Every year gardeners are faced with a surplus of tomatoes that didn't ripen before the killing frosts arrived. Never fear; those golden-green orbs can be put to good use.
It’s a fact of gardening life: tomatoes—particularly the indeterminate varieties—produce fruit far into the growing season, when there is no hope of them ripening before the real cold sets in.
Despite the liberal use of sprinklers, blankets, sheets, row covers, and a hearty prayer or two, even the most devoted grower usually ends up tossing a bunch of immature tomatoes into the compost heap when frost finally reduces the mother plants to wretched tentacles of blackened stems and leaves.
Alas, the ambitions of tomato lovers, renewed each spring as their stocky little charges are nestled into the soil, are rewarded every autumn with a surfeit of produce that will spoil on the counter long before it ever ripens to a usable form.
But gardeners are an optimistic bunch. When presented with a challenge, they invent solutions; when confronted by a rotten apple, they manufacture butter.
Thus, green tomatoes have attained a dubious sort of folk status among gardeners: Like the legendary zucchini, an unripe tomato is a subject for contemplation, the topic of dinnertime conversation, potential fodder for even the most unorthodox of recipes.
From sauces, relishes, and chutneys to piccalillis, pickles, and pies, green tomatoes have found their way onto the menu of anyone who has ever scratched a hole in a plot of humus and plunked in a tomato seedling.
One way to dispose of a bucketful of green tomatoes is to preserve a few jars of salsa. Come winter, those verdant receptacles standing on a pantry shelf will be a welcome sight.
Canned Green Tomato Salsa
Ingredients
8 lbs green tomatoes (approximately 16 cups chopped)
6 large onions
6 green peppers
3 sweet red peppers
3 – 6 jalapeño peppers (depending on taste)
6 garlic cloves, minced
1 cup fresh cilantro, finely chopped
½ cup salt
½ tablespoon black pepper
Cayenne pepper to taste (about 1/8 tsp)
3 cups vinegar
1 cup lemon juice
Method
Coarsely chop tomatoes, onions, and peppers
Combine all ingredients in a large kettle and mix well
Heat to boiling, then simmer uncovered for 25 minutes, stirring frequently
Ladle mixture into hot pint or quart jars, filling to within ¼ inch from top
Wipe jar rims with damp cloth or sponge
Adjust lids
Process in hot-water bath or steam canner: 15 minutes for quarts; 10 minutes for pints (start timer after jars have been placed in canner and water in canner has returned to boiling)
When processing is complete, remove jars from canner and allow them to cool to room temperature. Check seals. Label sealed jars and store in pantry
Jars that don’t seal can be placed in refrigerator (use within three weeks) or immediately reprocessed with new lids
Makes about 3 quarts (6 pints)
When the family has gathered around the television to watch a late-season football game or hunkered onto the carpet for a round of cards, a heap of chips and a bowl of green tomato salsa will transform the event from mundane to magnificent.
The copyright of the article Recipe for Canned Green Tomato Salsa in Recipes is owned by Stephen Allen Christensen. Permission to republish Recipe for Canned Green Tomato Salsa in print or online must be granted by the author in writing.
This is a lovely salsa but salty. I would cut the salt down to 1/4 Cup. I
would like verification as to whether pickling salt or table salt is to be
used.
Sep 24, 2009 7:05 AM
Stephen Allen Christensen :
I use sea salt, which is equivalent to table salt in measurment. We usually
buy unsalted chips and use the salsa in recipes where we don't add salt, so
we're undoubtedly getting our "salt fix" from the salsa instead
of those other foods. It certainly makes sense to adjust the recipe to
personal taste. Thanks for trying it...my family is trying to talk me
into picking all of our tomatoes while they're still green so we'll have
more of this stuff!
Oct 8, 2009 7:53 AM
Guest :
My family’s first attempt at canning! Success! Thanks! We cranked out 42
pints of delicious salsa. Sea salt was our choice as well and I found the
finished product to be right on par with my salty preference. This year
was also my family’s first attempt at gardening. Considering the Central
Alberta growing season I think we did pretty well for ourselves. I was
happy to find this recipe so that the 20lbs of green fruit that hanging on
4 plants did not go to waste. We will give some away for Christmas gifts
this year and I think we’re hooked on canning for years to come.
Oct 15, 2009 11:22 AM
Guest :
I'm curious about the altitude for your recipe, since I live at high
elevation and have to adjust accordingly. Is yours standard for recipes
(1000 ft. or lower) or already adjusted for higher?
Oct 15, 2009 11:37 AM
Stephen Allen Christensen :
The processing times mentioned in this recipe are standard for people under
1,000' altitude. The rule of thumb for altitude correction is as
follows: For processing times under 20 minutes, add 1 minute to the
recipe's time for every additional 1,000' of altitude. For processing
times over 20 minutes, add 2 minutes to the recipe's time for every
additional 1,000' of altitude. (By the way, I have another batch on
the stove as I type this)
Oct 19, 2009 1:45 AM
Guest :
Love the salsa! We always have lots of green tomatoes at the end of the
year and we usually pickle them so this was a great change. I read the
comments before I started and adjusted the salt to 1/4 c (I use Kosher
salt) and we found it to be perfect. My husband likes spicy salsa so he
added his own homemade HOT sauce to part of the batch instead of the
cayenne and it still turned out the way it was supposed to. We also ended
up with 13 500 ml jars... a good thing because our friends have been making
off with jars like there's no tomorrow!