Desi Tomato Sauce

This is our favorite sauce for pasta, polenta or any other dish that requires tomato sauce.  Why is it desi?  Well, because of one secret ingredient.

In essence the sauce has the basic ingredients of all good tomato sauces.  Vine ripened tomatoes, good quality olive oil, onions and garlic.  The difference is just when all the ingredients have melded together and you have a fat bubbling mix of sauce, that’s when I add the secret ingredient of tomato chutney.  The chutney deepens the tomato flavor  and adds a strong spicy kick of red pepper.

Recipe

6 vine ripened tomatoes, chopped into small pieces

1 large red onion chopped fine

1 head of garlic, chopped fine

1/2 cup olive oil, more if needed

3 heaping tablespoons tomato chutney

Heat a large skillet and add the olive oil.  In 1-2 minutes, once the oil has warmed, add the onion and garlic.  Cook, stirring often so that the garlic does not burn.  Once onions are translucent add all the tomatoes.  Cook for 15-20 minutes until tomatoes are completely melted.  Lower heat and add in the chutney.  Stir well to evenly distribute the chutney.  Add salt to taste.

Let cool and then puree in a blender.  I make 1-2 batches at a time and store in the freezer.

Pankajam’s Kitchen – A Story 30yrs in The Making

Pankajam Sarathy is my mother in law.  At this point she’s been a part of my life longer than my mother. I’ve been married for 30 years and my mother died when I was 28.

Both women have played an enormous role in my life.  Each of their stories are unique as all life stories are.  Yet in so many ways, various threads of circumstance, social customs and history have made their lives similar.  Many Indian women born when they both were in 1930s pre-independence India had the same themes running through their lives.

Both came from well educated households of modest means.  Both were married in their teens.  Both of their husbands, though very different people, were the dominant forces in their lives.  Each migrated to the US and found their individuality in different ways.  For my mother getting a job and working as a professional gave her an identity outside the home.

My mother was not a trail blazing feminist.  Quiet, modest with a gentle, calm poise she was someone you never wanted to disappoint because hurting her hurt more than anything else.  Yet her job and ability to draw a regular paycheck saved our family and showed the world that she was more than someone’s wife or mother.

For my mother in law, the freedom was food and cooking.  Food is what I associate most with her.  Cooking it, serving it, sharing, teaching and experimenting.

So this section is about honoring Pankajam, my mother and all the women of their generation.  My sharing their recipes, it will be a small way of preserving their wisdom, history and voice.

In addition to her recipes I hope to collect recipes from friends and family around the world.