DiNapoli Fire Roasted Tomato Pizza Sauce
It starts with a good dough. I didn’t say a round dough!
The next thing you have to master after you have a good dough is your tomato sauce. Once again, I credit Peter with my favorite sauce. His Crushed Tomato Sauce recipe is simple and delicious. It’s perfectly balanced. You make it cold and let it cook up right on the pizza. Check out the recipe *HERE if you haven’t tried it. I make it so often, I don’t look at the recipe anymore. I simply add the ingredients by feel – a pinch of this and a couple pinches of that.

The fire roasting adds an amazing depth of flavor to these quality California tomatoes. I would call this sauce not only delicious, but interesting.
I finally got around to trying these out and my hunch was right! Here’s what I came up with for my version of a Fire-Roasted Tomato Sauce. I give credit to Peter’s original Crushed Tomato Sauce that inspired where I wanted to go with this. I think you will love the results.
DiNapoli Fire-Roasted Tomato Sauce:
Olive Oil
Chopped Garlic (2 or 3 Large Cloves)
Chopped Onions (about 1/4 of an Onion)
DiNapoli Roasted Tomatoes (14.5 Oz Can)
Dried Basil
Dried Oregano
Kosher Salt
Ground Pepper
To Do:

I threw a lot of garlic and onions into this sauce.
Saute the Garlic and Onions in the Olive Oil until translucent. *I took this a little further to where they began to brown and almost char. I felt like this would add to the texture and flavor of this sauce and accent the fire-roasting of the tomatoes even more.

I gave these a little hand crushing, or squeezing in a bowl before adding to the pan.
Add a good pinch of the dried Basil and Oregano (about 1/2 – 1 teaspoon each to start)
Add a pinch of salt and freshly ground pepper, to your taste.
*I love the concept of adding a “pinch”! It is different for everyone. We could do a study and have 100 people add a pinch of salt and do some math and come up with what the average pinch measurement is. Instead, the pinch allows you to make it your own and more importantly it urges you to cook by feeling or instinct. Just a thought…

Simmer the sauce and add in the herbs and seasoning.
After it cooled down a bit I took my first taste. As I mentioned above the sauce was almost chewable. The thing that struck me was that this sauce was not only chewy, but almost meaty in flavor. I was standing there at the stove tasting the sauce to see if it needed anything and I my first thoughts were about this being a meat sauce. It was delicious! It had a roasty-meaty flavor at the base and finished with a salty sweetness.
Enjoy!
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Can this sauce be canned?