How Tomato Sauce Is Made In Italy | Regional Eats | Food Insider

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  • čas přidán 19. 10. 2020
  • Every summer, Isabella, her mother, Dina, and her daughter, Federica, honor the family tradition and make tomato sauce in their garden. The process is a laborious one that takes several hours, from handpicking each tomato to adding basil leaves into jars one by one. This year, the family has turned more than 200 kilos of tomatoes into sauce.
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    How Tomato Sauce Is Made In Italy | Regional Eats | Food Insider

Komentáře • 7K

  • @saqersak4760
    @saqersak4760 Před 3 lety +3400

    I wish if they interviewed the grandmother more, she was so excited 😍

  • @xxxxxx5868
    @xxxxxx5868 Před 3 lety +5461

    AHAHAHAHA when the grandma goes away outta nowhere and comes back 5 minutes with her old stuff to show it to us that was so relatable LMAOOOO I'm Asian but that was such a grandma thing to do

    • @parthjain7822
      @parthjain7822 Před 3 lety +20

      Ikr

    • @yeisonrodriguez4696
      @yeisonrodriguez4696 Před 3 lety +40

      You totally read my mind

    • @KaleshwarVhKaleshwarVh
      @KaleshwarVhKaleshwarVh Před 3 lety +49

      True right. I think my dad is doing that now. He is getting old as well.

    • @olenaklyevityenko2369
      @olenaklyevityenko2369 Před 3 lety +14

      Grandmom control and put step with basilic. Was all right in her hands, this quality of generations 😍😘

    • @MsPowpow111
      @MsPowpow111 Před 3 lety +44

      hahahaahha i thought the EXACT same thing when she did that! hahahah too sweet. made me miss my granparentsso much

  • @jq2147
    @jq2147 Před rokem +1478

    I once had elderly landlords who were Italian immigrants. They were the salt of the earth! Every summer they made homemade sauce with their garden tomatoes and always shared some with me. They also made their own wine! The wife, Giovanna, would always knock on my door and hand me a bowl of homemade pasta with fresh sauce, or eggplant parmesan, etc. She'd say "Mangia, Mangia!". They treated me like a son. Old school Italians. So sweet.

    • @JazzFunkNobby1964
      @JazzFunkNobby1964 Před rokem +17

      Not quite at the Horse head stage yet...

    • @julianafaloney4453
      @julianafaloney4453 Před rokem +6

      Luck you!

    • @JavaRatusso
      @JavaRatusso Před rokem +53

      I lived in Gaeta, Italy for 3 years while serving in the US, Navy... I agree... Mangia, mangia are beautiful words to hear when you are about to experience authentic Italian food.

    • @jq2147
      @jq2147 Před rokem

      @@JazzFunkNobby1964 🤣

    • @jq2147
      @jq2147 Před rokem +4

      @@JavaRatusso Amen.

  • @jenmarks6594
    @jenmarks6594 Před rokem +261

    My grandmother was born and raised in Italy and this was how she made her tomato sauce, except she called it gravy. Everything was homemade and I can still imagine the taste of her minestrone soup and raviolis, especially when she fried them. I loved listening to her speak Italian with my father. I miss you, Nona and Daddy.

    • @adelebonaccolta9619
      @adelebonaccolta9619 Před rokem +11

      no Italian calls tomato sauce gravy.

    • @jenmarks6594
      @jenmarks6594 Před rokem +12

      @@adelebonaccolta9619 Maybe not the Italians you know who were born in the U.S., but my grandmother, who was born and raised in Italy did and so did my Italian neighbor, who was also born and raised in Italy.

    • @adelebonaccolta9619
      @adelebonaccolta9619 Před rokem +6

      I received your answer and I need to explain why your grandmother used to call it it gravy, As newcomers from Italy and that includes me and the rest of my family, we tried very hard to assimilate to the American way, when I got Married and my mother in law called the sauce "gravy" I never corrected her, because I thought that in the US that's what it meant, but when people from Italy leave their country, they try their best to get along with others and not change their ways, so what your grandmother did was change her way to the Italian/American way. No one in Italy calls Tomato sauce "gravy", it doesn't exist. We call it Salsa.

    • @jenmarks6594
      @jenmarks6594 Před rokem +5

      @@adelebonaccolta9619 I grew up with it being called gravy. I don't call it that anymore since my grandmother is gone and my mother no longer cooks due to her age. I never heard my grandmother or my father and uncle, who's first language was Italian, refer to tomato sauce as salsa. All the Italians on my street from Italy, most are gone now, called it gravy. Don't know where there got it. By the way, my grandmother's name was Adelina, but she went by Adele. Very pretty name.

    • @adelebonaccolta9619
      @adelebonaccolta9619 Před rokem +1

      @@jenmarks6594 my grandmother's name was Adele and I was named after her, the relatives called her Adelina, but the proper name is Adele. In the home we called the sauce, salsa, but the proper name is Sugo, I was born and raised in Sicily (which is part of Italy) just like Long Island is part of New York, I came in the US at 12, so that part of my life I lived and went to school in Italy. If you don't believe me just ask a person that's from Italy and I guarantee they'll agree with me. You weren't born there to know better, you only learned from your grandmother and your mom which they tried to translate that word in English. Let me ask you a question, when you go to a restaurant, do you order penne or spaghetti with gravy?...

  • @thomaspinter5352
    @thomaspinter5352 Před 3 lety +479

    I remember living in an apartment with my pregnant wife in my 20's. We rented from Italian couple but the wife did not speak English. She used to make he own sauce when her garden tomatoes ripened. When l came up the back stairs from work she would always give me home made Italian dishes.....l must have gain 20 lbs. before our son was born. I also fondly remember sitting on a bench with her husband drinking wine out of a jelly jar and talking. Great memories!!!!

    • @Beltyboy118
      @Beltyboy118 Před 2 lety +8

      what a lovely story :)

    • @tonysopranoswife1834
      @tonysopranoswife1834 Před 2 lety +21

      These are the stories that not-so-randomly fall into your lap to remind you what humanity needs. Thanks for such a beautiful share. I am constantly sharing baked goods, meals and goodies with my tenants and my daughter recently told me “it’s really weird! Maybe don’t share so much, they might be uncomfortable with so much food sharing.” You reminded me that we don’t do things nearly enough if it’s seen as weird. Sharing should be normal and I would be proud if one day, someone spoke about my food gifts the same way you have; a gentle gift from a fellow human. Cheers!

    • @tonysopranoswife1834
      @tonysopranoswife1834 Před 2 lety +2

      @Heinrich Himmler lol, cheers and cannolis right back at you.

  • @danb4811
    @danb4811 Před 3 lety +3805

    There really is nothing like listening to a language you dont understand, but you understand the tone and the love and the intent. Heartwarming.

    • @KaleshwarVhKaleshwarVh
      @KaleshwarVhKaleshwarVh Před 3 lety +44

      Right? And you hear the words you read in the subtitles and listen how differently they pronounce it. Nice.

    • @samuelmuldoon4839
      @samuelmuldoon4839 Před 2 lety +21

      I would not say that there was a lot of love, and kindness in their voices. Actually, they kept interrupting each-other, and sounded stressed out at times. You could let the other person finish their sentence, instead of talking over them.

    • @trillrifaxegrindor4411
      @trillrifaxegrindor4411 Před 2 lety +11

      everyone loves and partially understands italiano...the most beautiful language in existance

    • @weeverob
      @weeverob Před 2 lety +4

      so true, when i watch foreigh netflix shows i read the subtitles but have to have the volume up to hear exactly what you stated.

    • @salutetherank2105
      @salutetherank2105 Před 2 lety +28

      Understand Spanish, you can make out Italian.

  • @chance1986
    @chance1986 Před 5 měsíci +44

    I re-watch this about twice per year. So beautiful to see three generations of a family create the sauce. I'd love to see more about their gardens.

    • @TREEHUGGAH1
      @TREEHUGGAH1 Před 4 měsíci

      right on

    • @luclucas135
      @luclucas135 Před 3 měsíci

      Same here

    • @51rwyatt
      @51rwyatt Před 2 měsíci +1

      I watch this to psych myself up for upcoming tomato gardening season. My Dad and me have nice tomato gardens every year and 90% goes to passata. I don't preserve with jars/boiling water; I freeze the passata in 1-gallon freezer bags stacked flat. Works great, if you have a big freezer.

    • @saidahmed4207
      @saidahmed4207 Před 2 měsíci

      ​@@51rwyatte

  • @MrStreaty122
    @MrStreaty122 Před 2 lety +301

    You know, it’s kinda crazy to see how much tradition and culture can develop in 400 years. (Tomatoes were introduced to Italy in the 16th century and didn’t take off until a century later)
    I actually really like the familial hierarchy of making traditional tomato sauce. It’s like… artisans training to perfect their art form. An apprentice never starts out making the complicated stuff, they do the little things, the fundamentals, over and over and over again for years until they’ve perfected it. They slowly, ever so slowly, rise through the tiers of tasks and steps, perfecting along the way, getting it just right, until eventually you’re Nonna. You’ve mastered your art, practicing every season for 60, 70, 80, maybe even 90 years or more. You know precisely how to get it right every time. Your family, centuries before you and centuries after you, are blessed by the multi-generational perfection of a single, simple, food staple.
    I may not be Italian, not even fractionally, but this is the way I want my future family to make tomato sauce

    • @milky9832
      @milky9832 Před rokem +5

      Yeah same My indigenous ancestors been making bomb ass sauces with tomatoes in North America tomatoes are the best !

    • @sj1roese
      @sj1roese Před rokem

      Your take on this is completely whack. The younger generation working on the more menial tasks is not about mastering some elusive craft that takes 80 years to develop. Have you not heard they saying about the fecal matter and the elevation change and whatnot?

    • @educationforblind6362
      @educationforblind6362 Před rokem

      Thia simple, and made with modern machines.

    • @educationforblind6362
      @educationforblind6362 Před rokem

      @@sj1roese where are you from?

    • @timeiswhat
      @timeiswhat Před 8 měsíci +9

      @@sj1roese Proof that people online can get mad about anything (even a very nice comment about tomato sauce)... He wasn't saying it takes 80 years to develop; he was indeterminate about how long mastering it would take. He basically just said you start out doing something simple and get better the longer you do it... You gotta chill dude.

  • @zerohero6602
    @zerohero6602 Před 3 lety +6374

    You know the grandma has been telling her daughter shes been putting the tomatoes in the wrong way for 40 years

    • @Urban_Piggy
      @Urban_Piggy Před 2 lety +109

      That’s just so poorly timed. I’d be like “you couldn’t have said something sooner? Like nearly 40 years ago? Whatsyerproblem?!”

    • @powderedtoastfacekillah734
      @powderedtoastfacekillah734 Před 2 lety +239

      and the daughter ignored her like i do with my mom now when she tries to tell me how to do something
      (Often times though my mom would be right...)

    • @ohasis8331
      @ohasis8331 Před 2 lety +67

      @@powderedtoastfacekillah734 It's still your job to continue to ignore.

    • @RigsyB
      @RigsyB Před 2 lety +72

      This is why home made Italian food is so magical. Every generation changes the family recipe slightly so in this case, it’s a family history in a jar.

    • @rustyshaklferd1897
      @rustyshaklferd1897 Před 2 lety +36

      @Repent to Jesus Christ Repent to Jesus Christ jusus H Christ man!! Enough already!

  • @edwindude9893
    @edwindude9893 Před 3 lety +679

    My cousin is married to an Italian gent and he makes sauce how his nonna does, there’s nothing like it. Italian food is the worlds treasure.

    • @y.m.7300
      @y.m.7300 Před 3 lety +35

      I would say not only food, but italian culture in general, its history, art, fashion, language... everything❤

    • @juliusmoe-nstar8942
      @juliusmoe-nstar8942 Před 3 lety +2

      Never mess with Nonna, no matter who it is. I never got close to Italian culture and even i know that

    • @edessentials3206
      @edessentials3206 Před 2 lety +12

      Italian food is delicious, but you can find that in many cultures. What I love best here is holding on to traditional values. Passing down quality from generation to generation. Listen to the older people, they speak from the heart.

    • @cool_sword
      @cool_sword Před 2 lety +7

      Absolutely. Italians' love for their food has almost become a joke, which is a shame. They have so many simple but delicious recipes.

    • @movienerd202
      @movienerd202 Před 2 lety +3

      I'm starting to learn to appreciate Indian food.

  • @dr.leonardo9789
    @dr.leonardo9789 Před rokem +880

    Growing up I remember my grandmother and I would make the sauce exactly like this video depicted except for one difference. Before sealing the jars we would put a dollop of extra-virgin olive oil to sit on top. We would use two jars a week for Sunday sauce and it would last a whole year. Great memory. I was about eight or nine years old. Now 77.

    • @KennyVo120
      @KennyVo120 Před rokem +42

      The olive oil on top is a good tip!! I'm going to start doing this with my home made sauce jars.

    • @dr.leonardo9789
      @dr.leonardo9789 Před rokem +103

      @@KennyVo120 Hi Kenny .I’m glad you liked the tip. Don’t overdo it. A tablespoon of oil on the top not mixed per 1 quart jar is all you need. It seems to blend with the sweetness of the tomato and overtime lends a genuine taste nuance. Remember, real Italian cooking is simple. Resist the temptation to clutter your recipes with stuff that never belong in that recipe. That’s what Americans have done. Keep it clean and genuine and enjoy the flavors of nature.L

    • @The_Gallowglass
      @The_Gallowglass Před rokem

      @@dr.leonardo9789 Italian pomposity at its finest.

    • @Crybaby-cz8et
      @Crybaby-cz8et Před rokem +10

      @Leonard Rampello Happy 77th birthday

    • @inkajoo
      @inkajoo Před rokem +6

      @@dr.leonardo9789 we are learning!

  • @peachsangria8704
    @peachsangria8704 Před rokem +75

    many years ago I lived next door to a family from Naples. One year they showed me how to do the passata by hand with a handful of tomatoes from my own garden. I've been making it the same way ever since. No jarred or store bought sauce comes close. my mouth is watering the whole time watching this video!

  • @wge621
    @wge621 Před 3 lety +212

    I'm glad they got a native italian speaker. The video feels a lot more natural. Italy is such a beautiful country and I like seeing how much more laid back the hosts seems when speaking Italian

    • @hillarysudeikis2264
      @hillarysudeikis2264 Před 3 lety +6

      Lord Jesus Christ is coming back everyone don’t worship celebrities and music, focus on Him alone, I promise there’s more to life than money, partying and music. Hell is real, repent from sinning confess your sins and ask God to forgive you, I know He will if you’re sincere.Anyone who thinks the Name of Lord Jesus Christ is a joke and who boldly mocks and scorns Him and takes pleasure in people like this is in for a big unpleasant surprise on judgement day. Hell is very hot people repent! In the mighty name of Lord Jesus Christ! Lord Jesus Christ is coming back everyone don’t worship celebrities and music, focus on Him alone, I promise there’s more to life than money, partying, sex, homosexuality, swearing, immodesty and music. Hell is real, repent from sinning confess your sins and ask God to forgive you, I know He will if you’re sincere.
      Islam, Buddhism, Hinduism, Santa Clausism, Confucianism, halloweenism and other religions that are outside Christianity lead to hell, don’t believe them, believe the Almighty God and Father of Lord Jesus Christ who begot Him, our God is mighty He doesn’t need a woman to beget a son, He is God. I choose to put my faith in a God who can do anything and everything, a God who has unlimited power to beget!

    • @wge621
      @wge621 Před 3 lety +48

      @@hillarysudeikis2264 this is a video on pasta sauce.

    • @justinnee1572
      @justinnee1572 Před 3 lety +28

      @@wge621 Jesus was nailed by romans. Romans are Italians. Italians like tomatoes. They cut up tomatoes. They cut up Jesus and Tomatoes. Therefore Jesus is a tomato and is relevant to this video

    • @TheMimiSard
      @TheMimiSard Před 3 lety +3

      @@justinnee1572 LOL

    • @TheHabadababa
      @TheHabadababa Před 3 lety +3

      @@hillarysudeikis2264 Jesus Christ, take a chill pill. Also believing that other religions lead to hell seems very cotrary to the things Jesus said. You might want to reflect on your religious stances.

  • @christinebutler7630
    @christinebutler7630 Před 3 lety +1022

    I'm heading over to Duolingo to start learning Italian. What a lovely language.

    • @jimmyz7218
      @jimmyz7218 Před 3 lety +10

      I think the men sound.. uh, special let's say lol

    • @thisrocks
      @thisrocks Před 3 lety +65

      My mum has been doing it for the last 3 or so years. She watches Italian CZcams, movies and TV pretty comfortably and also reads the Italian news. Hardly needs subtitles anymore really only for specialist words and dialects. Still practices almost every day. English was her 2nd language from about 24 and Italian was her 3rd from about 50

    • @brandonriggs1788
      @brandonriggs1788 Před 3 lety +61

      It really is a beautiful, elegant, soothing language. As calming and soothing as Hebrew, or Aramaic. If you ask me, Italian is a much more beautiful and romantic language than French (from both a linguistic and personal point of view).

    • @cringyalienguy9787
      @cringyalienguy9787 Před 3 lety +104

      @@brandonriggs1788 bruh Italian is the ultimate Romance language, French sounds like someone choking on a baguette

    • @noonedude101
      @noonedude101 Před 3 lety +7

      Yeah, I can read it but not speak it. Time to get on with becoming fluent

  • @fob1xxl
    @fob1xxl Před rokem +100

    Being Italian, back in the 50's my Mom had my older sister in the kitchen with her ever since she was 8 years old. My Mom taught her everything she knew about Italian cooking. My sister could duplicate every dish ! No Italian dishes, even in an Italian restaurant could ever come close to my Mom's cooking. What great memories and tastes ! Miss her so much.

    • @toughbutsweet1
      @toughbutsweet1 Před rokem +4

      No one can duplicate mom's cooking.

    • @forwardmoving8252
      @forwardmoving8252 Před rokem +2

      Lol this is what everyone says about their family's cooking. It's just bias. If you have people in your family who can cook better than any restaurant and they themselves never tried getting into the business that is silly.

    • @umarabdaziz760
      @umarabdaziz760 Před rokem +4

      @@forwardmoving8252 Better food isn't just about taste. Other factors include comfort, trusting the cook, familiar environment etc. Also opening a restaurant isn't just about knowing how to cook. It's a whole business.

  • @2or3ministry48
    @2or3ministry48 Před rokem +149

    This is the most beautiful thing I’ve ever seen on CZcams. The generations working together to keep their recipe alive is just the way life should be.
    Reminds me of my mother teaching me her mad kitchen skills 💚
    She’s passed 10 months ago now
    So thank you for that trigger of happiness in memories

    • @ladybug5859
      @ladybug5859 Před rokem +2

      What were your mother's mad kitchen skills?🤔 MY mother was a great cook but she taught me NO skills. I truly regret that and I am a terrible cook-- always cooking by the seat of my pants. I have been buying organic pasta sauce at Aldi's but the price went out from 135 to 195 with inflation so I'm thinking now to get the crushed tomatoes in a can I do worry though because my current comes in a glass jar while the crushed tomatoes will come in a tin can which I know bleed some of the metal into the sauce even if you can't taste it and that cannot be good for you

    • @captaintoad7654
      @captaintoad7654 Před rokem

      Do you happen to be American, Canadian, etc.? Highly western nations have forgone many family bonds, traditions, and peacekeeping in favor of money or retirement. Their society reflects this... Spain and Italy have better social safety nets, a little less work obsession, and cohabitation, democracy, and compromise is normal. My future spouse is apalled at my family. Her culture, pre Westernization, frowned upon attitudes like "my house, my rules", and would work together in multi generational settings. It would be selfish and inconsiderate to get a dog when someone is allergic or doesn't want it, and the selfish person would be asked to work through it or reconsider. Kicking someone out is a last resort, as it hurts the family to do so. To constrast, my Canadian mother chose little French dogs over her future grandkids, and she longs to go to France, so she is tight fisted and cynical and can't wait to retire, have the house to her husband, youngest son, and dogs.
      It is hard to pass a tradition when home life is selfish and turbulent, and culture rewards it as normal. I notice elders from highly Western countries are also hoarding their knowledge, eager to talk and judge, but demand pay to teach even their own children.

    • @larsonfamilyhouse
      @larsonfamilyhouse Před rokem

      This one guy makes bruschetta on yt and I feel like you’d love him. You should check him out, he comes up like first when searching:)

    • @docjackal8511
      @docjackal8511 Před rokem

      @@larsonfamilyhouse vincenzo?

    • @lavalady5571
      @lavalady5571 Před rokem

      @@captaintoad7654 This is very harsh and perpetuates stereotypes of American "toxic individuality" and greed. I can assure you that Americans love their parents and children, to the same extent that non-Western people do. You will find selfish, amoral people in every culture, both Western and non-Western.

  • @googleuser8143
    @googleuser8143 Před 3 lety +711

    I still make my sauce like this every year and I live in the USA. I've done this since I was a little girl with my mother and aunts. I made 98 jars this year.

    • @SuperSaltydog77
      @SuperSaltydog77 Před 3 lety +27

      You are my kind of family.

    • @kathydebernardo3459
      @kathydebernardo3459 Před 3 lety +7

      What do you use to separate the skins from the tomato? This family used a machine.

    • @googleuser8143
      @googleuser8143 Před 3 lety +11

      @@kathydebernardo3459 I also have a machine like this. It seperates the skins and seeds from the pulp.

    • @ronp.6782
      @ronp.6782 Před 3 lety +2

      @@googleuser8143 What´s the name of such a machine?

    • @googleuser8143
      @googleuser8143 Před 3 lety +30

      @@ronp.6782 it's referred to as an "Electric Tomato press". If you search with those words you'll find many machines on the internet for purchase.

  • @aletheali2766
    @aletheali2766 Před 3 lety +2542

    the grandma is so excited to show her ancient sieve that she interrupts the granddaughter @ 10:53
    Granddaughter: 🙂

    • @aperson6562
      @aperson6562 Před 3 lety +162

      lol you can see her die inside

    • @witkofhf
      @witkofhf Před 3 lety +128

      It’s pretty normal in Italy, especially in the South 😂

    • @FountainOfYoot
      @FountainOfYoot Před 3 lety +47

      @@witkofhf dying inside?

    • @absolutmo
      @absolutmo Před 3 lety +59

      @@FountainOfYoot GB referencing that grandparents have that interrupting behavior about them 🤣

    • @boooomerwang
      @boooomerwang Před 3 lety +70

      @Mike Airborne FFS cant even have a good conversation without it getting political.

  • @windellmcspindell3652
    @windellmcspindell3652 Před rokem +45

    What a great video! I love seeing old traditions being passed down. I'm 64 now and I live in South Carolina. I remember me, my dad, my grandfather, an uncle and two cousins making homemade molasses one day using sugar cane, a mule that walked in a circle to turn the mill that we fed the cane into to extract the sugars, burning oak wood and stainless steal trays to slowly cook the syrup as it passed over the fire to cook and brown the syrup on the tray as it slowly made it's way down to the jars. That was 1974 and it's in my mind like it was yesterday.

  • @todorlakic3649
    @todorlakic3649 Před rokem +5

    13 minutes of pure happiness, watching family tradition. Priceless

  • @muddhammer7834
    @muddhammer7834 Před 3 lety +2029

    Im hispanic and I love Italian food. My parents would say I was switched at birth.
    Somewhere there is an Italian family whose son craves beans and red chile.

    • @irmalair1
      @irmalair1 Před 3 lety +41

      😂😂😂💕

    • @andrealune8979
      @andrealune8979 Před 3 lety +57

      Here it is 🤟🏻

    • @CombatHD3
      @CombatHD3 Před 3 lety +100

      you'd be surprised to know that tomatoes are indigenous to the Americas

    • @Urban_Piggy
      @Urban_Piggy Před 2 lety +48

      I’m Canadian and love Italian food. Italian, Thai, Mexican....anything with a bit of kick. Growing up my parents liked to make roast beef and potatoes. Not usually very adventurous. (Bland) Lol.

    • @lanajohnson8424
      @lanajohnson8424 Před 2 lety +32

      Mexican and Italian foods are my favorites, and I'm Polish/German/French/Irish.

  • @Jtomba06
    @Jtomba06 Před 3 lety +900

    5:54 White sneakers while separating the tomatoes. I, too, like to live dangerously

    • @Arnav150
      @Arnav150 Před 3 lety +5

      Damn😂

    • @shwetayadav2850
      @shwetayadav2850 Před 3 lety +2

      😂😂

    • @soilmanted
      @soilmanted Před 3 lety +11

      She searched several stores for red sneaker and couldn't find any in her size.

    • @cjpr603
      @cjpr603 Před 3 lety

      Haven't laughed this hard in a while thx

    • @Cocytus
      @Cocytus Před 3 lety +7

      Just like eating a pizza slice in NYC while wearing a white Tshirt lol

  • @tylerdurden9748
    @tylerdurden9748 Před rokem +11

    So beautifully simple, tomatoes, salt, sugar, a basil leaf, and 3 generations of love.
    I think i got something in my eyes.
    🥺🥺🥺🥺🥺

    • @adelebonaccolta9619
      @adelebonaccolta9619 Před rokem

      If you cook your sauce from plum tomatoes, you don't need to add sugar to it, I found that I added only when I buy canned tomatoes or puree.

  • @younglee6718
    @younglee6718 Před rokem +53

    I think its amazing how recipes can be passed down to generations after generation. It’s a piece of history that households have and that’s really special. This was a heartwarming video to watch overall

  • @grahampeterson3293
    @grahampeterson3293 Před 3 lety +129

    The look she gives at 12:45 at her product, you can tell she is proud of what she is doing.

    • @pc9467
      @pc9467 Před 3 lety +1

      That's too true. Well spotted

  • @playbassken
    @playbassken Před 3 lety +519

    My maternal grandmother was born in Sicily, Italy and migrated to New York, so I was very fortunate to spend a lot of time with her in the kitchen, God rest her soul. This took me back to how she taught us to make sauce. What a wonderful memory thanks to Dina, Isabella and Federica.

    • @hostesswiththemostess7082
      @hostesswiththemostess7082 Před 3 lety +9

      You are lucky to have such a rich culinary family history from Italy to New york....we love italian cooking, especially from the small family run restaurants in Italy....the best food experiences

    • @playbassken
      @playbassken Před 3 lety +4

      @@hostesswiththemostess7082 it is a blessing, though I'm nowhere near the cook she was. Family gatherings to this day are always a treat getting to sample all the goods everyone cooks when we all get together. I can't wait to do that again once all this COVID garbage is over.

    • @siddhant...
      @siddhant... Před 3 lety +4

      You have any mob ties?

    • @playbassken
      @playbassken Před 3 lety +9

      @@siddhant... yes, but they've all long since passed away, God rest their souls. All but one and he's turned his life to God in an effort for salvation.

    • @siddhant...
      @siddhant... Před 3 lety +1

      @@playbassken talking about Michael Franzese by any chance?

  • @fmls8266
    @fmls8266 Před 4 měsíci +4

    Making tomato sauce was a big event here in South Italy.
    My whole family would gather, and other neighbour families, and we would make the sauce with the tomatoes from our fields, over a couple days, and stock it for the whole year.
    We would have a big celebration lunch all togheter when finished.
    I miss my grandparents ..

  • @michaelmiele1177
    @michaelmiele1177 Před rokem +8

    We adopted this technique recently for our tomatoes. Saved us much time and generated far less waste than before. Thank you thank you, thank you for this!!! 🍅🍅🍅

  • @marasannjno6425
    @marasannjno6425 Před 3 lety +365

    I'm Italian, from Naples and I remember when me, my grandparents and the whole family used to make them in July every year! My happiest memories date back to those days! 😭

    • @ZanzarologiUniti
      @ZanzarologiUniti Před 3 lety +3

      Stavo per commentare la stessa cosa. É stato un viaggio nei ricordi pazzesco

    • @katiehuynh03
      @katiehuynh03 Před 3 lety +2

      What happened? Why did u guys stop?

    • @Elasciapurgrattar
      @Elasciapurgrattar Před 3 lety +1

      idem! what a party that day each summer...

    • @Elasciapurgrattar
      @Elasciapurgrattar Před 3 lety +12

      @@katiehuynh03 I think (at least in my experience) kids grow older, they go away to study and work, there is no time... Younger generations would rather buy the sauce at the grocery shop than having the hassle of doing all that work, and so rituals passed from generation to generation just fade away without no one even noticing.

    • @madapigi1
      @madapigi1 Před 3 lety +5

      i'm from rome and we still do it every summer in august when we go to the countryside! I've been doing it for nearly 20 years now

  • @SuperMariposa91
    @SuperMariposa91 Před 2 lety +2205

    I’m from Congo and my very traditional African grandmother and great grandmother from the karunda tribe made a similar sauce, only difference is we add garlic and thyme to it as it boils. My Grandmother had a popular restaurant in their township and I still make the sauce today and use the sauce as a base to sooo many dishes. I get so many compliments when I cook for friends. Interesting to see. Reminded me of my family ❤️

    • @bobshenix
      @bobshenix Před 2 lety +34

      You'll make a great wife one day ! Edit: If you aren't already... if you are then hubby is lucky!

    • @lankytor6396
      @lankytor6396 Před 2 lety +22

      There is nothing like home cooking!! 💕😉

    • @zzzarkka
      @zzzarkka Před 2 lety +21

      Hell yes. Garlic and thyme.

    • @rachel4539
      @rachel4539 Před 2 lety +69

      You really shouldn't assume someone's sexuality. Plus assuming someone will want to marry one day? Please. 🙄🙄

    • @Ranger-ly5qf
      @Ranger-ly5qf Před 2 lety

      Fftj

  • @johnathonmullis4234
    @johnathonmullis4234 Před rokem +22

    A true joy to watch women shine doing something so important to the family but often overlooked. This is so much better than grabbing a jar of sauce from the store. I might grow a mess of tomatoes and try this myself.

    • @Liaros_
      @Liaros_ Před rokem +5

      You don't need to grow if you can't.
      My family used to buy tons of tomatoes from farmers and make passata for the whole family for a year. Just find a very good farmer with biological tomatoes.

    • @adamyasingh3713
      @adamyasingh3713 Před 10 měsíci

      ​@@Liaros_Biological Tomatoes💀

    • @Liaros_
      @Liaros_ Před 10 měsíci +7

      @@adamyasingh3713 In Italian "biological" means "organic".

    • @Someone-sq8im
      @Someone-sq8im Před 3 měsíci

      @@Liaros_interesting!

  • @SandraGarcia-ho4lb
    @SandraGarcia-ho4lb Před rokem +11

    In my hometown the Italian culture was very strong. Use to go visit friends and the aroma of their cooking would greet you at the front door. Could never understand mom, grandmother and even a few great grandmothers, but fascinated by their cooking.

  • @TheJellyPlane
    @TheJellyPlane Před 3 lety +1488

    Claudia: How many tomatoes are going in the pot?
    Isabella: Yes, yes.

  • @elrobo3568
    @elrobo3568 Před 3 lety +288

    This reminds me of making sauce with my grandma in Brooklyn in the 50's. She was from Italy and we did it all by hand. I later became an Italian chef and had a restaurant in the Bronx. I love to cook and watch people enjoy the food I make, simple and delicious just like this video. Thanks for the memories!

    • @ronA8te
      @ronA8te Před 3 lety +7

      Sounds so interesting wow!

    • @JB-zo7ln
      @JB-zo7ln Před 3 lety +1

      Italian food cooked up by a bunch of Mexicans don't sound so special to me.

    • @Beatngu23
      @Beatngu23 Před 3 lety +5

      @@JB-zo7ln he literally just said they are Italian.

    • @macbookfatty281
      @macbookfatty281 Před 3 lety +2

      @@JB-zo7ln he said his grandma was from italy what do you mean?

    • @macbookfatty281
      @macbookfatty281 Před 3 lety +2

      @@JB-zo7ln no hate though

  • @doctuppes2
    @doctuppes2 Před rokem +4

    This is where we should go again - handmade soulfood, worshipping la familia and the earth and the love one could feel between this lovely women. Awesome.

  • @pamgascoyne9718
    @pamgascoyne9718 Před rokem +5

    I remember my grandfather making sauce every weekend. On Friday he would take the tomatoes, peeled them then pushed each one through a strainer to remove the seeds. He only used plum tomatoes. Then he would start reducing the sauce on Saturday morning then add the meat about noon. It sat on a low flame all weekend until Sunday dinner. My gramma would make the homemade ravioli. So good. I'm glad I payed attention.

  • @AhmedEtman79
    @AhmedEtman79 Před 3 lety +71

    Grandma adds about 2 tablespoons of sugar... says: "a teaspoon of sugar".
    That's why taking verbal instructions from my Mom over the phone never works. I have to see her do it. Their perspective of how much stuff they're adding is always out to lunch :D

    • @jeps1973
      @jeps1973 Před 3 lety +1

      For me taste and smell have helped when I was too far away to watch again. My mom didn't use measurements and still doesn't . lol

    • @katrinaredford297
      @katrinaredford297 Před 3 lety +2

      She put 1/4cup of salt in😂 umm yeah looks like about a teaspoon.

    • @bobshenix
      @bobshenix Před 2 lety +1

      I noticed that too LOL

    • @jgrocketpup
      @jgrocketpup Před rokem +1

      Indian chef: "A 1/2 teaspoon of red chili powder"
      On-screen: a shovel full of red chili powder

  • @oxfords1
    @oxfords1 Před 3 lety +123

    I lived in Naples for three years and the families living in the Apartments from across us would bring out their huge cauldrons and cook their tomato sauce all day. I love Italy and their traditions.

  • @willvr4
    @willvr4 Před rokem +37

    It's cool to see the youngest daughter of the family also sharing the passion. It's pretty similar here in America (in NY at least) with Italian Americans taking incredible pride in their heritage and trying to learn and pass it down to their children.

  • @scruffy281
    @scruffy281 Před rokem +67

    This video was a sheer delight. What a kind and informative family. I loved the whole experience. Thank you so much for bringing this to us!❤️

  • @georgesbrodeur9608
    @georgesbrodeur9608 Před 3 lety +32

    My in-laws are from Sicilia and before I even got married, I had to help with making il sugo every August to early September. They added onions to their tomatoes and boiled the batch until the onions were clear. After straining, they would simmer the pulp with fresh basil and salt for about an hour before canning in jars. Hard work, but the pay-off...PRICELESS. A little perspective, my family alone goes through 140 to 190 thirty-two ounce jars a year. I didn’t marry an Italian (my wife was born in Toscana) I married a culture!

    • @christinemoser6702
      @christinemoser6702 Před 3 lety +4

      @final boss This is not true for canning. Preservation guides say to put hot liquid should go into hot jars and then immediately processed in boiling water for the appropriate time. Leaving food to cool first would allow bacteria to grow in the sauce. Anyone canning should look into established food preservation safety guidelines so they don't poison anyone.

    • @georgesbrodeur9608
      @georgesbrodeur9608 Před 3 lety +6

      @final boss we heat the jars in the oven at 200F for 15 minutes then pour the hot sauce into the jars. We also heat the self sealing lids in boiling water. Only lost about 6 jars from shattering when the sauce was poured in. Double boiling the jars afterward, sometimes. What we do is place the jars on thick cardboard and cover them with blankets. Let them cool for 2 days. The lids seal during the cool down. Haven't lost any sauce to spoilage in over 39 years this way.

    • @user-jy3zl2vp4b
      @user-jy3zl2vp4b Před 3 lety +1

      @@christinemoser6702 There are many ways to get to the same healthy outcome. Clearly his method has been working for years. Cheers!

  • @Elasciapurgrattar
    @Elasciapurgrattar Před 3 lety +129

    Back home in Abruzzo, we used to do it every year in the summer, and it was a real ritual. All the family reunited, working from early morning to late night. Each one had his role, us kids as well. Good ol' times ❤🍅🇮🇹

  • @martinez19d
    @martinez19d Před 8 měsíci +1

    That motor that separated the seeds and pulp is a game changer

  • @TylerJordan
    @TylerJordan Před rokem +42

    I loved seeing this. The love they have for family and food passed down through generations. So inspiring.

    • @ldlink3935
      @ldlink3935 Před rokem

      I enjoyed it also, but I could not help but be distracted by the plastic strainer used for the boiling tomatoes and the small funnel used to get the sauce into the jars....it almost ruined it for me.

  • @pbosustow
    @pbosustow Před 2 lety +659

    I'm from Melbourne in Australia, of Italian parents, and this is exactly how we, and the large Italian community here, make our passata (every February here in the southern hemisphere).
    As in this video, it is a family affair. You start out as a kid doing simple tasks, then gradually move up the ranks until you eventually work the machine. The General overseeing the whole operation is always Nonna. Supervising, advising, occasionally admonishing and having the final word on quality control & seasoning.
    It's a fantastic tradition, it brings the family together, and the pasta sauce ALWAYS tastes better with home made passata!

    • @zuzanasmolkova9011
      @zuzanasmolkova9011 Před 2 lety +10

      Awww so heartwarming family gathering 💕

    • @bobshenix
      @bobshenix Před 2 lety +6

      Diaspora amore!

    • @gullwingstorm857
      @gullwingstorm857 Před 2 lety +8

      And it's usually put into beer bottles.

    • @pbosustow
      @pbosustow Před 2 lety +7

      @@gullwingstorm857 Absolutely

    • @krainanimates3256
      @krainanimates3256 Před 2 lety

      oh wow i am currently living holugin, cuba but were moving to america or australlia because well, raul/communist

  • @jamesdizzle420
    @jamesdizzle420 Před 3 lety +308

    8:54 granny in the back adding more basil after they just got done saying they only add one hahaha

    • @sojourner8567
      @sojourner8567 Před 3 lety +13

      She's probably been doing that for years and just doesn't have the heart to tell her granddaughter that it's actually supposed to be two leaves in each jar. :)

    • @peerlessneedle4272
      @peerlessneedle4272 Před 3 lety +7

      Special orders are handled by granny

    • @tinman9341
      @tinman9341 Před 3 lety +2

      It’s amazing how older generations when they cook or prepare food they don’t need measurements. They’re taste and experience is all they need. Funny as heck though!!!!

    • @peerlessneedle4272
      @peerlessneedle4272 Před 3 lety +2

      @@tinman9341 They had to cook every single day, for more than one person, with no premade ingredients. It's just practice.

    • @tinman9341
      @tinman9341 Před 3 lety

      @@peerlessneedle4272 you aren’t kidding. My grandma had 16 children to care for. Her food was amazing!!!!!

  • @johnhelms8226
    @johnhelms8226 Před rokem +6

    It is such a joy to see these multiple generations of lovely Italian women putting so much love, skill, and wisdom into their craft. It reminds me of how multiple generations of Mexican-American women will get together to make tamales, especially during the holidays.

  • @macobats
    @macobats Před 4 měsíci +1

    Love the old school way of making sauce. It's very special especially when you grew up Italian American. You remember your Nonna, the smells, her hands, etc... and you continue making sauce the same way because you know great Italian cooking comes from quality ingredients.

  • @dogsinolga
    @dogsinolga Před 3 lety +31

    My grandmother made her own sauce and canned it. She lived to be 99 yrs. old. At maybe 85 or so she stopped canning it. The difference in flavor was dramatic. Loved seeing this process with the family all helping. I was the only grand kid who learned how to make ravioli. We worked together in the kitchen, many times. What a joy.

    • @xs4tanx
      @xs4tanx Před 3 lety +1

      Hope you keep the tradition alive.

  • @user-lv3yw9dq3b
    @user-lv3yw9dq3b Před 3 lety +140

    I'm from Saint-Petersburg(Russia) and my mother every year makes very delicious tomato sauce from different variety of tomato, like yellow tomatoes, "heart of bull", "dames' fingers" and other local varieties of tomato. These sauces are so delicious.

    • @NenaSilva210
      @NenaSilva210 Před 3 lety +1

      That sounds wonderful! I wish I could taste it.

    • @WonderBoy0403
      @WonderBoy0403 Před 3 lety

      Geez you're very lucky!

    • @badbotchdown9845
      @badbotchdown9845 Před 3 lety +1

      Because theyre not growing without ground and nurtured by substitutes as we have in most countries
      Tomatoes ancient varieties could be so tasteful you're lucky

    • @gaia7240
      @gaia7240 Před 3 lety

      Those tomatoes are delicious! Some of the best 👍

    • @hajarhajar8906
      @hajarhajar8906 Před 3 lety

      Your mother is Italian ?

  • @Lizard4678
    @Lizard4678 Před rokem +9

    You can see the love in their eyes for what these awesome women are doing!
    I’m so lucky that my mom makes all of our spaghetti sauce with homegrown tomatoes and vegetables. Thank you mama❤️

  • @mecha1gold
    @mecha1gold Před rokem +3

    Something that links Mexico with Italy. One of the wonders of the Spanish empire. All the amazing food we have as a product of our long past union. 🇮🇹❤🇲🇽

  • @kingcountyband
    @kingcountyband Před 3 lety +476

    No need to have measuring spoons levelled off for the salt and sugar, when grandma eyes the amount it's exact and perfect. period.

    • @ssl3546
      @ssl3546 Před 2 lety +4

      yeah and when she croaks (or she loses her sense of taste due to Covid) they won't know how much she put in. hope they are weighing the jars before and after so they have a record of what she did.

    • @idontknow5249
      @idontknow5249 Před 2 lety +14

      @@ssl3546 It’s all about trial and error. They’ll eyeball it and will figure it out pretty quickly.

    • @ironmanandspidyroc
      @ironmanandspidyroc Před 2 lety +7

      @@ssl3546 "passed away", not croaked.. thats a butchered language not used by civil people.. you operate the internet so your a civil people..

    • @theresagracee6130
      @theresagracee6130 Před 2 lety

      @@ironmanandspidyroc person?

    • @tagquasar8791
      @tagquasar8791 Před 2 lety +3

      Four! i counted four...Seems hardly enough when you look at the size of that bowl but what do i know, im dutch

  • @j10f20mh
    @j10f20mh Před 3 lety +2839

    It's weird how big of a role tomatoes play in italian cuisine and culture in general considering it's not even a native food to the country. I wonder what Italian food was before the spanish took tomatoes from mexico to europe.

    • @arlynnecumberbatch1056
      @arlynnecumberbatch1056 Před 3 lety +278

      Wait.... Spanish people stole stuff from every countries in the world?!

    • @witkofhf
      @witkofhf Před 3 lety +125

      @Jelly of course different kinds of polenta since the one we mostly know now is made with mais, also coming from the Americas

    • @FountainOfYoot
      @FountainOfYoot Před 3 lety +13

      @@arlynnecumberbatch1056 YUP.

    • @brianfrancis5635
      @brianfrancis5635 Před 3 lety +74

      @@arlynnecumberbatch1056 The Spanish didn't need to "steal" seeds.

    • @vm6756
      @vm6756 Před 3 lety +152

      @@arlynnecumberbatch1056 Yes, Spanish stole the tomatoes from S.America, brought it to Spain, and now they have a festival, where they throw a tones of tomatoes on each other, and the whole city looks like a big pot full of tomato sauce, hahahahhaha

  • @jkhegarty857
    @jkhegarty857 Před rokem +31

    This was an awesome video. As a little girl, I remember my grandfather jarring his tomato sauce. Not the same quantity that these ladies did. He used Mason jars that had the sealing lids. After the cooling of the jars, he would then date them so he rotated the jars using the older then the newer ones. Memories. 😊

    • @paudsmcmack3117
      @paudsmcmack3117 Před rokem

      For 10 years I cut the lawn of Mrs.Bonfiglio. Her husband died when she was 50 and she didn't die until her 80's and everyday s
      Since her husband passed she wore black.

  • @michailpligouroudis6642
    @michailpligouroudis6642 Před rokem +4

    This takes me 20 years ago. We used to to the same in northern Greece. The same big pot wood fire save it in empty bottles of beer. The same machine that crushes the tomatoes. This type of tomato sauce is just perfect. There is nothing like this in supermarkets. If you taste it once you never forget it.

    • @NorthLights22
      @NorthLights22 Před 11 měsíci

      Do you know the specific strainer/device they are using?

  • @Mindy56743
    @Mindy56743 Před 2 lety +180

    I have grown up canning tomatoes with my great grandma, grandma, and my mom. My first job was washing the jars. My hands could fit into them the easiest. I still remember standing on a chair next to the sink washing jars while they where canning. This was one of the things that built the bond with the family. The garden had to be harvested and preserved. Those are some of my best memories

    • @jordigarcia6112
      @jordigarcia6112 Před 2 lety +4

      Ha-ha, the same! I was washing jars because my small hands could fit inside the jars.

    • @cristibaluta
      @cristibaluta Před rokem +1

      Do this tomatoes have any taste? In my country only the type that is irregular in shape and big have taste, the other ones don't really taste, and definitely not the ones from import from italy, spain, turkey...

    • @Mindy56743
      @Mindy56743 Před rokem +4

      @@cristibaluta the tomatoes we can are either grown in our garden or a local farmer in the ground. Unfortunately many of the tomatoes you buy in the store are grown in water with fertilizer added to it. Tomatoes grown that way have no taste at all the are worthless.

  • @virendersingh9377
    @virendersingh9377 Před 3 lety +51

    This lady is so lucky to have been living in her own farm and making her own sauce with her family.

    • @pinklady7184
      @pinklady7184 Před 3 lety +2

      My late father grew fruits and vegetables at the back of his bike shop. Gardening was his hobby.

  • @mandywaynick8725
    @mandywaynick8725 Před rokem +143

    I've only recently in the last year started making my own spaghetti sauce verses buying it at the store already in a jar. I had no idea how much of a huge difference it made. All I add is salt, a tad of sugar, garlic, pepper, oregano, basil and crushed red pepper. So much better than the suace on the shelf. I was honestly shocked it was so good being so simple. I cut a X in the skin of tomato and par boil them for like 2 or 3 min. Take out with spider strainer and let rest for about 5 min (just long enough so I can touch them) then peel the skin off, chop into cubes on a sheet pan making sure to cut off the stem part and then put in large sauce pan and simmer for like 15 min mashing with potato masher adding in the seasonings as I go by the time the sauce reduces and thickens its ready. Takes about 45 min total and you can do other things while it's cooking and reducing in pan
    Edit: of course, as other have said and the faster method is buying a large can of tomatoes

    • @kirstinstrand6292
      @kirstinstrand6292 Před rokem +6

      An Italian American friend shared her tomato sauce recipe, including meatballs, with me...much as described here. It's easy and good. I've never made it with fresh tomatoes, though. Fresh would be devine!

    • @Dollectable_Dreams
      @Dollectable_Dreams Před rokem +2

      Why would you put sugar in your sauce? They said they put 1 teaspoon of sugar for 10 jars of sauce and some of those jars are bigger than typical sauce jars. You would have to put something like 20 grains of sugar in your sauce. If you have the right tomatoes you would need no sugar at all forv2 portions of sauce.

    • @mandywaynick8725
      @mandywaynick8725 Před rokem +15

      @@Dollectable_Dreams well, I usually taste first and I often have acidic tomatoes so I add a touch of sugar to counteract that

    • @MarieTheOstrich
      @MarieTheOstrich Před rokem +1

      thanks !

    • @redwoodtrail
      @redwoodtrail Před rokem +8

      Sadly, if the writer is in the US. Many of our crops are so GMO that they have lost their true natural flavor so tomatoes are sometimes not as sweet. If you have your own garden, that’s a game changer too. Shopping organic or at farmers markets can really create special tastes but can be very expensive.

  • @Passionforfoodrecipes
    @Passionforfoodrecipes Před 3 lety +3014

    Hey, What type of tomato smells the best?
    *A Roma.*

    • @tosht2515
      @tosht2515 Před 3 lety +261

      You are such a prolific punster; no one will ever ketchup to you.

    • @Passionforfoodrecipes
      @Passionforfoodrecipes Před 3 lety +32

      @@tosht2515 haha, nice one 😎

    • @tlfortynine
      @tlfortynine Před 3 lety +13

      Hey ya got any leftover tomatoes? I am making salad so I can bring home the bacon

    • @dragonairre9634
      @dragonairre9634 Před 3 lety +5

      Username checks out

    • @awilli182
      @awilli182 Před 3 lety +15

      Ha!
      I've heard some crazy dad jokes before, but this one takes the beefstake! 😜

  • @paintthesilence9891
    @paintthesilence9891 Před 3 lety +78

    I used to do this with my grandparents every year as a little kid in the early 90s, also in Puglia (Sannicandro Garganico).
    Every neighbour did this on the same day and the street smelled like tomato sauce. Those were the best days of my life, just pure joy.

  • @kaiseriv8483
    @kaiseriv8483 Před 10 měsíci +3

    The most impressive part of this is that they have gone 60 years and counting without breaking that terra cotta pot. I couldnt manage a 2 mile drive from the store back home lmao

  • @mikealman9259
    @mikealman9259 Před rokem +5

    How refreshing to see 3 generations doing this together. 😍👏
    It's the simple things like this shared by the family that is missing in today's society and sadly we are all the worse off for It.

  • @camelcase9225
    @camelcase9225 Před 3 lety +1727

    I need to start living even a little bit off the land. I feel like I can grow a friggin tomato.

    • @Blizzard020
      @Blizzard020 Před 3 lety +40

      You certainly can!

    • @pepumarius2006
      @pepumarius2006 Před 3 lety +18

      they are quite sensitive to draught and too much sun. But overall, I bet you can do it!

    • @20greeneyes20
      @20greeneyes20 Před 3 lety +40

      Growing tomatoes are easy. I have tomatoes coming up all by themselves just from seeds that dropped on the ground from the year before. Just protect them from animals groundhogs raccoons they love them.

    • @janconley2419
      @janconley2419 Před 3 lety +20

      You can totally do it! I grow mounds of them! So fun and delicious! I have been growing my own food for 22 years- the best!

    • @smedspets695
      @smedspets695 Před 3 lety

      1 plus gallon a day

  • @joanies6778
    @joanies6778 Před 2 lety +301

    What a blessing to grow up with generations in the kitchen learning to cook, can, and working together. Many of his did not have that experience. Count your blessings if you did, and keep that tradition going. It's golden! 💖

  • @RanaBurr
    @RanaBurr Před rokem +5

    One of the things our family noticed when we went to Italy was that they do not sell prepared pasta sauce in the stores. Now I can see why-and I don’t blame them. Marvelous!

  • @BunzLee
    @BunzLee Před rokem

    This brought back a lot of memories of family gatherings, weekend long sauce-cooking and pretty much doing everything just as displayed in this video. This is as legit as it gets. I might have to pick this tradition back up so my kids will have something to remember.

  • @doukyuuseii99
    @doukyuuseii99 Před 2 lety +20

    8:48 I love how you can see the grandma putting more basil leaves in the jars.

  • @kukungdeeka
    @kukungdeeka Před 3 lety +26

    Behind the best meal,there is always the best grandma

  • @Tootnscoot
    @Tootnscoot Před 25 dny

    Seeing another family use a pot over 50 years old warms my heart. I have a pot that originated with my great grandmother, to my grandmother, to my mother, to me. 4 generations. 3 of them 99% of their childhood meals were made in it

  • @audraowens8214
    @audraowens8214 Před rokem

    Putting up veggies in the summer with my mother and auntie have always brings a smile to my face. Just the smell of fresh fruit and vegetables that we know we will be able to enjoy all winter is the sweetest smell.

  • @thiagota
    @thiagota Před 2 lety +28

    It took a few generations, but they finally achieved perfection: Federica.

    • @HarryManback0
      @HarryManback0 Před 2 lety +6

      Seriously, she looks like a supermodel you'd see on a runway or a magazine cover.

    • @Aggressive_Splooge
      @Aggressive_Splooge Před 2 lety +1

      Isabella is amazingly beautiful

    • @slamp3844
      @slamp3844 Před 2 lety

      @@HarryManback0 agreed.

  • @pablogarciaperez1
    @pablogarciaperez1 Před 3 lety +43

    I grew up in North Greece and I remember every August making tomato sauce and peach marmalade in huge pots in the garden with my grandma! Central Northern Greece is known for its peaches and every family has peach trees there.

  • @nica77maniloco38
    @nica77maniloco38 Před rokem +1

    Beautiful. Lived in Italy from 1999-2001 as the Euro took place. Magical place really. Traditions of women cooking only

  • @magirusdeutzjupiter2234
    @magirusdeutzjupiter2234 Před rokem +4

    I love this video, the Italian people are so wonderful at tradition, and I'm lost for words really how beautiful they do it so nicely.

  • @Tyler-789
    @Tyler-789 Před 3 lety +92

    I’ll never get old of this host she always does such a good job.

  • @juanaltredo2974
    @juanaltredo2974 Před 2 lety +8

    man I hope the Italian family never disappears, its one of the great treasures of mankind, its comforting to see there's still such a warmth in this technologically cold world

  • @GeneralBlorp
    @GeneralBlorp Před rokem +20

    The language, the food, the women. Amazing country. 😍

  • @lotuslotus718
    @lotuslotus718 Před 17 dny

    I just don’t understand how Italian people can consume all this tomato sauce,pasta,lasagna,almost every single and look beautiful and fit in process. I am impressed by this channel to teach people how to do this wonderful sauce.

  • @vincentbolt8707
    @vincentbolt8707 Před 2 lety +170

    I really miss making sauce like this with my nonna and nonno. The entire family would get together for a week and jar sauce. This really took me back. Instead of doing this outside over a fire we did it in the basement over a gas burner. I also had the job of putting the basil in the jars. I loved feeding the machine too. I think nonna's surveilling the process and telling you you are putting too many in the machine at once is a universal thing.

  • @he-01
    @he-01 Před 3 lety +3109

    Yo, imagine being the generation that breaks the old ass pots

    • @lyfeasmemecsit6203
      @lyfeasmemecsit6203 Před 3 lety +109

      Lmbo! Omg I would hide under a table! If I did that .. I be so scared to touch em

    • @fufufuaru
      @fufufuaru Před 3 lety +203

      Their ancestors will haunt them day and night lmao

    • @gato0082
      @gato0082 Před 3 lety +4

      Nooooo🙄😟

    • @RustyDust101
      @RustyDust101 Před 3 lety +36

      Just the thought makes me whimper and cry... and I'm half a continent away from them. :D

    • @jeanvignes
      @jeanvignes Před 3 lety +145

      Now you will all understand why I hate FedEx. I had a set of kitchen bowls which I inherited from my great-grandmother, who was born in 1884. They were at least 80 years old. I packed them very carefully with triple bubble wrap and boxed them with more bubble wrap around them, in a sturdy box, then shipped them cross-country when I moved. When the box arrived, it looked like someone had driven over the box with a truck. Great-grandma's bowls were smashed. It about killed me. They took no responsibility.

  • @sarahjones79
    @sarahjones79 Před rokem +5

    This is SO wonderful !!!! Authentic Italian culture!!!

  • @annastrand5144
    @annastrand5144 Před rokem +2

    I grew up like this, cooking with the generations. Thankfully my kids spent a lot of time with my mom, gardened and cooked with her before she died. Behind ng raised on homegrown foods is the best.

  • @gblan
    @gblan Před 3 lety +320

    "So how much sauce do you have there?" ""About enough to last a week."

    • @bon7029
      @bon7029 Před 3 lety +43

      "How long will this sauce last?"
      "When we invite the whole family? This is a light snack."

    • @allegramorgagni7340
      @allegramorgagni7340 Před 2 lety

      Italian culture

  • @gokulvengatesan8168
    @gokulvengatesan8168 Před 3 lety +1086

    Claudia... Such a good host...

  • @matthewjohnston1017
    @matthewjohnston1017 Před rokem +1

    The family bonding in the process means so much more than the sauce that is made.

  • @deidraroberts9628
    @deidraroberts9628 Před rokem

    The simplicity of this is amazing

  • @basahero4817
    @basahero4817 Před 3 lety +9

    I love that Italians keep everything old school. Don't fix what's not broken, and keep tradition alive.

  • @kelvinh8327
    @kelvinh8327 Před 3 lety +134

    The Southern Italian and Greek cultures seem to be simpler and more enjoyable.

    • @uomopene
      @uomopene Před 3 lety +13

      Trying to survive in Naples it's not so easy

    • @mdarrenu
      @mdarrenu Před 3 lety +15

      @@uomopene napoli is a gritty town overrun with suspicious non-italians. but has awesome pizza!

    • @edmundooliver7584
      @edmundooliver7584 Před 3 lety

      yes, its the romans

    • @QuietWookie
      @QuietWookie Před 3 lety +2

      because u dont live there

    • @Sciencespipo
      @Sciencespipo Před 3 lety +1

      @barung1 yeah. No wonder the North of Italy was hit so badly with coronavirus: so many Chinese tourists there, taking pictures of everything. Thankfully this has stopped.

  • @ps603
    @ps603 Před rokem

    I love how the family works together on this..Thanks for showing this..

  • @jeankeats3200
    @jeankeats3200 Před rokem +1

    My dear Italian friend did it like this...it was amazing. He grew his own tomatoes and made his own sauce and jarred 90 and some odd jars every summer. His parents taught him. I lost him, he was a lot older than I. Having him in my life was one of the happiest times of my life. By the way, the cat was ADORABLE!!!! I enjoy tomato sauce since I was a little tot but I'm not Italian. There must be some in there because I just cannot live without my tomato sauce. I have penne marinara every Sat. at our favorite Italian Bistro....thank you for sharing. XO

  • @guyb6665
    @guyb6665 Před 3 lety +85

    When I think of authentic Italian home cooking, this is exactly what comes to mind. 3 generations of Italian women all fussing over a single pot of simmering tomato sauce 👌

  • @MarloTheNephilim
    @MarloTheNephilim Před 3 lety +445

    Granddaughter: „Only one leaf“ Grandmother: Puts more leafs in 😆

    • @Amberscion
      @Amberscion Před 3 lety +24

      She sets those bottles aside for when she is making her own food!

    • @MichaelSvenson
      @MichaelSvenson Před 3 lety +18

      haha I saw that too I was like yeah go granny we love the basil! haha

    • @whynot7802
      @whynot7802 Před 3 lety +10

      Lol thats the grandmas.they know the best

    • @oxfords1
      @oxfords1 Před 3 lety +7

      leaves

    • @Amberscion
      @Amberscion Před 3 lety +1

      @@oxfords1 Eats shoots.

  • @jlpack62
    @jlpack62 Před rokem +1

    This, my friends, is an example of how you preserve a culture.

  • @herbertlavorano9863
    @herbertlavorano9863 Před rokem

    This video made remember of my beloved mother. Mamma, i really hated to do this job, but I thank you anyway for the precious hours spent together.

  • @winkletown8828
    @winkletown8828 Před 2 lety +212

    What a beautiful family. The love and passion they have for the sauce is just heart warming.

    • @Aztec339
      @Aztec339 Před 2 lety +6

      My father was in a small polka band with two Italian guys…..I know 🥴 We are Hungarian. The Italians used to make us spaghetti dinner with homemade sauce! My mom would make them Hungarian dishes and bakery. It was fun.

  • @jgizzy
    @jgizzy Před 3 lety +75

    Oh how I so wish I was Italian. Everything they're about, I feel like I was meant to be Italian. Love the culture soo much.

    • @reginaldsmithers3468
      @reginaldsmithers3468 Před 3 lety +9

      Grow a bushy mustache, start talking like a wise-guy. One check off the bucket list. Boom. Take it up a notch. Bam. Next, take same mustache, tease it into a handlebar and start riding weird bicycles. One more check off the bucket list. Boom. 23 skidoo buckaroo.

    • @robertoclemente9580
      @robertoclemente9580 Před 3 lety +5

      @@reginaldsmithers3468 what?

    • @NeroHero07
      @NeroHero07 Před 3 lety +32

      @@reginaldsmithers3468 he said Italian not Italian American....

    • @cremonster
      @cremonster Před 3 lety +16

      @@NeroHero07 Yeah that new york stereotypical "fuggetaboutit" shit is NOT true Italian

    • @janconley2419
      @janconley2419 Před 3 lety +1

      I am desperate to find my village to prove that I am somehow Italian!

  • @bonochibear7895
    @bonochibear7895 Před rokem +5

    I would love to be able to buy tomato sauce like this at a farmers market. So much care put in. I bet it’s delicious.

  • @pigidly
    @pigidly Před rokem +1

    I’m Irish descendent and remember doing fruit chow ketchup with my mom… we had the same machine for the tomato but I was the motor. I miss my mom.

  • @TeresaSanchezViciano
    @TeresaSanchezViciano Před 2 lety +4

    the girl is so gentle and kind with her grandma :'''') made me miss my grandma so much, loved this video