tomato – Open Source Pizza http://blog.opensourcepizza.com Developing the art of pizza and community involvement in Columbus, OH Sat, 26 Apr 2014 20:57:24 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=5.1.8 Reducing Acidity in Tomato Pizza Sauce https://blog.opensourcepizza.com/2011/04/09/reducing-acidity-in-tomato-sauce/ https://blog.opensourcepizza.com/2011/04/09/reducing-acidity-in-tomato-sauce/#respond Sat, 09 Apr 2011 13:58:51 +0000 https://blog.opensourcepizza.com/?p=143 Continue reading Reducing Acidity in Tomato Pizza Sauce]]> A big factor in making a pizza great is the sauce! Sometimes the sauce doesn’t stand out at all, sometimes you notice it’s really great, and other times it’s quite bland or not quite to your liking. Is it thick or thin, sugary, sweet, tomato-y, spicy, bland, or just the right amount of spices? Many are concerned with counter-balancing the acidity of the tomatoes in the sauce. I sometimes have a hard time telling if a sauce is too acidic, but comparing it to a sauce I really like, I can tell a difference – it can be a little tart. Some people have acid reflux and acidic foods cause a lot of heartburn. So when making spaghetti or pizza sauce, how do you balance out the acidity and tomato taste?

Mask the Flavor

One method is to add sugar or carrots to counter-balance the acidic taste. You cook the carrots down and remove them at the end if you don’t want to keep the carrots in the sauce. But adding these things won’t change the actual pH of the sauce so won’t help with acid reflux or heartburn. The sugar will make the sauce taste sweet, which I don’t prefer. Adding water will dilute the sauce so the acid isn’t detected as much, but it will dilute all the other flavors as well.

Spaghetti sauce

Acid vs. Base

The first way to counter act the acid in the sauce is to add an alkaline (basic) ingredient, like baking soda. Just add a small amount at a time and stir it well, until you get the taste you want. You won’t be able to take any out once you put it in, since it will react! A little milk may also work. Cheese has also been suggested, since the calcium can react with the acid. Try a little grated Parmesan. This will add its own flavors though, so make sure you taste it to make sure it’s satisfactory. Reducing the acidity and not just masking the flavor with others is the best way to go for those that have heartburn. The pH of tomatoes is about 4.6, carrots about 6.0, and water 7.0.

What do you do to balance acidity in tomato sauce?

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Making Pizza Sauce – Need to Reduce it? https://blog.opensourcepizza.com/2010/10/08/making-pizza-sauce-need-to-reduce-it/ https://blog.opensourcepizza.com/2010/10/08/making-pizza-sauce-need-to-reduce-it/#respond Sat, 09 Oct 2010 02:21:13 +0000 https://blog.opensourcepizza.com/?p=25 Continue reading Making Pizza Sauce – Need to Reduce it?]]> I’ve come across a few recipes for pizza sauce recently.

On Serious Eats, J. Kenji provides a recipe I’d like to try and explains the science behind the recipe. http://www.seriouseats.com – new-york-style-pizza-sauce

Also on that website are a few videos on making the sauce. Just search for Pizza Sauce or see the Related Videos section on the page above. Here’s one that also includes reducing the sauce over heat. Kudos to Chef John of Foodwishes on Serious Eats for this video.

Reducing Pizza Sauce

I made a sauce from a cook book I have, and I don’t think it called for reducing it. So I wonder, do you need to reduce your pizza sauce? I would think it brings out a lot of the flavor and removes extra water so the flavors are concentrated. Which sounds good to me! I’ll have to try it.

I also wonder about the science behind recipes. For example, what does sugar and salt do to combat the acidity of the tomatoes? If you find your sauce is too ‘tomato-y’, what do you do to correct it?

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