and puree.
- This recipe is a Community Pick!
Tags: pasta sauce




about 2 hours ago MrsK
This sounds wonderful and so simple. The only problem for me will be to discard the onion... I love onions!
about 3 hours ago Jane Eyrehead
Francis Ford Coppola has published his family's no-garlic spaghetti sauce, and while it does have basil, and olive oil, it is finished with a lump of butter, which does add richness. I'll try this one. I also recommend M. Hazan's meatball recipe, from her first cookbook. Really, really good.
5 days ago Joe Mamaluc
Thats not gravy thats ketchup! Missing garlic, oregano, basil, rosemary and olive oil
5 days ago AlyssaM
Sorry to have to call you out, Joe, but as a 100% Italian, I can honestly say no one in my family has EVER used rosemary in their gravy. :). I was leery at first as well, and the flavor is certainly no comparison to the Sunday gravy I grew up on, bubbling on the stove for hours, loaded with meatballs, sausage etc..that we all dunked bread in throughout the day...but it did have wonderful flavor. The beauty is in the simplicity and possible freshness of ingredients. You have to embrace it for what it is. Oh, and for goodness sake, put down the rosemary! ;)
5 days ago Joe Mamaluc
Well, I was raised by my 100 percent Italian mother and know something about Sunday Gravy. I have many Italian friends that can't cook and like Ragu, so I rest my case.
11 days ago cookycat
Last night I used the last of this sauce that I made in the summer. It was still delicious. Yesterday I also planted my tomatoes so in a few months I can make more.
13 days ago Betty Frost
I use olive oil for almost everything, but I don't think this particular recipe will be as good if it does not have butter. Perhaps do half and half.
13 days ago Grant P. Sears
Looks and sounds good! But instead of butter, try olive oil!
13 days ago Grant P. Sears
Looks and sounds good!But instead of using butter, try olive oil!
20 days ago fayehess
I absolutely love this sauce. Be sure to seed the tomatoes to help w/acidity issues. Quality of both canned tomato and butter can make a difference too. Taste your canned tomatoes before using. I find if using canned tomatoes, whole tomatoes definitely work best and kate's unsalted butter, or most european unsalted butters add a really nice flavor.
20 days ago Cookie!
After seeing all the praise for this recipe, I finally made it over the weekend. I will never make any other tomato sauce again - the flavor of this recipe is amazing for so few ingredients. I could have stood over the pot and eaten the whole thing with a spoon! Will definitely double the recipe next time-
28 days ago webbiest
I made Marcella Hazan's sauce once in a Calphalon pot and it completely removed the finish from the inside of the pot. The combination of high acidity and long cooking did it.
about 1 month ago Hark
Lovely simple tomato sauce for lighter summer dishes. My house smelled amazing while I cooked it.
3 months ago alamesa
I think white or yellow are both fine. I've made it with both and really no difference. I've always used unsalted butter but as others have already mentioned the quality of the tomatoes is the key.
3 months ago AlyssaM
I have asked before, but never got an answer..what type of onion should I use, vidalia, white, yellow? And should the butter be salted or unsalted? Thank you!
3 months ago Kristen Miglore
Kristen is the Senior Editor of Food52
We've always used yellow onions and unsalted butter but any of these will probably result in great sauce -- just be sure to adjust the seasoning to your taste at the end.
3 months ago cookycat
I used a yellow onion that I happen to have and salted butter. I do, however, suspect that the tomatoes you use might make a difference. I used tomatoes straight from my garden that were delicious to begin with and this sauce turned out amazing.
3 months ago inpatskitchen
I use whatever I have on hand..but the tomatoes are the key I think. If using canned, make sure you have a great quality roma or a San Marzano.
3 months ago AlyssaM
Thank you so much everyone, I really appreciate the feedback. With it being Winter, I am going to try it with the absolute best imported canned Roma's or San Marzano's I can find. Fingers crossed!
5 months ago Betty Frost
I cannot tell you how excited I am to see this recipe on your site. I have her cookbook with this recipe and I had forgotten about it until a few months ago. I prepared it and loved it just as much as I did many years ago. Thanks for sharing it with everyone. Her clam sauce is also amazing.
6 months ago Crissy Shipp
how about a yummy meatball recipe to go with? anyone?
6 months ago Kristen Miglore
Kristen is the Senior Editor of Food52
This one! http://food52.com/recipes...
6 months ago Christina @ Christina's Cucina
This is how my southern Italian family makes meatballs: http://christinascucina...
6 months ago peter.boyd.37
@ccincalif, nice meatball recipe. It is very similar to the one passed down by my Calabrian grandmother. The only difference is that her recipe called for ground veal (or goat) instead of chicken/turkey, more cheese, minced onion, cold water instead of milk, and for browning the meatballs in the oven on a baking sheet—less mess to clean up this way. My own addition to her recipe is to add diced pancetta which mimics the way the Albanians/Bosnians make their meatballs (Qebap or Kofte/a, which are in turn based on Turkish Qofte) which I fell in love with when I lived/worked in the former Yugoslavia—of course being Muslims, they left out the pork and used minced bits of an air-dried prosciutto-style beef ham (confusingly also) called prosciutto.
5 months ago Christina @ Christina's Cucina
Thanks, Peter-I like the idea of browning the meatballs in the oven; have never seen that done before. Your grandmother's recipe sounds delicious! It's nice that we can save our relatives' recipes to pass down (and onto) others much easier with computers and social media than in the past. My mother gets upset when she can't remember how her mother used to make certain things because nothing was ever written down :(
7 months ago cookycat
I made this sauce last summer using my garden tomatoes. Took some out of the freezer last week and used it and it was so delicious. Sorry that I didn't make lots more. Tastes like sunshine and summer.
7 months ago cookycat
Made this in the summer with my delicious garden tomatoes and put it in the freezer. I used some last week and it was so good. I am so sorry that I didn't make more than I did. I will definitely make it again next summer.
8 months ago Geni758
I do a slightly modified version of this sauce. I freeze the fresh tomatoes, defrost and put them in a food mill. I add 1 - 28 oz. Or 2 - 14.28 oz. cans of tomatoes and put them through the food mill as well. I add butter, onion and salt and simmer for 45 minutes. This sauce reminds me of the sauce my former father in-law used to make. I never knew why it was so good but now I'm convinced it's the butter. I LOVE this sauce! I can't believe it tastes so good and is sooooo...simple. If you haven't tried it, you don't know what you're missing. Definitely my "go to" recipe, bar none.
8 months ago sam74387
I don't know what went wrong but my sauce has been cooking for an hour and still is very thin. and the taste is off but i can't put my finger on the problem. does anyone have any suggestions? :(
8 months ago Kristen Miglore
Kristen is the Senior Editor of Food52
That doesn't sound right! Have you been simmering it uncovered? It might help to know if you're using fresh or canned tomatoes too.
8 months ago sam74387
it is simmering uncovered and i used fresh tomatoes from my garden. my only guess would be that i used too many tomatoes. i don't have a scale so i estimated.
8 months ago sam74387
i added more butter a while ago and the sauce is starting to thicken now. i am going to start my noodles and hopefully it will be thick by the time my noodles are done, if not i will just eat it as is.
8 months ago Kristen Miglore
Kristen is the Senior Editor of Food52
That's good -- some juicier fresh tomatoes can take longer to reduce and thicken than romas. I hope that the off taste has gone away and that it all comes together nicely.
8 months ago sam74387
i just got done and the sauce is the perfect consistency. as for the off taste i realized it was that i thought it was oily. i added some garlic salt and it tastes great on the noodles, it is only too oily when eaten on its own. over all it is a great recipe.
8 months ago always040
Not with the butter... and I would definitely acidify it with a tablespoon or two of lemon juice... and definitely not in quarts for 15 minutes (more like 35). So the short answer is no. Youre probably better off canning acidified tomato puree and making the sauce on the spot. It should freeze well, though.