The villages bordering our town are vegetable growing belts
of the foothills. The fields fed by the river and mountain springs are rich
agricultural belts. During weekends we often make a trip to the villages to buy
vegetables. It is a good practice to be a locavore. It ensures that the
vegetables that reach your platter are fresh and seasonal, the farmer earns
directly without parting with middleman and the biggest thing - you
reduce your carbon footprints.
And of course, picking and choosing your own vegetables is
so pleasurable!
Last month we got tomatoes from a nearby village. I wanted
to make ketchup at home. Tomato picking was on when we reached there. There
were piles and piles of tomatoes in the fields. Tomatoes were being packed in
the baskets. Men, women and children were all contributing their bit in the
work. We went to a father son team who were packing tomatoes. They let us
choose and we got red, ripe juicy and choicest tomatoes just perfect for making
ketchup. Here goes the recipe-
Ingredients
2 ½ kgs ripe tomatoes
200 g (1 cup) sugar (can be adjusted according to taste)
½ cup(120 ml) malted vinegar (can be adjusted according to taste)
1 ½ teaspoon salt
½ teaspoon ginger paste
1 teaspoon garlic paste
2 sticks cinnamon
1 teaspoon cloves
½ teaspoon whole black peppers
½ cup water
You will also need a muslin cloth
Method
Peel the tomatoes. (A lot of insecticide is sprayed on
tomatoes before ripening. It is advisable to remove the skin) In case the
tomatoes very ripe and soft, put them in boiling water for a few minutes and
remove the skin.
Cut the peeled tomatoes into small pieces and cook in a pan
with half cup water for fifteen minutes.
Cool the tomatoes and blend. Strain the mixture, discard the
seeds.
Transfer the blended tomatoes to a thick bottom non aluminum
vessel. Add sugar, vinegar, salt and ginger garlic paste to it.
In a muslin cloth, tie cinnamon sticks, cloves and whole
peppers. Place the muslin bag in the blended tomato mixture and cook on medium
flame. Cook till the mixture becomes thick and attains the thickness of
ketchup.
Fill in the sterilized bottles. (To sterilize the bottles, place
the washed and dried bottles with the lids in the oven. Set the temperature to
100 degrees and set the timer to 10 minutes. Remove the bottles and their lids
from the oven.)
Refrigerate and consume early.
I so love the fact that you love fresh produce and encourage using them!! Love the idea of bottling your own ketchup and yours look so fine. Love the natural red colour!!
ReplyDeleteWonderful to get farm fresh produce! We go tomato picking in late summer. Our local u-pick farm offer a good number of varieties, but we don't get the beautiful red tomatoes of Delhi!! The ketchup looks great!
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