This is a print preview of "Tomato, Butter and Onion Sauce and the ‘Hazan Family Favorites’ Cookbook" recipe.

Tomato, Butter and Onion Sauce and the ‘Hazan Family Favorites’ Cookbook Recipe
by Barbara Kiebel

When I was approached by Lael Hazan inquiring if I would be interested in reviewing her husband Giuliano’s latest cookbook, Hazan Family Favorites, it was very simply a ‘no brainer.’ Giuliano comes to this effort of love with a legacy behind him. His mother is the renowned Marcella Hazan; a legend in the world of Italian cooking and Giuliano himself is an accomplished author, he and Lael own a cooking school in Verona, Italy and he often appears as a guest on a variety of cooking related venues including a recent appearance on the Today Show.

When the book arrived, I was eager with anticipation; you know I think I’m Italian right (it can too be a state of mind!)? I made a recipe of Giuliano’s last year so he had a lot to live up to. After winning some of their olive oil, I wanted to make sure that the post I planned would showcase their amazing product so I asked Lael if she would query Guiliano for a recommendation; something I could make and post with the olive oil as an integral part of the dish. The recipe for Tagliata (Cut) Ribeye with Olive Oil, Garlic and Parsley that they gave me was simply the best steak I have ever had. I can still remember that moment of standing at my kitchen counter saying, ‘Oh I’ll just take one more little bite.’ and soon had to literally walk away before devouring steak I had made to serve four so I would not embarrass myself by only having two little slices left on the plate. I am so not kidding.

I’m delighted that recipe is in this cookbook…more people need to try this stellar dish! Simply prepared and using the best ingredients; that seems to be the thread that runs so completely through this collection of family recipes.

I’ll be honest; at first glance one might think these dishes just a bit too easy to prepare and you might wonder what the big deal is but that is the very essence of why this is such a fabulous cookbook. This is not meant to be preparations that have days of hard labor involved, they are quite simply recipes meant to serve to your family at the dinner table. Recipes with the freshest of ingredients, time honored traditions and evident throughout, the story of a true family complete with photos and stories from Giuliano about his own childhood where his love of food and cooking started those many years ago at the skirt of his grandmother, Nonna Mary.

I perused my copy thoroughly looking for just the right dish to make while also reading other bloggers reviewing this book as they made one mouth watering dish after another. I knew that at one moment the choice for me would be evident and in the course of exploring those choices that ranged from grilling meats to fresh fruit, vegetable and pasta preparations through several dessert courses that it would eventually be clear; something in this treasure trove of Italian foods would literally jump off the page into my arms.

Knowing I wanted to make something this past weekend I was determined; I needed to get to the market and get started early, in the cool of the day, allowing me to prepare and photograph before the heat of the afternoon when I try to avoid turning on the stove or oven in my kitchen. I sat down with my cup of coffee and a purpose; it was time and the choices that appealed to me seemed endless. Sausage with peppers, penne with mushrooms, an Italian mac and cheese; sorbets and cakes that I wanted right then and there. When I came to the page for an already favored recipe, ‘My Mother’s Butter, Tomato and Onion Sauce’ this is the first sentence, verbatim, ‘If I had to pick one dish that exemplifies ‘Hazan family favorites’ it would be this sauce.’

You know how sometimes you just know, how you knew all along but the choice seemed too easy; maybe too expected so you avoided it completely…searching for the ‘real’ right choice? That was me and this was that dish. I’ve been making this spaghetti sauce for several years; once I made it for my daughter Lauren she said I should never bother with meat sauce again…yes, it’s that good and just as cool…it’s that easy too. The butter both balances the acidity of the tomatoes while imparting it’s own richness to the sauce and the onions add the perfect touch of sweetness to the mix. While I was searching for something more unique or more complicated the truth of that sentence hit home; this recipe I already loved is the true essence of what this cookbook is all about and it was the one I simply had to share.

And that is what spoke to me. It is ridiculously easy. It’s a full 5 minutes of labor; it has four simple ingredients and yet it tastes ridiculously good. Isn’t that the perfect dish for a family favorite? If you’ve made it before you know exactly what I’m talking about and now I know you want to run into the kitchen and make it again. If you have not made it, well then you are in luck because I’m including the recipe. But the bottom line; for each one of you? You need this book. Family time is precious, preparing a meal and having the opportunity to sit with our families seems to be more and more difficult as our lives seems to expand beyond the time available. I love the stories in this book; the weaving of family and food in a way we can all enjoy, appreciate and hopefully, find the time to do ourselves.

Tomato, Butter and Onion Sauce from Hazan Family Favorites

Amazingly simple and amazingly good; you have to try it to see!

Ingredients

2 lbs ripe tomatoes or 3 cups canned, whole, peeled tomatoes with their juice (true confession; I just use 2 cans of organic, diced tomatoes.

Preparation

If using fresh tomatoes, peel them. Coarsely chop the canned or peeled tomatoes.

Trim both ends of the onion, peel it and cut it in half lengthwise.

Put the tomatoes, onion, butter and salt into a 4-5 qt saucepan over medium heat.

When the tomatoes begin to bubble, lower the heat to a slow but steady simmer.

Cook, stirring every 10-15 minutes until the tomatoes are no longer watery and the sauce has reduced, about 45 minutes.

The sauce is done when the butter has separated from the tomatoes and there is no remaining liquid.

Remove the onion and serve the sauce over freshly cooked pasta. I actually love it on angel hair pasta.

Notes

What to do with that onion? Well it's one of the treats of this sauce for me. I think the cook gets to nosh on those sweet tidbits!

I did used canned tomatoes; until we get great fresh tomatoes, I prefer using canned ones to the tomatoes(?) in the grocery. I use tomatoes that are already diced and then when the sauce is done, I removed the onion and used my stick blender to roughly blend the rest making for a chunky sauce.

Some prefer this without any cheese but if you want to add some Parmesan, toss about 1/3 cup with a pound of cooked pasta and the sauce.

2.0

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Book jacket photo by Joseph De Leo

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