Canning Stewed Tomatoes Recipe. How to safely adapt for flavor. (2024)

Canning stewed tomatoes gives you a versatile ingredient. I use this stewed tomatoes recipe as a base for stews. I use it in my chili. I will pour it over a roast in a Crockpot.

If you are canning stewed tomatoes, you will be adding peppers and onions. Celery is optional. Since you are adding other vegetable ingredients, botulism is a risk. This MUST be pressure canned.

Please note: I like this recipe because it has lots of veggies. It has only been tested as safe in a pressure canner. There are recipes available that are meant for a water bath, but this recipe is not one. Please don’t skip processing!

You will need to know how to use a pressure canner. This how to use a pressure canner page has more detailed information and step-by-step instructions.

This recipe makes approximately 7 pints. For my family, I almost always double this and do quarts.

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This Page Includes:

  • Canning Stewed Tomatoes Recipe: Extended, Step-By-Step Directions
  • Peeling Tomatoes for Stewed Tomatoes
  • Home Canning Stewed Tomatoes
  • skip to – Stewed Tomatoes Recipe Card
  • Frequently Asked Questions
  • Celery in Home Canned Stewed Tomatoes?

Canning Stewed Tomatoes: Recipe with Extended, Step-By-Step Directions

Gather your canning supplies and ingredients.

Supplies:

  • pressure canner
  • canning jars
  • canning lids and rings
  • jar lifter and canning funnel
  • large pot or blancher
  • bowls
  • large spoons
  • sharp knife
  • towels and dish cloths

Ingredients:

  • You will need about 24 large tomatoes (enough to make 4 quarts peeled and chopped tomatoes)
  • 1 cup chopped onion
  • 3/4 cup chopped celery or green peppers
  • 1 Tbsp sugar
  • 2 tsp. canning salt
  • Lemon juice (Ball’s canning recipe, my original source, doesn’t include lemon juice, but I’ve opted to include it for acidity per NCHFP safety recommendations.)

Note about the quantity: You’ll need 4 quarts of chopped, cored tomatoes. This cooks down a bit, so you should end up with around 3 quarts or 7 pints of stewed tomatoes when you are finished.

Peeling Tomatoes for Stewed Tomatoes

Start by preparing your jars and getting water in your canner heating. (See pressure canning for full directions.)

You’ll start by skinning (or peeling) your tomatoes.

Blanching tomatoes to remove skins is the easiest way for me. Use a blancher or a basket to dip your tomatoes, or you can just use a slotted spoon and a big pot of boiling water.

I have a Polder Stainless Steel Strainer and I love it! Highly recommended for all kinds of projects. Here is a link to it on Amazon: Polder Strainer

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Depending on the size of the tomato, blanch 4 to 6 at a time. In these pictures I am working with Roma tomatoes. I like them for canning, because they are meatier than other tomatoes. They are smaller, so I can fit more in the strainer.

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Wash tomatoes and dip in boiling water for 30-60 seconds or until you see the skins split. Start counting as soon as your tomatoes hit the water. Don’t wait for the water to come back to a boil to start your count time.

Quick Cleanup Tip

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When I am canning stewed tomatoes or any other style of tomatoes, I love this super easy cleanup tip!

I have pots and containers set up in my double sink. The one on the left is for the cold water to cool the tomatoes as they come out of the hot water. The one on the right is to slide the skins off into. I slip the peeled tomatoes into a measuring bowl to measure how much I am getting done.

The work area is lower than if you set them on a counter. This make is easier on the arms and the sink makes for easy cleaning up later. Love that easy cleanup!

Home Canning Stewed Tomatoes

When you remove the tomatoes, drop them immediately into sink or bowl of cold water to stop the cooking. The skins should just slide off in your hands. Occasionally, I’ll use a knife on some stubborn spots. Slip off skins, and if you are working with larger tomatoes, quarter them. These are the smaller Romas, so I don’t bother cutting them up. They will mash up when I cook them.

Repeat steps until all tomatoes are skinned and chopped. You may need to let your water come back to heat in between batches in the blancher.

Chop your vegetables.

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Remember, with a stewed tomatoes recipe like this, you can safely adjust the type of pepper you use.

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Use a hotter variety for a spicy jar. Use bell or banana peppers for mild. Just don’t change the quantity or ratio of tomatoes to vegetables.

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You can chop your vegetables either by hand, or chunk them up and place in a food processor! Love my food processor. The size of the pepper is not vital. You just want them chopped. If you use a processor, don’t overdo it! You can practically liquefy them. Don’t go that far. 🙂

Did you note the lack of pictures of onion chopping? That is because this day I had particularly potent onions and I was trying to just get them chopped as quickly as possible! No time for pictures because my eyes were tearing so badly. (sigh) What I do for my family. 🙂

Add your chopped onion and chopped bell pepper (or celery). Add the salt and sugar.

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Simmer the tomato mixture 10 minutes. Stir frequently to avoid burning. At first, the mix will be chunky with pieces of tomato. By the time it is heated through, however, your tomatoes will be soft and saucy.

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Pour hot stewed tomatoes into hot jars, leaving 1/2-inch headspace. Add lemon juice to each jar (1 Tablespoon per pint or 2 Tablespoons per quart.)

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Wipe the rims clean, remove any air bubbles and place your lids.

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Follow pressure canning instructions.

How to Can Homemade Stewed Tomatoes

Process pints for 15 minutes.
Process quarts for 20 minutes.

Be sure to adjust processing according to your altitude using the chart below. For more information, see this altitude adjustments page.

There you go–now you know how to make stewed tomatoes yourself!

Recipe Card

Canning Stewed Tomatoes

Canning stewed tomatoes gives you a versatile ingredient. I use this stewed tomatoes recipe as a base for stews. I use it in my chili. I will pour it over a roast in a Crockpot.

Print Recipe

Canning Stewed Tomatoes Recipe. How to safely adapt for flavor. (14)

Prep Time:2 hours hrs

Processing Quarts (adjust for altitude):20 minutes mins

Total Time:2 hours hrs 20 minutes mins

Ingredients

  • 24 Tomatoes large ones, enough to make 4 quarts of prepared tomatoes
  • 1 cup Onions chopped, but onions are optional
  • ¾ cup Celery or green peppers, chopped
  • 1 Tablespoon Sugar
  • 2 teaspoons Canning Salt
  • Lemon Juice

Instructions

  • Start by preparing jars and getting water in the canner heating. You want the canner hot, but not boiling, when the jars are ready to be processed.

    If you are new to using a pressure canner, seethis articlefor full pressure canning instructions. This includes more detailed information and step-by-step instructions on how a pressure canner works.

Hot Pack only

  • Peel tomatoes.

  • Roughly chop tomatoes. Put in large stock pot.

  • Add chopped onion, vegetables, salt, and sugar.

  • Simmer 10 minutes, stirring often.

  • Pour hot tomatoes into hot jar, leaving 1/2” headspace.

  • Add lemon juice (1 Tbsp. per pint, 2 Tbsp. per quart).

  • Remove bubbles, wipe rim clean, and place seal and ring.Place jar in the warm canner. Proceed to fill all jars.Process according to directions below.

Notes

Processingwith a Pressure Canner

Place the jars in the warm canner. Proceed to fill all jars placing them in the prepared hot canner.

Put the lid on the canner leaving the weights off. Bring to a boil. Watch for the steam to start coming out the vent pipe in the lid.

Allow the steam to ‘vent’ for 10 minutes then put the weights on. Use the proper weight for your altitude (check the chart below). This is when pressure will start to build.

When the pressure reaches the pressure required for your altitude (check the chart below), that is when you’ll start your time. Process for the full time indicated, adjusting the heat as needed to maintain the correct pressure for the entire time.

When processing time is completed, turn off the heat. Do not remove weights yet. Let the canner sit undisturbed until pressure comes back to zero. Do not try to speed up the cooling process.

Remove the weight and wait 5 minutes.

Open the lid to allow steam to escape. (Carefully, don’t let it hit your face or arms!) Leave the lid setting on top of the canner slightly ajar and wait 5 minutes.

Take the lid off the canner and remove your jars. (Optionally, you can wait another 5 minutes if the contents appear to be bubbling so hard it is coming out of the jars.)

Put the jars a few inches apart on a thick towel and allow them to cool to room temperature undisturbed. 12 hours is suggested.

When the jars are cool, remove the metal bands, check the seals, and store the jars in a cool dark place.

Processing Instructions for Pressure Canner (Hot Pack)

Process pints for 15 minutes or quarts for 20 minutes, adjusting for altitude.

Adjustments forPressure Canner

Altitude – Weighted Gauge

0-1,000 ft – 10 pounds

1,001-10,000 ft – 15 pounds

Altitude – Dial Gauge

0-2,000 ft – 11 pounds

2,001-4,000 ft – 12 pounds

4,001-6,000 ft – 13 pounds

6,001-8,000 ft – 14 pounds

8,001-10,000 ft – 15 pounds

Adapted from: Ball Blue Book Guide to Preserving

Servings: 7 pints

Author: Sharon Peterson

Canning Stewed Tomatoes Tips & FAQs

What do you use stewed tomatoes for?

Stewed tomatoes in your pantry gives you a great base for lots of recipes. Use it to make Chili, soups, casseroles (or hot dish as we call it). Blend up the tomatoes after you open the jar and make tomato soup by adding a bit of basil, salt and pepper (half and half if you like it creamy!). It is just a great pantry item for many different things.

How do you spice up canned tomatoes.

A stewed tomatoes recipe is a great way to spice up canned tomatoes. Remember it is a different recipe you’ll process it different than canned tomatoes. Add spicy peppers to heat thins up if you like it.

Celery in Home Canned Stewed Tomatoes?

“I noticed you don’t combine celery and bell peppers in your stewed tomatoes recipe. Wondered what the reason is. I would like to have both, and I’m just wondering if I can. Thanks, Sharon. I love your stuff, Sue.”

Notes from video:

The reason I leave the celery out when I am canning stewed tomatoes is…we just don’t prefer it. So I use all peppers and onions. You can certainly use celery too.

If you look at the recipe, in the ingredients list, I have celery or peppers. You want to use whatever combination of the two veggies, but use the same quantity. So you will have 1 and 3/4 cups of veggies total (onion, celery, or peppers).

If you want to do onions and peppers like we do, you’ll use the same amount of total cups of vegetables. I just don’t put the celery in there. I add more peppers or onions to make up the difference.

If you want to leave the peppers out, you could just do onions and celery. You’d use that same total number of cups. The recipe is good as it’s written. If you want to add celery, make sure to stay within the total number of cups per the amount of tomatoes that you have, so you stay within safe processing levels.

Great Question

I’m glad you’re not just adapting recipes without understanding what you’re doing, because that’s really important.

Homemade Spaghetti Sauce Recipe

Here is a way to use your stewed tomatoes. Homemade Spaghetti Sauce sauce. Serve with spaghetti noodles. (not a canning recipe / serve this with noodles for supper)

Ingredients:

  • 1 quart stewed tomatoes
  • 1/2 pint salsa
  • 2 small garlic cloves
  • 1T dried basil
  • 1 tsp. salt
  • 1/2 tsp. pepper
  • 1 pound Italian sausage, browned

Combine all of these ingredients in a Crockpot and cook on low all day. Serve over noodles.

Related Pages

How to Can Homemade Salsa – Salsa is another great alternative if you’ve got lots of tomatoes, onions and peppers. Learn how to make homemade salsa for canning purposes.

Tips for Home Canning Tomatoes – Before you start canning, here are 3 things you should know about home canning tomatoes.

Freezing Tomatoes can be as straightforward or as complicated as you want it to be. With or without skin, cut or whole, SimplyCanning.com covers it all with a “how to” video included.

Dehydrating Tomatoes in a Food Dehydrator – Learn how to dry tomatoes in a food dehydrator.

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Canning Stewed Tomatoes Recipe. How to safely adapt for flavor. (15)

Source: Ball Blue Book Guide to Preserving

Canning Stewed Tomatoes Recipe. How to safely adapt for flavor. (2024)

FAQs

How do you make canned stewed tomatoes taste better? ›

You want to give your tomatoes contact with a direct heat source. That means cooking them at the bottom of whatever saucepan or Dutch oven you're using. The goal here is to remove water from the tomato solids and allow them to caramelize somewhat, which will concentrate their flavor.

Do you need to add lemon juice when canning stewed tomatoes? ›

The short answer to the question is “Yes, to ensure safety, acid in the form of lemon juice, citric acid or vinegar must be added to tomatoes that will be processed by a pressure canning option”.

Can you add seasoning when canning tomatoes? ›

Adding dried herbs and spices to home-canned tomatoes gives you a head start on recipes that require seasoned tomatoes. Choose the spice blend that suits the kind of recipes you are likely to make to enjoy these all year long.

How do you jazz up canned tomatoes? ›

First, pour some olive oil into the pot and heat it over medium heat. Then, add the canned tomatoes to the pot and let them cook for about 10 minutes. After 10 minutes, add some garlic, basil, salt, and pepper to the pot and let everything cook for another 20 minutes. And that's it!

How do you make canned tomatoes taste less tinny? ›

Metallic taste is due to the tannins in the tomato pomace and skins. A pinch of baking soda will alleviate the problem.

Does adding lemon juice to canned tomatoes change the taste? ›

As expected, tomatoes canned with commercial cider vinegar and bottled lemon juice had altered flavors. Note that the flavors mellow (like most pickled or acidified products) after 4 to 6 weeks, so it's best to test your canned products after several weeks.

Why do my canned tomatoes taste sour? ›

Some (non-disease-causing) bacteria are thermophilic, which means that they can survive high temperatures. (There are bacteria that thrive in Yellowstone's hot springs, for instance.) These bacteria survive the canning process and will multiply rapidly at high temperatures. This process causes the flat-sour taste.

How to make flavorful tomatoes? ›

It's a simple trick, really: All you do is sprinkle the tomatoes with salt. Yes, I know, salt brings out the flavor of everything. But with tomatoes—and especially not-yet-at-their-peak tomatoes—salt has a particularly transformative effect.

What happens if you don t use lemon juice when canning tomatoes? ›

If the tomatoes have not been acidified prior to canning you are risking the possibility of bacterial growth, which can be fatal. If you just canned them, and they haven't been stored, you might be able to open the jars and start over, or maybe freeze them.

How do you can tomatoes the old fashioned way? ›

Here's how to do it:
  1. Wash and peel the tomatoes; halve, if desired.
  2. Fill the jars, pressing to fill spaces with juice.
  3. Add bottled lemon juice and salt (1 Tbsp. lemon juice and ¼ to ½ tsp. salt for pints; add 2 Tbsp. lemon juice and ½ to 1 tsp. ...
  4. In a boiling-water canner, process pints and quarts for 85 minutes.
Aug 8, 2023

What happens if you forgot the lemon juice in canning? ›

If your recipe called for lemon juice and you forgot to put it in, your mixture will not be acid enough for safe canning. You have to open the jars and put the mixture into a sauce pan.

Can you add basil when canning tomatoes? ›

While tomatoes are cooking, remove the canning jars from the hot water along with the lids and place on a towel. Add 2 tablespoons of lemon juice in each jar. Carefully pack the hot tomatoes into the jar placing 2 Basil leaves and 4 cloves of garlic into each jar at alternating levels for eye appeal.

Can you add sugar to tomatoes before canning? ›

You can use either bottled lemon juice or citric acid (2 tablespoons of lemon juice per quart, or 1/2 teaspoon of citric acid per quart). You can faintly taste the added acid in the finished product, but adding a scant tablespoon of sugar to the recipe in which you use the tomatoes will offset that taste.

Do you put salt in jar when canning tomatoes? ›

Dip into cold water, slip off skins and remove the cores. Tomatoes can be canned with or without salt. Salt seasons the product but is not necessary for a safely canned food. If salt is desired, add ½ teaspoon to pints or 1 teaspoon to quarts before placing the lid on the jar.

What is the difference between canned tomatoes and stewed tomatoes? ›

Diced tomatoes are generally tomato chunks packed in tomato juice. They can be an excellent timesaver. Crushed tomatoes are a mixture of diced tomatoes and tomato puree or paste. Stewed tomatoes are cooked and then canned, usually with other seasonings and sugar added.

What are canned stewed tomatoes used for? ›

Stewed tomatoes are versatile and can be used as a base for many different foods. Take this spicy tomato sauce, for example. You can use it on anything from chili to baked or mixed pastas and smothered meats. Just combine two cans of stewed tomatoes with the usual suspects: olive oil, onion, garlic and oregano.

Do you drain canned stewed tomatoes? ›

Drain whatever else you'd like, but leave your canned tomatoes undrained. While this may seem a little bit strange, you're actually avoiding washing away those savory juices. Canned tomatoes themselves may make up the bulk of your can, but aren't the only part of the vegetable that's worth hanging onto.

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