• BarneyPiccolo@lemmy.today
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      1 day ago

      It’s not even good sauce. Pour a couple of big cans of crushed tomatoes over some browned ground beef/pork, add lots of garlic and Italian herbs, salt & pepper, a few oz of red wine, and let it simmer all day.

      Add more or less meat, perhaps mushrooms. I like to put in chopped spinach at the beginning, to let it break up into micro pieces, and amp up the nutritional value, but it’s not necessary.

      It’s super easy, and way better than any jarred sauce, and much cheaper.

        • BarneyPiccolo@lemmy.today
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          23 hours ago

          Oh, sure, you don’t need meat at all, I sometimes just make a hearty mushroom sauce, and it’s great.

          Put whatever you want in it, there are no rules. Yellow/orange/red peppers are nice. I hate green peppers, and onions, but if you like them, go nuts, just don’t invite me for dinner.

          Some people put lots of veggies in, but they puree them first, so they dissolve better (and the kids will eat it without knowing, too, I suppose).

          Experimenting is half the fun of cooking. The other half is eating it.

          • Rekorse@sh.itjust.works
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            23 hours ago

            Without the meat should I just start with the crushed tomatoes and go from there?

            I like the idea of experimenting, another commenter mentioned using different types of mushrooms together as well.

            I guess I never really knew the simple part of how to start a sauce so thats why I’m trying to learn more here.

            Thank you for the advice I’m saving most of these comments.

            • BarneyPiccolo@lemmy.today
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              20 hours ago

              Again, no rules, use what you like.

              I went through a period of using ground chicken or turkey, and I used ground beef for a long time. Now I use a combo of ground beef and pork. Ground beef is expensive, of course, but I get the ground pork in a 1 lb roll from Aldi, and it’s usually less than $3. So the pork really fills out the meat portion, and adds a lot of flavor.

              Seasoning is important, and chefs talk about three levels of seasoning. First you season the olive oil in the pot as it heats up before before you toss in the meat. Then season the meat as it browns, then season it again when you add the crushed tomatoes.

              You will have to balance the seasoning a bunch of times after that, until it tastes right. If you feel like you’re close to right, but you can’t put a finger on it, you probably need to add more salt, or more garlic powder. Add in small amounts until it tastes right, and don’t judge it right after you add them. Wait a few minutes for it to cook in, and then re-taste and evaluate.

              If you like a spicy or Arrabiata sauce, add lots of red pepper flakes and cayenne.

        • jellygoose@lemmy.ca
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          24 hours ago

          Consider meat alternatives. You can even get away with tofu. Anything goes, it’s a sauce…

          • smh@slrpnk.net
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            23 hours ago

            I’m a big fan of textured vegetable protein (TVP). It gives a ground beef texture but is vegetarian and shelf stable. It looks expensive per pound, but it’s dehydrated so you’re not paying for water.

        • Roucan@lemmy.zip
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          24 hours ago

          Yeah yo for sure can, though you probably don’t need to simmer for as long with everything combined if it’s just mushrooms.

          I would do a variety for a bigger range of umami flavour, (et 3:1 cremini:shitake), then add a bit of msg, it’ll hit hard. MSG optional but it’ll hit hard.

          I think you can also fake mallard reaction (browning meat) but I don’t know how bc I’m not vegan.

          Worcestershire also could help, but idk if it’s vegan

          • Rekorse@sh.itjust.works
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            24 hours ago

            Thanks for the idea I’ll save this and try it out soon.

            There is vegan Worcestershire sauce but I dont believe the original recipe is vegan.

            • smh@slrpnk.net
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              23 hours ago

              Original recipe has fish in it (sardines iirc), so might be ok for pescetarians.

  • Rcklsabndn@sh.itjust.works
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    1 day ago

    As someone that spent the better part of their youth making other people money at a grocery store, I’m bummed that I never had to build a comically oversized pyramid of bean cans that:

    A: A neurotic but lovable protagonist that is just trying to get through shopping day would make the whole stack implode by taking a single can.

    Or

    B: A random cat in a panic would scurry up and around it as I frantically keep the pyramid from collapsing. Once the cat has fled the scene I would utter a sigh of relief just before a dog who was after the cat would crash through the stack just in time for the manager to appear and scold me for the mess.

    • JennaR8r@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      1 day ago

      I’m reading through all the comments and you seem to be the only one who has acknowledged what this post is actually about.

      Everyone else is complaining about the price of pasta sauce.

    • ccunning@lemmy.world
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      2 days ago

      Raos is good. Pretty consistently top rated. I basically thought all jarred pasta sauces were garbage before I tried it.

      …it does always hurt a little when I splurge on a jar though. Also, Costco sells two packs of the 32oz jars for just a bit more than this and it goes on sale frequently.

    • Vegan_Joe@piefed.world
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      2 days ago

      Even Newman’s Own (a non-profit) is $4. $6-$10 is normal in my area, and it’s one of the least affluent areas of the country.

      • T00l_shed@lemmy.world
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        2 days ago

        Like, where I am, the cheap classico sauce is about 3 bucks. And i dont doubt that the tomatoes they use come from Cali. Im across the continent, in a different country. I know some “ritzy” sauces here are encroaching on the 10$ mark. Its so fucked up

    • Enkrod@feddit.org
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      2 days ago

      Most expensive one I could find with a simple google search in Germany is € 12.54 per kg,
      the ones pictured above are 680g, so for $ 7.49 that’s $ 11.01 or € 9.55 per kg (at current exchange rate)

      Average price for pasta sauce in Germany seems to be around € 5.00 / kg, but then the Rao’s might be among the pricier sauces in the US?

      • fartographer@lemmy.world
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        2 days ago

        Rao’s might be among the pricier sauces in the US?

        It is. It’s a high-quality sauce made by a very famous restaurant in New York City. It’s one of those few products that immediately stands out when someone tries a blind taste test on you.

    • thezeesystem@piefed.blahaj.zone
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      2 days ago

      Your right, fuckin cheap! Pasta sauce around me is around 12.99. Well besides the store brand which is pretty much water now a days.

    • MasterNerd@lemmy.zip
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      1 day ago

      Pre-made pasta sauce in general is pretty overrated. It’s so easy to make your own pasta sauce, it’s pretty much ready in the same time as it takes to heat up premade pasta sauce. Only real advantage is that you don’t have to worry about seasoning

      • boonhet@sopuli.xyz
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        1 day ago

        The real avantage is fewer dishes and less prep time before the actual cooking.

        However I usually find that pasta water takes enough time to start boiling that I can just chop up the ingredients and start the sauce while that’s happening.

        With premade I’ve just chucked it in the hot pasta which heats it up enough AND cools down the pasta so I can eat it quicker.

        Also locally made premade sauces in my country are 2-3 EUR which makes them actually cheaper than homemade because I usually put either mince or chicken in my sauces and those already cost more than the entire premade sauce lol. Of course homemade is way better but honestly sometimes I feel like I’d be saving money if I used premade.

    • A_Random_Idiot@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      i get the hunts pasta sauce in a huge fuckin can for like a buck. Raos is definitely for people that think a banana costing 10 dollars is cheap and affordable.

  • Tempus Fugit@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    I don’t care how good it is, $8.50 for a jar of pasta sauce is highway robbery. It’s like Bachan’s BBQ sauce, sure it’s good, but it ain’t even close for those prices. I’d legit feel ripped off if I bought either.

    • empireOfLove2@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      2 days ago

      The sign says “serving SoCal” so this is actually a below average price

      Los Angeles grocery prices always make my eyes pop out of my head. It’s just the cost of existing down there.

      • Tempus Fugit@lemmy.world
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        2 days ago

        Shit is getting ridiculous here too. Luckily I’ve really gotten into cooking over the last five years or so. Fresh ingredients are still pricey, but much much much cheaper than what these corps are slopping out. I can make pasta or pizza sauce in these quantities fresh for under $2.

      • Poxlox@lemmy.world
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        1 day ago

        No. Don’t spread misinformation/bullshit. Plenty of family in LA and lived there just two years ago. This is NOT a below average price. Maybe for Raos, not sure, but definitely not for pasta sauce as a whole. And no it’s not the cost of existing down there unless you have absolutely no shop savvy. Food4Less, Aldi, Super King, Costco, etc will absolutely have plenty of pasta sauce of that size for under 5 bucks

  • SlippiHUD@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    Kroger actively wants their employees to do this. (Source: worked in this hellhole for 13 years. Would choose homelessness/starvation over going back)

    Its a psycholigical trick to make you think its cheaper than it is. Intended to make you think subconciously “It can’t be that expensive if they treat it this poorly.”

    I do think they picked the wrong product for this treatment considering shrink and high price. It should be shit like dvds and other durable products.

    • JennaR8r@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      6 hours ago

      And oddly enough in order to prevent breaking the jars, the employee had to carefully position each jar haphazardly like that.

  • shweddy@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    Cento peeled tomatoes and a little basil makes better sauce for less than 7.49 just saying

    • Sprinks@lemmy.world
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      2 days ago

      I grew up shopping at Kroger and continued to shop there for a years after I moved out on my own. Cant say enough how much i fucking hate Kroger. Our local one decided to put in those stupid security gates at the door, forcing you to walk the ENTIRE LENGTH of the store and through the registers to get out. It was the last straw in a mounting hay pile of shitty changes that pushed me to start going to Meijers despite kroger being much closer. Cant state enough how much i fricken love Meijers compared to Kroger, Giante Eagle, Etc around here.

      EDIT: I also worked Kroger bakery in 2019 and i got to see how they rolled back all pay and benifits over the years for new employees. They were also abusive as fuck with my hours.

      • Passerby6497@lemmy.world
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        2 days ago

        My wife (who has DOCUMENTED NUT ALLERGIES and told them about it) was put into the bakery and expected to pull all the frozen stuff to thaw before being baked.

        Anyone see an issue with putting a worker with a nut allergy in the bakery? Because they sure as fuck didn’t. They were also very surprised when she no call/no showed to quit after they kept ignoring her complaints and expected her to do the work of 3 people and to train register people when she needed help to get shit done.

        • Sprinks@lemmy.world
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          2 days ago

          Im sorry she had to go through that. Kroger is a shit company to their employees and customers. I was there for maybe a month before i did the same, no show/call and quit. I specifically applied for the bakery, they hired me for the bakery, but on my first day they started dropping hints the bakery was over staffed and tried to probe my interest in working in the deli, which was a hard no and they knew that. The second week they kept trying to position me in deli and i refused every single time. By the third week they told me i had no choice, but to work deli, so i stopped showing up.

          All in all, they gave me less pay than promised, less hours than promised, less benefits than promised, and work in a completely different deparment than promised. The hours, by the way, they kept just a hair shy, and well below what i was promised, of qualifying for benefits, which i was also promised.

          “Fresh for everyone” my ass

          • Tollana1234567@lemmy.today
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            2 days ago

            deli/prepared foods at our local wf is similar to, hard work nobody wants to work there, and the people that are there gives attitude to other employees because they are worked to the bone.

    • zip@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      1 day ago

      That edit made me laugh, 'cause I totally understand. For example, I had a ‘Gram’ and a ‘Gran’ and my whole life I can never remember for sure which goes by which. Makes me feel like an asshole, lol.

      I’m glad he taught you how to make your own, by the way. It’s so damn tasty. Now I’m craving homemade tomato-based pasta sauce…

      • MinnesotaGoddam@lemmy.world
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        1 day ago

        dude i feel like i should make the title of my autobiography “Where did all these grampas come from” or something but like, grampas were pretty cool. I looked up to them enough that my friends started calling me grampa in high school

  • I saw Rao’s get recommended as the second best sauce outta all the store brand sauces in the US rated by some of Italy’s top chefs.

    It isn’t that good. Newman’s Own is way better and, around here anyway, half the price of Rao’s. But you can also very easily and for a lot less than a jar, make your own pasta sauce and make it as good as you want.