Ahhhh… it’s Spring in San Diego. The flowers are blooming away. The days are warm enough for short sleeves. The frogs are croaking in the canyon at night, prompting begging from my 6 year old to go frog hunting in the evenings. The neighbors are beginning to put their yappy little dog outside so it can bark to no end. The vegetable garden has been planted and has already been eaten some by some sort of mysterious creature. And a nice selection of veggies (at good prices) have been making their debut at Farmer’s Markets and grocery stores.
This puts me in the mood for VEGGIES! The mission: to make a nice, light, fresh pasta sauce for dinner. Bored with marinara, I searched my cookbooks for a recipe. Dianne Rossen Worthington is a cookbook author whose style I’ve found that I enjoy immensely. I have her cookbook, The Cuisine of California– in which I have discovered some real recipe keepers. I found what I needed within this cookbook: Red Pepper Tomato Sauce.
A very simple sauce, a bit of chopping and then plunging tomatoes into boiling water so that I could easily peel and seed them, and I was on my way.
This sauce has just a small amount of chopped chiles in adobo sauce (found canned in the Latin area of your market.) This gives it just a little bit of umph of smoky, spice flavor. I honestly couldn’t detect it much in the half chile that I put in. I would try a whole chile next time. Speaking of those canned adobos, it took me a while to realize that you could throw the extra chiles in little zips and freeze them for later use. This is super convenient when you only need one!
After simmering away on its own for a while, the mixture is ready for the food processor.
A quick whir, and the sauce is ready for pasta!
I added a good dose of kosher salt and some fresh ground pepper.
I’m off to find pasta and other veggies to accompany this delicious, fresh sauce….
Red Pepper Tomato Sauce
Ingredients
- 3 tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil
- 1 medium onion, finely chopped
- 4 large (or 5 medium) red bell peppers, seeded and thinly sliced
- 2 large tomatoes, peeled, seeded and finely chopped
- ½ whole canned chipotle chile in adobo sauce, coarsely chopped (add a whole one for more spice)
- 1 bunch fresh basil, coarsely chopped
- salt and freshly ground black pepper, to taste
Instructions
- In a large non-aluminum saucepan, heat the olive oil over medium heat. Add onion and sauté for 3 to 5 minutes, or until softened.
- Add sliced bell peppers, tomatoes, chile, and basil, cover partially, and cook over medium-low heat for about 20 minutes, or until softened. Remove from heat.
- Purée the vegetables in a food processor fitted with the metal blade for about 1 minute, until the mixture is smooth with some texture remaining. Add the salt and pepper, tasting for seasoning.
Nutrition
Nutrition information is automatically calculated, so should only be used as an approximation.
Disclosure: There are Amazon affiliate links included within this post.
first of all, i’m insanely jealous of your weather–there’s still snow on the ground here in ny. secondly, my neighbors don’t seem to mind leaving their yappy dog outside year-round, and it drives me bonkers. thirdly, this sauce is a must-try, and i’ll definitely go with a whole chile–the spicier, the better! 🙂
Let me hear ya say “YUM”
WOW – that sauce looks DEElicious – exactly what I would want on a big steaming bowl of pasta. And I love that you are not shy with the pepper — mmmmm!
Looks very nice. I’m getting tired of tomato sauce too. I’m putting this on my list of things to try.
Fabulous!!!
Can’t wait to try this one.
I keep thinking about this as a soup as well, with a bit of lime juice and creme fraiche on the top. I’m starving, can you tell!!
Love it Lori!!
Mary
Tracy- Thanks, and glad you’re starting to see Spring too!
Peter- Yep, we actually planted our veggies and fruits at the end of Feb. believe it or not! It’s quite warm here. Only a few things have survived the mysterious creature though 🙁
Karen- thanks for stopping by!
Patsy- both hubby & son will be eating the sauce for dinner so we’ll see if I can pass one over on them!
I’m the only one in my house who likes red peppers as a sauce! Maybe I’ll make it anyway, and freeze the leftovers… JUST FOR ME! 🙂
That looks amazing! Thanks for posting!
This is the second red pepper sauce I’ve seen in as many days and now I’m going to have to play around with this idea.
Garden planted? We have to wait until mid-May!
Such gorgeous colors on this post! I’m starting to see the tips of daffodils … so spring is on its way here too!