Posted by startaurus on Nov 16, 2011 · Member since Sep 2009 · 252 posts
tomato sauce and marinara sauce?
Posted by veganhealthy on Nov 19, 2011 · Member since Feb 2010 · 29 posts
Interesting question! I thought about for a minute and every marinara sauce I've had has been made with chunks of veggies in it, so that was going to be my guess - and then I checked wikipedia:
"Marinara (mariner's) sauce is a southern Italian tomato sauce usually made with tomatoes, garlic, herbs (such as basil), and onion. However, there are many variations. Some of these include the addition of capers, olives and spices.
...
Italians refer to marinara only in association with other recipes. For instance, spaghetti alla marinara literally translates to mariner's spaghetti. However, tomato sauce alone in Italy is called salsa al pomodoro or pummarola." http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marinara_sauce
So it seems like tomato sauce is the general category, and marinara sauce is a specific type, although it seems like a pretty standard tomato sauce... :)
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Posted by Tweety on Nov 19, 2011 · Member since Jan 2003 · 3135 posts
The difference, in my opinion, is that tomato sauce is plain and marina has garlic and herbs (or just garlic and basil, but the point being it's not plain) and most of the time has chunkier tomatoes. You can use tomato sauce to make a marinara sauce.
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Posted by young fogey on Nov 19, 2011 · Member since Apr 2011 · 7 posts
For me, the definition of "tomato sauce" is different if it's used in a recipe than if it's describing a finished dish.
In a recipe, it usually means the stuff that comes in a can and is next to the tomato paste, crushed tomatoes, diced tomatoes in juice, and other "plain" canned tomato products. It's pretty much a tomato puree, maybe with a little onion powder or other basic flavoring, but it's an ingredient, not a ready-to-use item.
If a menu says something like "pasta with a light tomato sauce", then I translate that to "pasta with a light marinara sauce", meaning that it is a sauce with tomatoes, garlic, basil, etc.
But then if a recipe, perhaps for breadsticks or something, says "serve with a side of tomato sauce", then I would assume that it means a marinara or other spaghetti sauce, not the plain canned tomato sauce.
You have to use context to decide which one is meant.
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Posted by faunablues on Nov 19, 2011 · Member since Aug 2003 · 9655 posts
^ yep
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Posted by amymylove on Nov 19, 2011 · Member since Apr 2009 · 5266 posts
^ yep
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Posted by Tweety on Nov 20, 2011 · Member since Jan 2003 · 3135 posts
Interesting question! I thought about for a minute and every marinara sauce I've had has been made with chunks of veggies in it, so that was going to be my guess - and then I checked wikipedia:
"Marinara (mariner's) sauce is a southern Italian tomato sauce usually made with tomatoes, garlic, herbs (such as basil), and onion. However, there are many variations. Some of these include the addition of capers, olives and spices.
...
Italians refer to marinara only in association with other recipes. For instance, spaghetti alla marinara literally translates to mariner's spaghetti. However, tomato sauce alone in Italy is called salsa al pomodoro or pummarola." http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marinara_sauce
So it seems like tomato sauce is the general category, and marinara sauce is a specific type, although it seems like a pretty standard tomato sauce... :)
The difference, in my opinion, is that tomato sauce is plain and marina has garlic and herbs (or just garlic and basil, but the point being it's not plain) and most of the time has chunkier tomatoes. You can use tomato sauce to make a marinara sauce.
For me, the definition of "tomato sauce" is different if it's used in a recipe than if it's describing a finished dish.
In a recipe, it usually means the stuff that comes in a can and is next to the tomato paste, crushed tomatoes, diced tomatoes in juice, and other "plain" canned tomato products. It's pretty much a tomato puree, maybe with a little onion powder or other basic flavoring, but it's an ingredient, not a ready-to-use item.
If a menu says something like "pasta with a light tomato sauce", then I translate that to "pasta with a light marinara sauce", meaning that it is a sauce with tomatoes, garlic, basil, etc.
But then if a recipe, perhaps for breadsticks or something, says "serve with a side of tomato sauce", then I would assume that it means a marinara or other spaghetti sauce, not the plain canned tomato sauce.
You have to use context to decide which one is meant.
^ yep
^ yep
^yep