Ava Supernova
AvaSupernova
HealthRecipesTurkish

Domates salçası (tomato paste)

TurkishTurkeycondiment

I have always believed that the soul of a Turkish kitchen is measured not in its spices, but in the depth of its reds. Domates salçası is not merely a condiment; it is the foundational breath of our stews, our pilafs, and our slow-simmered meats. When I first learned to make it from my grandmother in the Aegean countryside, I watched hours of summer sunlight boil away until only the concentrated essence of August remained. Making your own paste means reclaiming control over flavor, stripping away the hidden sugars and preservatives that commercial jars inevitably rely on. The process is deceptively simple but demands patience. You begin with ripe, sun-warmed tomatoes, blend them down, and let them reduce over low heat for hours. The most common pitfall I see is rushing the evaporation. If you crank the heat, the sugars scorch and the paste develops a bitter, metallic edge that ruins everything it touches. You must let it whisper, not boil. Another mistake is neglecting the salt-to-oil seal once it cools; without that protective layer, the vibrant color dulls and mold creeps in. This is a batch hero for a reason. When you commit to a full summer harvest, you are essentially bottling the season’s warmth to sustain you through the grayest winter months. The texture should be thick enough to hold a spoon upright, glossy and deeply fragrant. It is an exercise in restraint, a quiet alchemy that transforms a fleeting harvest into a year-round staple. Every jar I seal feels like a promise kept to the earth that grew it.

Nutrition

Per servingCaloriesProteinCarbsFatSat fatFibreSugarSodium
beginner55kcal2g11g1g0g3g8g20mg
intermediate45kcal2g10g0g0g3g7g12mg
expert95kcal4g18g1g0g5g14g680mg

Per serving · Ava-estimated — a guide, not a clinical figure.

Source: Adapted from traditional Aegean household preservation methods.
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