There comes a Saturday in the first half of September when the kitchen counter is no longer a counter — it’s a tomato situation. The vines, which all summer have been polite about ripening one or two at a time, decide together that the season is over and offer up everything they have left in a single weekend. The basket on the porch is full; so is the colander; so is the cookie sheet you forgot you set down. This is the day you put up.

We built a method that fits a real Saturday, with kids underfoot and a husband walking through the kitchen every twenty minutes for a glass of water. It is not the prettiest method. It is the one that holds.

What you’ll need before you start

You don’t need a fancy canning setup to put up tomatoes well. We’ve been doing this on a flat-top range for six years now. Here’s what we reach for, in the order we use it.

“The work is the point, not the obstacle. But it doesn’t have to be the only thing you do on a Saturday.”

— from the kitchen, September 2026

The slow-Saturday schedule

Coffee in hand by 8, jars out of the dishwasher by 9, sauce off the stove by 4, and dinner together at the table by 6. No marathon.

9:00 — set the table

Pull every empty jar out of the cabinet, line them up on a folded tea towel, and set the lids in a bowl of warm water.

9:30 — blanch & peel

Score the bottoms. Blanch in batches of eight to twelve. Shock, peel, core, and quarter the lot into the biggest bowl you own.

11:00 — start the sauce

Into the heavy pot: a small splash of olive oil, four smashed cloves of garlic, a pinch of salt. Add the tomatoes. Bring to a simmer and walk away — but only across the room.

Pint jars lined up on a kitchen counter
Pints, lined up on the towel. The right size for a family supper.

2:30 — taste, ladle, lid

When the sauce coats the back of a spoon and the kitchen has gone quiet, you’re ready. Ladle through the funnel, leaving a half-inch of headspace.

From the kitchen —
Ed & Kate