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Meathead Goldwyn

Meathead Goldwyn

Posted: August 12, 2010 09:40 PM

"Why aren't Italians famous for barbecue? The spaghetti keeps falling through the grates." Anonymous

2010-08-12-tomatoes.jpgIt is August and the world is awash in tomatoes. I am eating a tomato sandwich for lunch almost every day (with fresh basil of course). But our garden always give us more than enough so we make sauce. Marinara sauce is the great classic Italian tomato sauce from Naples (or maybe even from Spain, but don't say this too loudly in the wrong company or you might find a horsehead in your bed).

Marinara is the base sauce (or gravy as my Italian-American wife calls it) for spaghetti and meatballs, pizza sauce, and so many Mediterranean dishes. It is so easy to make, and it freezes well, so there is no reason to every buy it in a jar again. If you have a recipe that needs red sauce, you can make it a day or two in advance and keep it in the fridge.

So here's how you have some fun with your friends. Invite them over to a Grilled Spaghetti Dinner, watch them scratch their heads, and serve them this incredible grilled rich marinara sauce.

Makes. About 3 cups
Preparation time. About 90 minutes

Ingredients
2 pounds of ripe tomatoes
2 tablespoons good quality olive oil
1 small onion, sliced in half
1 carrot, peeled
1 stalk celery, leaves removed
2 garlic cloves
1 bay leaf
1/4 teaspoon dried oregano
1/4 teaspoon dried thyme
1/4 teaspoon dried basil
1/2 teaspoon table salt
1/4 teaspoon ground black pepper

About the tomatoes. If tomatoes are not in season, use a 28 ounce can of crushed tomatoes.

Optional. Amp it up a notch with fresh hot peppers, a pinch of red pepper flake, chipotle powder, or hot sauce.

Do this

1) Preheat the grill to medium hot and when it is ready, clean the grates thoroughly. I know you don't clean the grates most of the time, but clean grates are very important for this recipe. Take the tomatoes and slice them in half. Roll a paper towel into a tight cigar and dip it into cheap vegetable oil. Swab the grill grates with the oil so the tomatoes won't stick. Put them on the grates, cut end down, for about 10 minutes or until they start to get some dark grill marks. Then roll them over and grill the skin side. Don't worry if they blacken a bit on the skin side. Remove them and let them cool until you can handle them and then peel off the skins. Chop them into 1/4" chunks. While the tomatoes are cooking, put the onion, carrot, and celery on the grill and roll them around until well marked. Remove them and when cool, chop them fine.

2) In a 2 quart pot or frying pan warm the olive oil over medium heat. Add everything except the tomatoes and cook about 10 minutes, stirring occasionally so it does not stick.

3) Add the tomatoes, turn the heat to medium low, and simmer uncovered for about 1 hour. If it gets too thick add a splash of red wine. If it gets thick again, add water.

4) Remove the bay leaf, taste and adjust the seasonings. If you like, a dollop of balsamic vinegar might be nice. You're done. The result is lumpy with those flavorful fire roasted veggies, and that's just the way it is. If you don't like that, you can whup it up in a blender or food processor or with a stick blender. Now pour your sauce over pasta, use it on pizza, in grilled eggplant parm, or on just about anything except ice cream.

All text and photos are Copyright (c) 2010 By Meathead, and all rights are reserved

For more of Meathead's writing, photos, and recipes, please visit his website AmazingRibs.com

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"Why aren't Italians famous for barbecue? The spaghetti keeps falling through the grates." Anonymous It is August and the world is awash in tomatoes. I am eating a tomato sandwich for lunch almost ev...
"Why aren't Italians famous for barbecue? The spaghetti keeps falling through the grates." Anonymous It is August and the world is awash in tomatoes. I am eating a tomato sandwich for lunch almost ev...
 
 
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climbing panda
there's a log in my cabin
04:38 PM on 08/16/2010
just saw the weirdest little gadget in my williams sonoma catalog. the smoking gun or something like that. looks like you put sawdust into a port on this thing, light um, and inject smoke flavor into your stove top dishes via a hose. ridiculous at first, but the concept kinda grew on me (after two minutes of examining the page).
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suzc
Speak the Truth, even if your voice shakes
08:21 PM on 08/15/2010
You really would need a clean grill for this!

When I was in grad school, we used the grill nightly. But with alum foil. One foil contained salmon or chicken. The other contained veggies. Potatoes, corn, onions, squash, peppers. Both packets were well seasoned and basted with olive oil. Slow grill. Heavenly results. So simple. Think it's time to go get out the grill.
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Meathead
I am a Barbecue Whisperer and Hedonism Evangelist.
10:31 PM on 08/15/2010
This is a fine way to cook, but it is steaming not grilling. You are not getting the flavor from the flame or the grates. You can get the same flavor in the oven.
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suzc
Speak the Truth, even if your voice shakes
09:26 AM on 08/16/2010
I bow to your expertise. Maybe it was having the grill lid closed. Maybe there was a hole in the foil.... I don't know how he did it but it did taste more "grilled" than doing it in the oven. It had that slightly smokey flavor. Meanwhile I'm going to try it in the oven (lazy me).

Anyway, you've inspired me to grill again.... and experiment more.... (and during your meatless month I have a fabulous veggie chili made with eggplant....)
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
up420oz
02:28 PM on 08/15/2010
this year, I've been grilling my vegetables for Salsa and chips as appy's. When the main dish is set, people are still looking for more Salsa.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Paganus
Classics Ninja
03:52 PM on 08/15/2010
I have a wonderful secret for you: grilled nachos. Try it!
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Meathead
I am a Barbecue Whisperer and Hedonism Evangelist.
10:32 PM on 08/15/2010
Tell me more!
11:43 AM on 08/15/2010
Addendum to previous post:

That being said (that it's pretty good), the Rao's cookbook (legendary New York eatery, with a gorgeous offshoot restaurant in the Caesar's out in Vegas) has a better one. And the meatball recipe is without a doubt the best Italian item I've ever had.
11:41 AM on 08/15/2010
Well, I tried this last night, and I have to admit, it was pretty good. Granted, I added meat to mine since in honour of this guy going 30 days without meat, I'm going 30 days with nothing BUT meat dishes - so this technically wasn't a marinara by the time I was done with it.
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Meathead
I am a Barbecue Whisperer and Hedonism Evangelist.
10:34 PM on 08/15/2010
I hope you are using antibiotic free pastured meat. Let's encourage family farmers to hold some of their animals out of the CAFO system and help them get back in the game and help us get better meat.
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suzc
Speak the Truth, even if your voice shakes
09:28 AM on 08/16/2010
I get all my beef from a local farmer or local farmer's market farm. It is fabulous. A slightly sweet taste when not covered up by all those antibiotics. More like buffalo. I'm lucky to live so close to ranching. I used to drive 150 miles one way to buy such beef. Now I just eat less of it. But it's tricky, as they are not supposed to sell or even give to non-family members.
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
spartanmom
My micro-bio is empty
09:15 AM on 08/15/2010
Way too much work.

Wash tomatoes
put them in a pot
stab them a bit
set on a low heat 'til they're soft
run them through the food mill
Back in the pot on low heat
When they've cooked down a bit
add
Basil
Garlic
Bay
Salt (if needed)

If you use a heat diffuser you don't even have to stir that often.

Add wine near the end of cooking if you want.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Paganus
Classics Ninja
03:47 PM on 08/15/2010
Your suggestion sounds good, but you're missing the point, which is to get the flavor of grilled veggies in the sauce!
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Meathead
I am a Barbecue Whisperer and Hedonism Evangelist.
10:36 PM on 08/15/2010
Paganus has it right. How you cook things alters their flavor.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
DogTown
your micro-bio is empty
04:56 AM on 08/15/2010
Nooooooooooo oregano...Never oregano in Italian food!
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
spartanmom
My micro-bio is empty
09:10 AM on 08/15/2010
Where I grew up (Metro NY area with lots of Bronx Italian transplants) oregano was the difference between pasta sauce and pizza sauce. All the best Bronx pizza has oregano in the sauce.

I suppose you could argue that NY pizza isn't really Italian food.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Paganus
Classics Ninja
03:49 PM on 08/15/2010
The only time Italians use oregano is in pizza sauce; otherwise, they use marjoram.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
DogTown
your micro-bio is empty
10:17 PM on 08/17/2010
Exactly!
10:00 PM on 08/14/2010
Sounds great. By the way, the Moosewood Cookbook has a great recipe for shish kebob veggies I have used to make vegetarians happy at cookouts for decades. Basically marinate mushrooms, cherry tomatoes, onion chunks, green pepper chunks and parboiled eggplant in olive oil and vinegar with Italian type herbs. Skewer on wooden “skewers” and flop around on the flames till slightly charred. Makes a light vinegary side dish for grilled meat too. But you won’t be able to check that out for a month, ha ha ha. Stay strong.
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Meathead
I am a Barbecue Whisperer and Hedonism Evangelist.
10:37 PM on 08/15/2010
Love me the Moosewood cookbooks. We have a well dog eared Vol 1 #1 bought when we lived in Ithaca. Several of those recipes are faves.
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Halsey
"There is a price to pay for speaking the truth. T
09:18 PM on 08/14/2010
I don't even LIKE spaghetti, yet you, Craig, just made me drool like (insert choice of drool images). I'd have to use angel hair pasta and use the marinara with conservatively; with those flavors you injected, less WOULD be more. I love the idea of grilling the celery, that is a new one.

I think you'll survive the next 27 days just fine (yes, judging b b q contest will be difficult, but we have faith).

Yum!
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Weirdwriter
03:48 PM on 08/14/2010
On top of everything else, I'll bet this makes the home smell heavenly...
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Meathead
I am a Barbecue Whisperer and Hedonism Evangelist.
03:10 PM on 08/14/2010
Today I plan to try to convert this to a soup.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Weirdwriter
03:46 PM on 08/14/2010
Can I come for dinner? I'll bring the vino...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
SouthernJewel
That All Important I-4 Corridor in Central FL
01:32 PM on 08/14/2010
Sounds Delicious!
Absolutely Delicious!
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Ozark Homesteader
http://ozarkhomesteader.wordpress.com
12:29 PM on 08/14/2010
Sounds delicious!
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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06:39 AM on 08/14/2010
Nice recipe! I'll definitely try this. The sauce may not go well over ice cream, but I've made basil ice cream before ... which is surprisingly good.
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Meathead
I am a Barbecue Whisperer and Hedonism Evangelist.
03:09 PM on 08/14/2010
Love to know how you do that!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Paganus
Classics Ninja
03:50 PM on 08/15/2010
My wife did that a couple of summers ago. I'll have her send you the recipe or post it to your blog.
06:59 PM on 08/13/2010
I'd say this is sort of like making spaghetti sauce with fire-roasted tomatoes. Sounds quite good.