Chief Longwind Of The North
Certified/Certifiable
I've made a decision. I love a good tomato based sauce, be it Bolognaise, Marinara, Sauce Tomate, whatever. My own favorite sauce is made up of diced tomato, tomato puree, tomato paste, fresh garlic, basil, oregano, marjoram, rosemary, and thyme. Add to that rustic chopped onion, and sometimes, some diced bell pepper, even carrot occasionally. Usually, I add browned ground beef, sometimes home-made meatballs. I never cook it longer than an hour. I like to quickly chill it and let it sleep in the fridge overnight, reheat and serve the next day over spaghetti, or some kind of pasta. The flavors are bright and pronounced. I can distinguish all of them in my mouth.
So, we had a pot luck at work today. I made my sauce the same way, with home-made meatballs this time. I let it cook all night in the slow cooker after initially building the sauce on the stove. It tasted great when I put it into the slow cooker. I tasted it this morning, and much of the flavor was diminished. I added more herbs and got it tasting right again. I took it to work and let it simmer until lunch. I just got done eating it with spaghetti noodles. The meatballs were great, but the sauce was downright boring, no pop of herb goodness. I just don't understand why people talk all the time about simmering a good sauce for hours, to let the flavors blend.
For me, I like my flavors bright and distinctive. I don't think I will ever slow cook my tomato sauces anymore. All of the essential flavor oils disappear into the air, rather than stay where they belong, in the sauce.
If anyone can explain to me the reason for slow cooking/simmering a sauce for a long time, that makes sense, I'd be glad for the explanation, or to know what I'm doing wrong that makes every slow-cooked tomato sauce I've cooked taste so boring.
Now it just might be that as I like strong flavors, I'm not your average pasta sauce lover. Maybe my desire for pronounced herb/tomato flavor is unique to me. I don't know. I just know that I like a young sauce better.
Seeeeeya; Chief Longwind of the North
So, we had a pot luck at work today. I made my sauce the same way, with home-made meatballs this time. I let it cook all night in the slow cooker after initially building the sauce on the stove. It tasted great when I put it into the slow cooker. I tasted it this morning, and much of the flavor was diminished. I added more herbs and got it tasting right again. I took it to work and let it simmer until lunch. I just got done eating it with spaghetti noodles. The meatballs were great, but the sauce was downright boring, no pop of herb goodness. I just don't understand why people talk all the time about simmering a good sauce for hours, to let the flavors blend.
For me, I like my flavors bright and distinctive. I don't think I will ever slow cook my tomato sauces anymore. All of the essential flavor oils disappear into the air, rather than stay where they belong, in the sauce.
If anyone can explain to me the reason for slow cooking/simmering a sauce for a long time, that makes sense, I'd be glad for the explanation, or to know what I'm doing wrong that makes every slow-cooked tomato sauce I've cooked taste so boring.
Now it just might be that as I like strong flavors, I'm not your average pasta sauce lover. Maybe my desire for pronounced herb/tomato flavor is unique to me. I don't know. I just know that I like a young sauce better.
Seeeeeya; Chief Longwind of the North
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