Written by: Crock-Pot Ladies 21 Comments
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Use up your garden or local farmer’s market tomatoes to make up a batch of fresh Crock-Pot Pizza Sauce which you can then choose to can or freeze for long term storage!
Slow Cooker Pizza Sauce (Canning Version)
For the first time this year I made Crock-Pot Pizza Sauce by scratch to be canned. I had decided to focus my garden on things that I knew the family would eat and that I could preserve. I purchased a pressure canner so I could process meats, veggies and mixes of the two.
I’ve been canning for years, but was sticking to fruits and tomatoes. This recipe if it’s followed exactly, can be water bath canned. If you want to vary it a bit, or not be so concerned on the amounts of tomatoes to onions and garlic then it needs to be pressure canned. Either will work well.
This Crock-Pot Pizza Sauce can also be frozen if you wish to do neither, and of course can be used fresh, if your making a ton of pizza! The recipe uses honey to sweeten and you can replace with regular sugar, but I generally don’t suggest using artificial sweeteners when canning.
If you are interested in either water bath canning or pressure canning and don’t know where to start, the Ball Book of Canning and Preserving is the best beginners book to start out with.
This recipe was the first time I got to try out my new Kitchen Aid Immersion Blender, and frankly I wonder where it has been all my life! What a marvelous product.
I also used my trusty stockpot and my new Presto Pressure Canner. I’ve made it twice now, and working on a new one tomorrow.
Special Diets
Gluten Free | High Fiber | Low Calorie | Low Cholesterol | Low Fat | Low Sodium | Paleo | Vegan | Vegetarian
This recipe for Crock-Pot Pizza Sauce (Canning Version) is Weight Watchers Friendly on the new Personal Points plan. You can see the WW personal points for this recipe here on the Weight Watchers website. Click here for MORE of our Weight Watchers Recipes
Crock-Pot Pizza Sauce Recipe (Canning Version) Recipe
Heidi Kennedy
Making your own pizza sauce in your slow cooker is a great way to use up fresh tomatoes from your garden and the result tastes amazing! You can can this pizza sauce in jars or freeze it for long term food storage.
4.48 from 21 votes
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Prep Time 1 hour hr
Cook Time 4 hours hrs
Total Time 5 hours hrs
Course Canning, Sauces
Cuisine Italian
Servings 8 Pints
Calories 286 kcal
Ingredients
- 10 quarts Fresh Tomatoes (cored, chopped and seeds removed (40 cups))
- 2 cups Chopped Yellow Onion
- 6 cloves Garlic (minced)
- 2 tablespoons Honey ((or sweetener of your choice))
- 2 whole Bay Leaves
- 2 tablespoons Minced Fresh Basil (or 2 teaspoons dried basil)
- 2 tablespoons Dried Oregano
- 1 ½ teaspoons Dried Thyme
- Lemon Juice (only needed if you are water bath canning – you need to put 1 tablespoon of lemon juice per pint jar)
- 8 ounces Canned Tomato Paste
Instructions
This can be done several different ways, I will first post how I do it.
I wash tomatoes with vinegar and water to help clean them, picking out any that are spoiling or bruised ( soak in huge buckets).
I cut the top off of the tomato, and then cut out much of the core and scrape the seeds out.
In a Roma Tomato, it’s easiest to cut the tomato in half to get the seeds out.
In a tomato that is more a round size, it’s easier to cut the top off, and then squeeze the tomato to get the seeds and juice out.
I then boil, on medium, the tomatoes and chopped onions down until they are much more liquified, stirring often.
I drain off the excess juices and place them into my 6 quart or larger slow cooker.
I add the garlic, honey and bay leaves.
Set on HIGH for about 4 to 6 hours.
Do not place the lid on, once it is warm and stir every 30 minutes or so.
Remove bay leaves when it’s done.
If it still seems quite runny I would add a small can of tomato paste or dehydrated tomatoes.
I then let it cool down a bit, and pour in a large container (I use my large water pitcher) and I use my immersion blender to make it a nice smooth consistency.
Add your basil, oregano and thyme, and taste test it (I end up adding a bit more honey to mine).
Remember if you are water bath canning add 1 tablespoon of lemon juice to each jar and you need to follow the ratios of tomato vs onion/garlic exactly.
Pour hot pizza sauce into pint jars, filling to within 1/2 inches of the top.
Wipe the top of the jar with a towel soaked in a bit of vinegar to clean off the jar.
Cover with a clean mason jar lid (that is been in boiling water) and screw a clean band on, tight but not too tight.
You can then freeze them, and in fact I had an extra amount that didn’t fully fill a jar and froze that one with no issues.
Water bath can for 35 minutes (pints) If you do quarts it’s 40 minutes.
Or pressure can at 11 pounds pressure for 20 minutes at 1000 feet (please check a Presto manual online if you are at a different elevation for the poundage).
If you are pressure canning quarts do it for 25 quarts.
Nutrition
Calories: 286kcal | Carbohydrates: 65g | Protein: 13g | Fat: 3g | Saturated Fat: 1g | Polyunsaturated Fat: 2g | Monounsaturated Fat: 1g | Sodium: 97mg | Potassium: 3282mg | Fiber: 19g | Sugar: 40g | Vitamin A: 10700IU | Vitamin C: 225.2mg | Calcium: 240mg | Iron: 6.3mg
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