Canning 101: How to Can Spaghetti Sauce (2024)

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by Erin

How to Can Spaghetti Sauce – Canning your spaghetti sauce or marinara is a great way to use your garden-fresh tomatoes and ensure you have homemade spaghetti sauce all year round!

Canning 101: How to Can Spaghetti Sauce (1)

Canned Spaghetti Sauce

First of all, here is the Homemade Roasted Marinara recipe we make every year to can – it comes highly recommend and is really flexible and forgiving! Let me know if you make it!

Canning + Botulism

First, I am going to direct you to the USDA’s Guide To Home Canning – a great resource for all of your home-canning questions. Additionally, homecanning.gov has a great schpeel on home canning and the concern regarding botulism. Botulism is a potentially deadly form of food poisoning that is caused by a bacteria that is actually found in the soil, but it can survive, grow and produce a toxin that can grow inside sealed jars of food – like canned spaghetti sauce. There are a couple of ways to ensure this bacteria is NOT in your food – one of them is high heat. Heat, particularly at certain temperatures and for certain periods of time, can kill that bacteria – this is why a pressure cooker is generally recommended as it can withstand incredibly high temps and pressure, thus killing off bacteria quickly. Another is acidity. Tomatoes, for example, are very acidic by nature. Thus, they are generally a great food to can as they naturally can kill of the botulism bacteria. But, that is why you often hear canning recipes call for lemon juice, which is also very acidic, as it can also assist with ensuring there are no botulism bacteria in your food. Botulism is a very serious bacteria with potentially fatal side effects, but there are definite ways to ensure you don’t have to worry about it.

Bottom line, the safest way to can any food, tomatoes as well, is to use a pressure cooker, add lemon juice and follow the other guidelines described in the USDA’s Guide.

All that being said, below I am going to explain the way that we have canned our tomatoes the past several years. While it doesn’t involve either a pressure cooker or lemon juice, we take into consideration the amount of acidity in the tomatoes and the fact that our homemade marinara recipe cooks at 425 for 5 hours, undoubtedly killing off any bacteria, but if any remained, the 45-60 water bath would kill off the rest.

What you need to can spaghetti sauce:

How to Can SpaghettiSauce in a Water Bath:

  1. Sterilize. Sterilize. And then sterilize again: With canning, you need to aware of not only the potential bacteria that may have been in your soil, but also the everyday bacteria we have on our hands and in our kitchen. So, the first thing you need to do is eliminate that bacteria. Take your jars, lids, rings and funnel (this is included in your Kit) and give them a good wash in hot, soapy water. Then, either run them through the sanitizing cycle in your dishwasher (no detergent) or place them in boiling water for 30 minutes. Once that is complete, set everythingon a clean towel.
  2. Take your homemade marinara (which has already been in the oven for 5 hours) and pour through funnel into one of your sanitized jars. Ensure there is 1/4 inch of space left at the top of the sauce. Use clean towel or paper towel and wipe down the top of the jar to ensure nothing will prevent a tight seal from occurring. Place seal and ring on top and tighten – use tightener also included in yourKit.
  3. Repeat this step until you have used all of your marinara sauce.
  4. If you are using a water bath, take yourStainless Steel Multi-Use CannerCanning 101: How to Can Spaghetti Sauce (5)and fill it about 3/4 full of water and bring to boil. Place as many jars as can comfortably fit in the canner and let sit in boiling water for 45-60 minutes, ensuring there is at least 1 inch of water on top of the jars.
  5. After 45 minutes, remove from water and let sit out for 12 hours, listening for each can to “pop”. If they don’t pop, they haven’t sealed correctly and should be discarded.

Storage

Once you can your spaghetti sauce it is fine being stored in your pantry – no need to freeze!

Canning 101: How to Can Spaghetti Sauce (6)
Canning 101: How to Can Spaghetti Sauce (7)
Canning 101: How to Can Spaghetti Sauce (8)
Canning 101: How to Can Spaghetti Sauce (9)

Here’s to enjoying yummy spaghetti sauce all year round!

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  1. Traci says

    I am new to this. I would like to make a big batch of my grandmother’s gravy (sauce). She used canned tomato paste, canned tomato puree (like red pak or contadina), little oil, almost a head of garlic, water, basil, oregano, salt and pepper. Am I able to can this up and use a water bath?

    Reply

    • Heidi C. says

      If you are still curious… I wouldn’t. It’s safest to freeze something like that. Keeps it fresh and yummy, and no guessing about it being shelf stable.

      Reply

  2. Arthur Heinrichs says

    I make a homemade marinara using canned certified San Marzano whole tomatoes and canned certified San Marzano tomatoe paste. To these I add sauteed onions and garlic along with chopped fresh garlic. Since I am using previously canned produce can I skip the long oven step before canning?

    Reply

  3. Jenna says

    Can you add something like mushrooms and still be able to can?

    Reply

    • Erin says

      Hi Jenna – yes, adding vegetables is usually fine (I have done zucchini before and it worked great), just don’t add any meat!

      Reply

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Canning 101: How to Can Spaghetti Sauce (2024)

FAQs

How to properly can sauce? ›

Place jars in canner, ensuring they are completely covered with water. Bring to a boil and process pint jars for 35 minutes and quart jars for 40 minutes, adjusting for altitude. Remove canner lid. Wait 5 minutes, then remove jars, cool and store.

How do you seal spaghetti sauce in a mason jar? ›

How to Can Sauce at Home In Jars
  1. Canning Sauces at Home Requires High Acidity Ingredients.
  2. Tools needed to jar sauces.
  3. Submerge mason jar and its cap in boiling water.
  4. Pour the sauce in your mason jars.
  5. Return the filled mason jar to the water.
  6. Turn the jar upside down until you hear the pop or it seals.
Jun 17, 2023

Does homemade spaghetti sauce need to be pressure canned? ›

Unripe tomatoes consist of a lot more acid as compared to fruit that has reached maturity. That is why it is recommended to make spaghetti sauce or preserve tomato-based sauces through the pressure canning method that requires no acid to be added to the sauce and ensures that the taste remains fresh even after days.

Why do you put lemon juice in jars when canning spaghetti sauce? ›

Testing has shown that some current tomato varieties have pH values at or above pH 4.6; a few have values of pH 5 or even higher. Adding the recommended amount of bottled lemon juice or citric acid lowers the pH of all tested varieties enough to allow for the safe process of water bath canning.

How to Make spaghetti sauce in a can better? ›

Here are my favorite ways to make canned spaghetti sauce more exciting!
  1. 1 - Extra virgin olive oil. Adding a good amount of a flavorful olive oil will go a long way in infusing flavor into your sauce. ...
  2. 2 - Fresh garlic. ...
  3. 3 - Meat. ...
  4. 4 - Hot pepper flakes. ...
  5. 5 - Red wine. ...
  6. 6 - Fresh or dried herbs. ...
  7. 7 - Cheese. ...
  8. 8 - Cream and/or butter.
Feb 26, 2018

Is it safe to can spaghetti sauce with meat in it? ›

However, meat is a low acid food, which is the ideal environment for botulism. Because of this, low acid foods need to be processed in a pressure canner. Pressure canners raise the temperature of the jar and its contents well above the boiling point, which kills off even botulism and makes the product shelf stable.

How long does spaghetti sauce last in mason jars? ›

Pasta sauce may last approximately 2 weeks in the fridge (sealed in a mason jar) and approximately 3 months in the freezer.

How to preserve a homemade tomato sauce? ›

If you want to keep it longer, freeze it. I use that basic red tomato sauce for lots of things besides spaghetti, so I usually make a couple of gallons at a time and then divide it into a bunch of 1, 2, and 4 cup containers, put fitted lids on them, label and date them, and put them in my big freezer. Thaw as needed.

How to hack jar spaghetti sauce? ›

7 Ways to Improve the Taste of Jar Pasta Sauce
  1. Sautee Some Veggies. The first step to making your jar sauce better is to sautee some garlic in olive oil on your stovetop. ...
  2. Mix in Some Meat. ...
  3. Add a Splash of Red Wine. ...
  4. Spice It Up. ...
  5. Get Cheesy. ...
  6. Stir in More Dairy. ...
  7. Pop It in the Oven.

Do I have to add citric acid when canning spaghetti sauce? ›

Because of the uncertainty related to the pH of tomatoes, ALL home-preserved tomato products must be acidified to a pH of 4.6 or below (using lemon juice, citric acid, or vinegar (5% acidity)) and processed as a low-acid food using a boiling water or pressure canner.

Do you have to peel tomatoes for canning spaghetti sauce? ›

Same goes if you're canning tomatoes for a later time, when they'll probably be turned into a sauce. Though it's completely a matter of preference, for the smoothest, mellowest sauce, you might consider peeling.

How to thicken spaghetti sauce before canning? ›

Cornstarch: Make a slurry of half water, half cornstarch and whisk until smooth. Cornstarch is a powerful thickener, so start by whisking in no more than 1 tablespoon of the mixture per 2 cups of simmering sauce; stir and simmer for 2 minutes, check the thickness, and repeat with more slurry as needed.

How do you preserve homemade sauces? ›

Add 1 tablespoon bottled lemon juice or 2 tablespoons vinegar, or 1/4 teaspoon citric acid to each pint jar. Fill jars, leaving 1/4 inch of headspace. Adjust lids and process pints for 35 minutes and quarts for 40 minutes in a boiling water bath or atmospheric steam canner.

What is the proper way of storing sauce? ›

Best Storage

The fridge is the best place to store sauces. Store your leftover homemade sauce in the fridge and use within a couple of days or freeze. For leftover shop-bought sauces it's best to follow the storage guidance on the jar. If you have leftover sauce, seal the lid and store the jar in the fridge.

How do you seal jars for sauce? ›

Sealing with a water bath
  1. First, place a round metal cooling rack on the bottom of a tall cooking pot. ...
  2. Next, fill the pot with water – enough to cover at least an inch above your glass jars. ...
  3. Carefully lower your filled canning jars into the boiling water using a jar lifter. ...
  4. Turn the heat up to a rolling boil.
Sep 24, 2022

How do you thicken sauce before canning? ›

If you want it even thicker, add another can or so of tomato puree until it is thick to your likeness. Let it sit for a while! Make sure to stir every now and then. You can let it simmer anywhere between 30 minutes to 2 hours.

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