5 Ingredients or Fewer
Marcella Hazan's Tomato Sauce With Onion & Butter
Popular on Food52
585 Reviews
Joy
August 9, 2024
This is an OMG recipe. I enjoyed it so much.
I loved the simplicity of it , and for me I was suspicious of making a pasta sauce without my beloved garlic ; however the onions were so tasty after the sauce was cooked I used the onions as a side dish .DELICIOUS! This sauce is truly a genius recipe.
I loved the simplicity of it , and for me I was suspicious of making a pasta sauce without my beloved garlic ; however the onions were so tasty after the sauce was cooked I used the onions as a side dish .DELICIOUS! This sauce is truly a genius recipe.
CookingMom
July 25, 2023
This recipe is so deceptively simple. I thought the sauce would taste like tomatoes and butter and onion, but the sum of ingredients are transformed into something bigger than its parts. I used one 28 oz. can of San Marzano tomatoes, 1 stick of butter (scaled), 1 onion halved and a little salt. I couldn't believe the results. I diced up the onion to add back to the sauce. I think that was too much onion for me and next time I will maybe add half of the onion. Definitely a keeper and what an incredible base to work from!
Miranda B.
June 20, 2023
Amazing, delicious! Help me out though, what recommendations can anyone give about a protein to serve with this for entertaining. I was wondering about serving this over a small portion of freshly made spaghetti, topped with a few fresh king prawns? Or would a fish fillet work? I need to make it into a complete meal to serve as a main.
[email protected]
June 22, 2023
The ski is the limit with this, even if you simply put some in in a martini glass along side mini meatballs as a passed hors D’oeuvres. HEAVEN!
hdjukic
May 14, 2023
This recipe is so simple and so perfect, if you can exercise restraint. Do not add any additional ingredients and use high quality butter (Kerigold) and tomatoes (San Marzano whole & peeled).
Smaug
April 16, 2023
After following comments on this recipe for some time, I finally decided to try it- I had some frozen tomatoes left from last years crop (Costoluto Geovanese, mostly- not that big a fan of Romas). I used Hazan's recipe (even the tiny amount of sugar); the recipe published here is altered some, which didn't seem like a good idea for something this simple. Also not so accurate; the butter did not separate out; the texture was actually pretty good. A food mill is really much the best way to prepare the tomatoes. I have a lot of respect for Hazan, and had hoped for something greater than the sum of its parts, but this seemed to me exactly like the sum of its parts; it tasted like tomatoes, way too much butter, and a trace of onion; took a lot of salt. If you like buttered noodles it might appeal; I do not, and found it pretty heavy, while quite thin nutritionally. I often make fresh tomato sauces that are no more complicated; a bit of basil, garlic and a touch of olive oil will do nicely with good tomatoes- this seems more like a butter sauce than a tomato sauce; just not my thing.
gravityace
April 7, 2023
I left a review a couple of years ago and still stand by it. I love this sauce. Its what I use as a BASE. I can add basil or other seasonings to build what I want for a meal. Love to simmer meatballs in it or italian sausage or just a bit of salt and its always terrific. Like Mark H replied, this makes a great pizza topping and yes it makes a fabulous soup.
I do think that the brand of tomatoes makes a big difference in the finished sauce. If crappy tomatoes are used....well that would be a factor. I use fresh tomatoes in the summer or romas that Ive frozen in the winter. As for canned, I prefer the Sclafani brand crushed tomatoes from new jersey. It is reasonably priced and very flavorful. I've recently started blending the onion in with a stick blender after it is fully cooked. I usually let it simmer in a dutch oven for a good hour or two. I make this sauce at least two or three times a month. Everyone I've made it for loves it and asks for the recipe. Wow. 547 reviews now.!!!
I do think that the brand of tomatoes makes a big difference in the finished sauce. If crappy tomatoes are used....well that would be a factor. I use fresh tomatoes in the summer or romas that Ive frozen in the winter. As for canned, I prefer the Sclafani brand crushed tomatoes from new jersey. It is reasonably priced and very flavorful. I've recently started blending the onion in with a stick blender after it is fully cooked. I usually let it simmer in a dutch oven for a good hour or two. I make this sauce at least two or three times a month. Everyone I've made it for loves it and asks for the recipe. Wow. 547 reviews now.!!!
Mick
April 6, 2023
The BBC Radio 4/made the Essential cook book of the year when first published. I bough 4 copies for Christmas presents always go back to the toms and onion sauce, the best, cooking in Spain right now. The book was just out when we bought it.
Mark H.
February 7, 2023
This is one of the easiest sauces around short of opening a jar, and so much better than any jarred sauce. We use it by itself strictly by the recipe (with the onion on the side so as to not waste it) on spaghetti or other long pasta, we cook meatballs in it for spaghetti and meatballs, and we even use it as a pizza sauce when we fire up the backyard pizza oven. We’ve also used it in a slightly modified form to make tomato soup and that was the best!
Blanchie
November 15, 2022
I tried this-completely baffled by all the great reviews. Did they actually make it? It was so bland, it actually tasted like nothing more than just a plain can of tomatoes. The onion didn’t really impart any flavor to the sauce. I think this is one of those recipes I call a “myth.”
jangold
December 13, 2022
To each their own but I suspect your sauce needed a good salting. Assuming you let it simmer for the full 45 minutes, the onion and butter meld with the acidic tomatoes and wonderful flavor develops. But like any dish the flavor is brought out by ample salt.
caseyjones125
November 2, 2022
I already have a good recipe for Marinara and was looking for a recipe for a good tomato sauce when I came across this one and thought that I'd give it a go.
I live in England where,unfortunately, access to good tomatoes is pretty woeful so, tinned tomatoes it was.
I learned quite a while ago that, whilst everyday tinned tomatoes are fine for everyday use, when it comes to sauces, especially pasta sauces, there really is no substitute for San Marzano ( and even that is variable. Find a brand you like and stick with it - I am using Coppola at the moment.)
When cooking a new dish for the first time, I always stick to the recipe exactly.
How people can add lots of extra flavours to a dish and then review the original recipe is beyond me. Don't get me wrong here, my cookbooks/scrapbooks are covered in hand written notes about things to put in/take out along with altered cooking times and temperatures.
So, my thoughts on this recipe as is -
I thought that it was absolutely delicious !
I served it with a decent dried Bucatini pasta cooked 2 minutes under and finished off in the sauce with a couple of tablespoons of the pasta water.
I tried it with both grated Parmesan Reggiano and Pecorino Romano and ,surprisingly, the Pecorino gave a noticeably better result.
I had half of the sauce and the 2 onion halves left so, for lunch the next day, I blitzed 1 half of the onion , added it back to the sauce and served it with Linguini .
Still a tasty sauce but, the onion had taken away some of the bright, tomato taste that the original recipe was all about. Essentially, it had turned it into a different sauce.
I can see where some people are comparing this to tomato soup are coming from and, indeed, I will be trying this sauce with the addition of some stock and fresh basil and I have high hopes of producing an equally good tomato soup. ( Paired with a nice grilled cheese sandwich of course ! ( thank you America for that pairing !)Tip :- try and find some Raclette cheese and wild garlic leaves for the ultimate grilled cheese sandwich.)
I will definitely be making this sauce again, without any changes.
Regards from across the pond,
Andy.
I live in England where,unfortunately, access to good tomatoes is pretty woeful so, tinned tomatoes it was.
I learned quite a while ago that, whilst everyday tinned tomatoes are fine for everyday use, when it comes to sauces, especially pasta sauces, there really is no substitute for San Marzano ( and even that is variable. Find a brand you like and stick with it - I am using Coppola at the moment.)
When cooking a new dish for the first time, I always stick to the recipe exactly.
How people can add lots of extra flavours to a dish and then review the original recipe is beyond me. Don't get me wrong here, my cookbooks/scrapbooks are covered in hand written notes about things to put in/take out along with altered cooking times and temperatures.
So, my thoughts on this recipe as is -
I thought that it was absolutely delicious !
I served it with a decent dried Bucatini pasta cooked 2 minutes under and finished off in the sauce with a couple of tablespoons of the pasta water.
I tried it with both grated Parmesan Reggiano and Pecorino Romano and ,surprisingly, the Pecorino gave a noticeably better result.
I had half of the sauce and the 2 onion halves left so, for lunch the next day, I blitzed 1 half of the onion , added it back to the sauce and served it with Linguini .
Still a tasty sauce but, the onion had taken away some of the bright, tomato taste that the original recipe was all about. Essentially, it had turned it into a different sauce.
I can see where some people are comparing this to tomato soup are coming from and, indeed, I will be trying this sauce with the addition of some stock and fresh basil and I have high hopes of producing an equally good tomato soup. ( Paired with a nice grilled cheese sandwich of course ! ( thank you America for that pairing !)Tip :- try and find some Raclette cheese and wild garlic leaves for the ultimate grilled cheese sandwich.)
I will definitely be making this sauce again, without any changes.
Regards from across the pond,
Andy.
gravityace
April 7, 2023
Caseyjones125. I see that you are enjoy toying with this recipe as much as I do.!! I live in the US in the rainy pacific northwest and the tomato situation is grim here as well. For this recipe to work, the ingredients have to shine. Once I found a great brand of tinned tomatoes Ive never looked back and ditto on the pecorino cheese. Delicious. Happy cooking!
Fred R.
September 8, 2022
Like most of us, everyone seems to add a bit of “something else” here and there. Now, it no longer is Marcella’s tomato sauce, it’s ours.
Smaug
November 2, 2022
I'm not sure that "us" shares a coherent philosophy. If anyone cares to diagram that sentence, please don't tell me about it.
[email protected]
September 8, 2022
The ultimate pasta sauce! The only additions for me, marjoram and roasted fennel seeds. Perfection!
gravityace
April 7, 2023
That sounds delicious... I'll be trying that too. Thanks for the suggestion!
Laura
August 21, 2022
This was fabulous. So far I’ve put it on pork carnitas, eaten as a soup with a dash of my “special” olive oil and tomorrow will serve on pasta as it was originally mean to be. I could eat this all day long and it was a great way to use my abundant tomato supply. I imagine this will be great with canned tomatoes as well. PS - I kept the onions in because once tasting it, I decided they really added great sweetness and texture although I think they could also be pureed too.
gravityace
April 7, 2023
Hello Laura. I recently started blending the onion in after its a mush with an immersion blender. Delicious!
Mark B.
February 11, 2022
I used grass-fed, cultured butter, which makes a nice difference. After tasting, I had to add fresh-ground pepper and some sweetness. I used Keys Beez honey, which I love, but brown sugar would have been fine. I think tomato sauce needs sugar, always. Sorry! I couldn't bear to throw away the onions, so I served them on the side. I put this sauce over gorgonzola-stuffed gnocchi, which cries out for a simple, buttery tomato sauce. Mind blowing.
AlanBruno
November 2, 2021
As someone whose sauce has around 15 ingredients, give or take, it astounds me that this is so popular. Cook the onion without sautéing and then remove it? Unconscionable.
Emily
November 2, 2021
I know what you mean, but once I tried it, it’s become a regular in my rotation! I leave the onions in. I just couldn’t do that!
Julie I.
November 2, 2021
Don't knock it until you have tried it. I also leave the onions and lightly blend the sauce before using. It's easy, light and delicious. The key is using good San Marzano tomatoes.
ShenAnno
November 2, 2021
If you're counting ingredients for success, Marcella might be a good guide for you. Sometimes, simple is better.
carol
November 2, 2021
have you tried it though? it's very different than a traditional sauce but still very good!!!
Blanchie
November 15, 2022
Tasteless! Don’t bother. How anyone thinks this is actually like some awesome thing is beyond me. Was basically a can of tomatoes, the onion doesn’t really impart any flavor.
Nancy
November 1, 2021
This sauce as soup. Another site (sorry, forget where) recommends using this sauce to make tomato soup. I tried it and it's great!...plain or with some added liquid (broth, milk or cream). Genius (yes, true) pantry save.
Sonsam13
October 8, 2021
My friend told me about this recipe ( he loves it). I however didn’t care for it all that much. It’s good, but I prefer a marinara that is light and fresh tasting. The butter, and it’s a lot, just weighs this down and blankets any freshness; which is further compounded by the fact that there is no Basil in the recipe. If I’m going to use this much butter and have the added calories I’d rather do it making Alfredo. To each their own .
Scott C.
January 27, 2022
You've grossly misrepresented the point he's making. Calories are not a myth. They way we count them and the recommendations the government makes about them are.
Sonsam13
February 11, 2022
Calories are a form of energy and fall under the first law of thermodynamics which is no myth! Do I bother to count calories…hell no, it’s stupid, but I do know what foods are high in calories and butter is one of them. So is olive oil but I don’t use nearly as much as this recipe calls for. Butter also has a lot more saturated fat which for me blankets the freshness of the other ingredients. My review is fair….I acknowledged that some people love this recipe and others don’t (myself) . If there was truly the perfect marinara there wouldn’t be 1000 variations - to each their own, like I said.
My sister growing up loved Sunny Delight. To me it was disgusting and later in life I figured out why….the second ingredient is corn syrup. It’s an orange syrup drink. My sister, her body just loves sugar, she’s also close to 300lbs. I’m 6’ 180 and 49. I know calories and Marinara isn’t a place for them for ME!
My sister growing up loved Sunny Delight. To me it was disgusting and later in life I figured out why….the second ingredient is corn syrup. It’s an orange syrup drink. My sister, her body just loves sugar, she’s also close to 300lbs. I’m 6’ 180 and 49. I know calories and Marinara isn’t a place for them for ME!
violetsandirises
May 28, 2022
The first law of thermodynamics only applies in a closed system. Humans are an open system; matter is being put into and coming out of our bodies every day.
Smaug
August 11, 2022
I don't offhand see the relevance to dietary calories, which are after all potential energy, not actual energy, but the universe can be seen as a closed system for many applications of the law.
Anita104
August 14, 2022
Yes, calories are a measure of energy. However, the way calories in a food are measured is in a laboratory and a computer, they are no longer actually burned. Our bodies are not laboratories or computers. Two people can eat the exact same food, same amount and extract different calorie counts. That's why listings of calories on foods is nonsense.
Smaug
August 14, 2022
I wouldn't say nonsense exactly; calorie measures still give a relative measure of the potentials of different foods. Since for the most part people are worrying more about the unburnt calories than those that are burned, that's an important measure.
Wade M.
April 26, 2021
Would this recipe work well as a dipping sauce, such as a marinara sauce in which to dip focaccia bread; or would I need to modify it slightly to get the texture right?
Lilyp
April 26, 2021
I eat this as a soup. I’ve added ravioli or tortellini to make it a heartier meal. So when I make it it is more soup consistency rather than a sauce. However you eat it, it’s pretty tasty.
Blanchie
November 15, 2022
Do not bother with this recipe, it is basically tasteless. The onion barely imparts any flavor, it’s really just tastes like a can of tomatoes, bland.
Toraaki V.
March 12, 2021
I am a total rookie cook, I ain't useless, but I sure can't make any complicated stuff.
I just tried this recipe and it was gooooood!
I may used another tomato and a bit less liquid (the recipe is not clear to how much liquid to use, when using fresh tomatos) But all in all, I really enjoyed it.
I just tried this recipe and it was gooooood!
I may used another tomato and a bit less liquid (the recipe is not clear to how much liquid to use, when using fresh tomatos) But all in all, I really enjoyed it.
Smaug
March 12, 2021
You shouldn't have to add any liquid. Where did you get fresh tomatoes in March?
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