5 Ingredients or Fewer
Marcella Hazan's Tomato Sauce With Onion & Butter
Popular on Food52
516 Reviews
Julie I.
January 14, 2021
After trying this recipe the first time it became my favorite go-to pasta sauce. It's so delicious and easy to make. I like to puree the sauce after it's finished cooking... including the onions. Also, I always use good quality San Marzano tomatoes.
Emily
January 1, 2021
I have to say that I absolutely love this sauce! It’s such a simple sauce, and couldn’t be easier to prepare, but with a surprising depth of flavor. I’ve even made it with good quality canned tomato sauce (pantry staple), and I’ve also tried using olive oil for half the butter (just for health reasons) —all with excellent results. Oh, and I leave the onion in. It truly is genius!
Trock
December 13, 2020
There is only one way to make a good tomato sauce, and that is with olive oil. Nevertheless, I decided to try it this way and the result is truly disgusting. Avoid!
Trock
December 13, 2020
There is only one way to make a good tomato sauce, and that is by using olive oil. Nevertheless I decided to try it this way, and it is truly disgusting. Avoid!
ShenAnno
November 29, 2020
Love all these people who claim to cook Italian who clearly have never met a Marcella Hazan cookbook, filled with hundreds of her recipes. She makes magic of zucchini, celery, pork and swordfish, not to slight her other skills. This sauce may be one of her best and can be used as a base for ratatouille, soup, stew, pizza, anything that requires tomato. An Italian friend once told me that her even easier Tomato Sauce with Garlic (5 cloves) and Basil is the equivalent of Italian cereal — you can eat it anytime, anyplace, for any meal. She was absolutely genius, and four words prove it: Chicken with Two Lemons.
Glvilla83
September 28, 2020
I hate when people leave bad reviews such as “this was too bland”, so on and such forth. You have eyes, you obviously see that it only has 4 ingredients in it. If you’re someone that loves spices this isn’t the sauce for you. Also, this is a simple sauce, no need to butcher it with all your additions. Again, a simple sauce that is delicate on its own. It’s supposed to use quality tomatoes and the butter compliments the tomatoes. It’s perfectly fine on its own. Marcella Hazen was a chef, it doesn’t matter if Italians made this in Italy or not. Just because she is Italian doesn’t mean this is common in Italy. She’s a chef, chefs experiment and make their own recipes. This is hers and it is marvelous just the way it is. 🤦🏾♀️
Linda W.
September 28, 2020
Hear, hear!! I totally agree! (And I love this recipe. Its simplicity is what makes it so good)
Lilyp
September 28, 2020
I agree, too. I love this so much I made an additional 3 quarts and have more tomatoes to use so I'll be making more. It's so good I drink it as soup as is, no pasta for me (I do blend in the onions rather than remove them). I think I've made about 14 quarts in the last couple of weeks!
Lilyp
September 18, 2020
I made this with 8 pounds of tomatoes, 4 onions, a lot of butter and salt. I cooked it much longer than the recipe called for and then rather than removing the onions, blended them in with an immersion blender. The result was a little thin for sauce, I thought, but made for a delicious soup. I liked it so well as soup, I made additional batches with 14 pounds of tomatoes (it was a very good year for tomatoes in the garden). This is now my tomato soup recipe. I might add that I have never been a big fan of tomato soup. I now have at least 8 quarts of homemade tomato soup in my freezer.
Fred R.
September 18, 2020
That’s what many have said: As a soup, fine, but as a sauce, not so much.
carol
September 19, 2020
I do the same, although I do add some milk or h & h when I serve it as soup. I think the key here is the type of tomatoes you use p fresh tomatoes give off a lot more water than canned -this the longer cooking time to reduce the sauce down.
Lilyp
September 19, 2020
I may try adding som half and half the next time we have it. I also strained the sauce/soup to give to the generous provider of the tomatoes (she can’t eat seeds). It was very thin, but the flavor was still good. Next time (she gave me more tomatoes today!) I will cook, remove the onions, strain the seeds and then blend the onions back in to give it more body. I have to say, I love this recipe for soup.
louise61
September 12, 2020
This is so simple and so phenomenally good. I didn't even use imported canned tomatoes, just a good quality store brand. I chose to use a stick blender to include the onion in it, but it would also be great as written if you want a more delicate flavor. I've spent years tinkering with olive oil, fresh garlic, fresh herbs, blah blah blah but now I'm just making this.
rodders
September 4, 2020
Marcella I am a neophite but I know what I like. I am sure they will debate your sauce until the end of time, what a legacy you have left
debplusthree
August 24, 2020
Once again, my mind is blown! I made this tonight exactly as it is written, and it is positively dreamy. Thank you for taking the time to hunt down these amazing recipes that I would probably never find without you. This one is for sure a keeper.
back T.
May 26, 2020
Spend a lot of time in Italy and cook many Italian food. This recipe is perfect for many occasions when I just want some simple and quick tomato sauce without a fuss, like making ravioli and I want two different sauces, the other one being the sage butter. My Italian friend from Alto Adige always adds a little cream to her sugo, akin to the butter effect. We add parmesan at the end, which is also a daily, right? Sometimes I make tomato sauce with olive oil but Hazan's is my go-to recipe.
People, I question the meaning of "authenticity" speaking of food, which varies in its history and continues to evolve. Dishes refuse to be defined. And also, the cook's nationality or the "blood" doesn't all that relates to how "authentic" the food is produced. I was born in Asia, grew up in different places but my Italian food isn't any less "Italian", I swear.
People, I question the meaning of "authenticity" speaking of food, which varies in its history and continues to evolve. Dishes refuse to be defined. And also, the cook's nationality or the "blood" doesn't all that relates to how "authentic" the food is produced. I was born in Asia, grew up in different places but my Italian food isn't any less "Italian", I swear.
Smaug
May 26, 2020
I don't think that the effect of cream is at all like the effect of butter. Authenticity is always a thorny question, though I'm not sure anyone is seriously questioning the authenticity of this sauce, just whether they really like it. Aside from the fact that there are something like seventy million people in Italy and probably a lot of them are rotten cooks, there are always variations from region to region, from cook to cook, and- for many adventurous cooks- from day to day. But just because there's no clearly visible line doesn't mean you can't cross it (lawyers love that sort of fallacious argument). Chili, even if you go beyond the basic Mexican stew that it derives from, should at any rate be defined by the flavors of chilis- beans and tomatoes just isn't chili. A pizza needs a yeast dough for the crust and for the toppings and crust to be cooked together- it just isn't pizza otherwise (not to say that it can't be good). A hamburger simply isn't made of soy beans- etc. etc.
Margaret B.
May 26, 2020
Is there anyone here--including Food 52--who cooks this sauce as written? I don't think so. All add herbs and subtract fat. No one really like the sauce. Nor do I. It is fatty. It uses butter instead of olive oil, it ruins fresh tomatoes.
Peter P.
July 28, 2020
I cook it exactly like this, and have since I first came across this recipe a decade or so ago. It is perfect as-is. The butter is a treat, and doesn't "ruin" fresh tomatoes. It complements their sweetness and makes for a lovely, delicate yet decadent sauce.
TeaForMe
August 14, 2020
I also make this (ingredient wise) as is -- it's my favorite tomato sauce! Just got finished with a triple batch today! I've still got oodles of roasted tomatoes from last year -- so this year, the Amish paste tomatoes are going into this wonderful sauce. I DO cook it much longer so it gets more "saucy" but that's the only deviation from the recipe.
Stir those pools of fat in! Go one better and drizzle some lovely olive oil on top before serving:)
Stir those pools of fat in! Go one better and drizzle some lovely olive oil on top before serving:)
Matthew M.
August 23, 2020
I 100% cook it as is. It’s fantastic and not at all ‘fatty’. This recipe brings out the taste of the fresh tomato’s and gives a better mouthfeel by using butter and not olive oil.
Karthurs
September 14, 2020
I make the sauce as written. It is delicious! Of course it can be a base for adding Italian sausage, mushrooms or other things that get added to pasta dishes regularly.
But for delicious fresh flavor, canned Italian pomodoros, an onion, butter, salt and 45 min is all that is needed
But for delicious fresh flavor, canned Italian pomodoros, an onion, butter, salt and 45 min is all that is needed
Margaret B.
May 26, 2020
The truth of this sauce is that no one actually uses it, including those who recommend it highly--including food 52. No italian uses butter in ragu, and this sauce is not Italian in any general sense. I don't know what Marcella Hazan was thinking. I love her books, but she simply erred here.
Karthurs
September 14, 2020
wow you certainly are bold to speak for me.
I love this sauce. Was first made for me by a friend as we cooked a meal.
And I have never bought sauce again. I love it, just as it is.
I love this sauce. Was first made for me by a friend as we cooked a meal.
And I have never bought sauce again. I love it, just as it is.
Smaug
May 26, 2020
Sorry, I love Marcella Hazan but I don't think you can consider a sauce with this much butter a purist's tomato sauce- it is a simple way to go if you like a lot of butter. I also question the designation of "most popular recipe" as judging from printed comments, the great majority of users change the recipe.
Margaret B.
May 26, 2020
You are so right. To me, the sauce is more like Chef Boyardee than an Italian sauce. Ugh to all that butter.
nancyet
May 26, 2020
I DID cut down on the butter via others (great) suggestions, and kept the onion quarter pieces in the sauce to have as an occasional treat with this dish...as you would a meatball. I automatically slipped and added a tiny PINCH of garlic powder before realizing that it wasn't in the recipe.
Please give this another try....it's sooooooo good.
Please give this another try....it's sooooooo good.
Smaug
May 26, 2020
What we really come down to is the quality of the tomatoes. I don't go this way because I simply don't like fatty sauces, but in tomato season I often don't go far beyond tomato, basil and salt.
Kayla
May 8, 2020
Does anyone have any ideas for what to do with the leftover onions?
carol
May 8, 2020
I totally riff on this recipe by using a hand held blender after it's cooked - pop it right into the slightly cooled sauce along with the onions - it makes it creamier and the onions add so much to the flavor i don't even add salt or pepper. I suppose if you wanted to stay truer to the recipe - take the onions out and blend just them - a fantastic spread on bread, etc.
fayehess
May 8, 2020
Pour a bit of balsamic vinegar over with a quarter inch of water. give it a pinch of sugar, a pinch of salt, thyme sprig and a bay leaf. Let it simmer until tender. Serve as a side to steak, pork or chicken.
T
May 6, 2020
I made this so many times..this review is long overdue...ditto what every one has commented....so simple..so easy....so delicious...
[email protected]
May 6, 2020
This is the best sauce I have ever made. I always missed a basic tomato sauce without all the extra stuff in it. Who would have thought such a simple recipe can be so delicious! I usually cut the onion into my sauce and I love it.
Ana S.
April 19, 2020
OUTSTANDING.
I hate recipes. I do not consider this a recipe, but instead a meal composed with instinct.This will be a staple in our household from here on out. A standing ovation to Marcella and the creative staff at Food52.
I hate recipes. I do not consider this a recipe, but instead a meal composed with instinct.This will be a staple in our household from here on out. A standing ovation to Marcella and the creative staff at Food52.
gravityace
April 19, 2020
thank you.....a voice of reason! Its a brilliant recipe and can be tweeked to ones liking.... I make it at least twice a month....
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