10 Simple Steps for Making Pasta Sauce

As someone who eats pasta all the time. I thought I would take a stab at jarring tomato sauce with Jersey tomatoes. Having successfully jarred peaches, I found that with a food mill, sauce making is much easier. The food mill essentially peels the skin off the fruit, removing much of the tedious labor. I am so happy I was able to bottle up Jersey tomatoes at their peak flavor.

Reference links:

How to make small batch summer sauce

How to sterilize canning jars via the oven

How to sterilize canning jars by boiling

Items checklist:

10 Summer Sauce Steps:

  1. Clear work area, tools and sterilize jars and lids
  2. Set aside the sterilized items on top of clean tea towels
  3. Rise your tomatoes and get rid of any dirt and slice into quarters
  4. In a large pot bring the sliced tomatoes to boil, add some salt to encourage the softening process
  5. Once the skin of the tomatoes are softened, remove heat and run the tomatoes through a food mill
  6. Transfer the strained sauce to a large pot and cook for 2 to 3 hours for your desired sauce consistency
  7. Add your sauce into the jars and seal with lids and caps
  8. On the stove bring the jars to a boil and continue a rolling boil for 30 mins
  9. Remove jars and let it cool, ensure that the seal doesn’t pop or repeat the sealing process
  10. Once cooled and properly sealed store your jar is cool, clean dark area i.e. pantry
Plum and Cherry tomatoes from RH Farms
Tomatoes skin softerning process
Reducing the sauce to desired consistency
Sauce before the sealing process
Final product, yay

Mangia!

Scrolling the Week of 9.14.2020

Liberty State Park, Nj

National Portrait Gallery’s Hold Still, 100 photos defining 2020

Hawaii’s pre-travel plan may re-energize their tourism industry and South Africa is reopening its borders to a select few

I can wait 3 minutes and charge my phone with this UV sanitizer

Ulla Johnson present NYFW with no crowds but an amazing backdrop:

Have a laugh about masks with Paul Rudd (he doesn’t age):

Is Thomas Cook back for good?

Wondering what herd immunity is exactly

Apple season is here and the recipes

Have a lovely weekend and know….

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Visit Dia: Beacon

It is not that I am starved for indoor activities that I thought Dia Beacon was an incredible visit, but more so that it exceeded my expectations far and away. It is worth the hour and half drive for each and every exhibit especially Carl Craig’s Party/After Party. It would be remise not to mention that the museum itself is a site to behold, nearly 300,000 square feet that epitomizes industrial architecture. The natural light that pours in through the skylights of museum is divine. The massive glass pane windows wrapping the building allows the outside foliage to fuse with the exhibits. The shadows that form on the concrete and hardwood flooring is a photographer’s dream. Dia Beacon is open all year-round sans major holidays and I will be closely watching for new exhibits and guided tours. 

John Chamberlain
Mel Bochner
Robert Smithson
Dan Flavin
Lee Ufan
Lee Ufan
Michael Heizer
Dorothea Rockburne
Dorothea Rockburne
Dan Flavin
Carl Craig
Carl Craig

I am not only besotted with the museum, but also with the town of Beacon. Everyone is welcome. As you walk towards the main drag you are meet with homes prominently showcasing Pride and BLM flags. People holding signs facing traffic like “Honk for Justice”. This is 75-minute express train ride from Manhattan, but you could have fooled me into thinking it’s Chelsea/West Village for it’s progressive, yet quaint vibes.

Notable mentions:

Parking for the museum is included with your tickets and parking downtown was hassle free.

Mask wearing was abundant and people were considerate of distancing on the sidewalks.   

The Roadhouse: Incredible meal, great service and a patio that overlooks a waterfall.

Wonderbar Beacon: Tapas and cocktails are worth the wait.

Scrolling the Week of 9.07.2020

I will always love New York, Never Forget, let’s come together

New York is NOT dead, the constants will always remain

The Whitney, The Natural History Museum, MoMA, DIA: and more are all open

A gender reveal party started the El Dorado Fire in California’s San Bernardino County, let’s end this stunt

Patio and yard makeovers before and after

Just picked up this book

Following PRH for more books:

Great recommendation to a documentary on the Father of New American Cuisine:

Now on Netflix

Swooning over this charging pad

Just sent these masks as a gift, love free shipping

I don’t know about you, but I have lost my appetite, two meals a day has been working for me

I lost my craving for coffee in the beginning of the pandemic, but I am back on the caffeine train

Cheers to the weekend.

Storm King Art Center: Outdoor Museum

For over fifty years this Art Center has been a welcoming guest from all over the globe. I’ve been to Storm King in the past and in the wake of social distancing norms, this was a must do weekend activity. There are over 100 sculpture installations throughout the property, but the Center’s dramatic landscape of farmed fields, woodlands, lawns, native grasses, wetlands, and water are also a sit to behold. The landscaping is extremely thoughtful and I couldn’t help but be impressed by invitations to enter areas indicated solely by strategic paths, low cut grass or gravel paths, like breadcrumbs. There is something for everyone. If you choose to look at the sculpture from a far you will surely cover more ground, but you can easily walk 20K steps, either way there are fantastic photo opportunities at every turn. There are also designated picnic areas near each parking lot, so you can take a break and enjoy lunch overlooking the scenery.

Currently, tickets are based on timed entry and in turn there wasn’t clustering of people in the parking lots or the lunch areas. This park is opened rain or shine and throughout the fall. I highly recommend reserving your tickets as soon as possible. This is truly a majestic place that beautifully encapsulates the union of art and nature.