2 Homemade Ketchup Recipes - One for Canning, One Probiotic (2024)

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Homemade ketchup seems somehow mysterious, but once you find a good recipe, it's not complicated to make. My youngest loves ketchup, so I tried out several homemade ketchup recipes until we found some he liked.

The first ketchup recipe uses fresh tomatoes, and is suitable for canning or freezing for long term storage.

The second ketchup recipe is lacto-fermented, so you get some probiotics with your burger and fries. It starts with tomato paste, so it's a cinch to whip up.

2 Homemade Ketchup Recipes - One for Canning, One Probiotic (1)

Homemade Ketchup Canning Recipe

The key ingredient to this homemade ketchup recipe is patience. To get a nice, thick ketchup from fresh tomatoes without adding any thickeners, you need to cook it down slowly.

Early on, you can keep the heat a little higher and simply stir frequently, but as the sauce gets thicker, you need to keep the heat lower, as it will be more prone to scorching and bubbling all over the place.

Because I save my paste tomatoes for salsa, I usually use juicier tomatoes for this recipe and more of them. Paste tomatoes will cut cooking time and you can use less of them.

When I make homemade ketchup for canning, I generally use it as a means to use up all the odds and ends of tomatoes rolling around, such as excess cherry tomatoes or slicing tomatoes that have split.

I'll put a pot on the back of the stove and keep measuring tomatoes into it over a day or two, slowly cooking them down while I'm working on other projects in the kitchen. (You could also use a slow cooker or Instant Pot.)

The taste of this homemade ketchup recipe is similar to a popular national brand – no big range of added spices – but like most home processed products, the flavor is richer and deeper.

You can really taste the fresh tomatoes, onions and garlic. Because there is added vinegar, this ketchup is safe to can in a water bath canner.

Ingredients

Tomatoes – about 25 lbs paste tomatoes or 30 pounds mixed tomatoes (cherry tomatoes are fine)
1 cup onions, finely chopped
1 teaspoon salt (optional)
1 cloves of garlic, minced
1 teaspoon black pepper
1/2 teaspoon cayenne pepper
1 cup cane sugar (white or brown)
1 cup apple cider vinegar

Directions

Core and quarter tomatoes and place them in a heavy bottom pot (or pots) or slow cooker on low/medium heat, stirring frequently.

Cook until soft and run through a food strainer, food mill or chinois to remove seeds and skins, or cook down until volume is roughly half of original volume and then run through food strainer, food mill or chinois.

As I mentioned, I usually make this while working on other things, so I do my straining when time allows.

Continue cooking tomato puree until volume is roughly 1/4 of original volume.

Add remaining ingredients, cook until onion and garlic are soft. Puree with hand blender or food strainer, or leave lumpy – your choice.

Cook on low until desired consistency is reached.

2 Homemade Ketchup Recipes - One for Canning, One Probiotic (2)

While the homemade ketchup recipe is cooking down, prepare your canner, jars and lids. The water bath canner should be filled enough to cover your jars with two inches of water.

Jars should be sterilized and kept hot. I run mine through the dishwasher. Some people heat them in their canning water or in a warm oven.

Ladle into prepared jars, leaving 1/4 inch headspace. Wipe jar rims and threads. Cover with two piece lids. Screw bands until finger tight.

(Air exits from above the food during processing to leave a vacuum behind, and the vacuum creates the final seal, not you. Just FYI to those who are new to this.)

Process for 15 minutes in a water bath canner. Turn off heat, remove canner lid, let sit five minutes.

Remove from canner and place on kitchen towel on counter top. After jars are cool, check seals.

Refrigerate jars (if any) that did not seal and use them first. Makes around 9 cups for me when I cook it to the thickness we like.

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Homemade Tomato Ketchup for Canning

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Easy homemade ketchup recipe, slow cooked with fresh tomatoes, garlic and onions.

  • Prep Time: 20 minutes
  • Cook Time: 12 hours
  • Total Time: 12 hours 20 minutes
  • Yield: 9 cups 1x
  • Category: condiment
  • Method: canning
  • Cuisine: American

Ingredients

UnitsScale

  • Tomatoes – about 25 lbs paste tomatoes or 30 pounds mixed tomatoes (cherry tomatoes are fine)
  • 1 cup onions, finely chopped
  • 1 teaspoon salt (optional)
  • 1 cloves of garlic, minced
  • 1 teaspoon black pepper
  • 1/2 teaspoon cayenne pepper
  • 1 cup cane sugar (white or brown)
  • 1 cup apple cider vinegar

Instructions

  1. Core and quarter tomatoes and place them in a heavy bottom pot (or pots) or slow cooker on low/medium heat, stirring frequently.
  2. Cook until soft and run through a food strainer, food mill or chinois to remove seeds and skins. Return puree to pot and continue cooking tomato puree until volume is roughly 1/4 of original volume.
  3. Add remaining ingredients, cook until onion and garlic are soft. Puree with hand blender or food strainer, or leave lumpy – your choice.
  4. Cook on low until desired consistency is reached.
  5. While the homemade ketchup is cooking down, prepare your canner, jars and lids. Water bath canner should be filled enough to cover your jars with two inches of water. Jars should be sterilized and kept hot.
  6. Ladle ketchup into prepared jars, leaving 1/4 inch headspace. Wipe jar rims and threads. Cover with two piece lids. Screw bands until finger tight. Process for 15 minutes in a water bath canner.
  7. Turn off heat, remove canner lid, let sit five minutes. Remove from canner and place on kitchen towel on counter top.
  8. After jars are cool, check seals. Refrigerate jars (if any) that did not seal and use them first.

Nutrition

  • Serving Size: 1 tablespoon

If you need more tomato canning recipes, check out:

  • Home Canned Salsa Recipe – Plus 10 Tips for Safe Salsa Canning
  • Spaghetti Sauce for Canning
  • Home CannedTomato Soup – Tastes Like a National Brand, Except Better
  • Pickled Cherry Tomatoes for Canning, Plus More Cherry Tomato Ideas
  • How toCan Tomatoesin a Canner or Large Pot

Probiotic Homemade Ketchup Recipe

If you'd like a smaller, quicker recipe that also packs a probiotic punch, check out this easy lacto-fermented homemade ketchup recipe from Traditional Cooking School by GNOWFGLINS.

Wardee said she kept an unopened jar in the back of her fridge for 6 months. An opened container would have a shorter shelf life.

If you use water instead of whey, double the salt or use a non-whey culture (not both). The whey referred to in the recipe would be obtained by straining live culture yogurt or milk kefir.

If you don't have whey, you can substitute sauerkraut juice from live kraut or other cultured vegetable juice, or kombucha. This will change the flavor, so feel free to experiment and see which flavor you like best.

Recipe reprinted with permission from Traditional Cooking School by GNOWFGLINS.

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Probiotic Homemade Ketchup

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Simple fermented homemade ketchup recipe for a probiotic punch.

  • Prep Time: 5 minutes
  • Total Time: 5 minutes
  • Yield: 2 cups 1x
  • Category: condiment
  • Method: Fermenting
  • Cuisine: American

Ingredients

UnitsScale

  • 12 ounces organic tomato paste (no salt added)
  • 5 tablespoons water
  • 1/8 cup whey (or water)
  • 2 Tablespoons apple cider vinegar
  • 1/4 teaspoon mustard powder
  • 1/4 teaspoon cinnamon
  • 1/8 teaspoon cloves
  • 1/8 teaspoon allspice
  • 1/8 teaspoon cayenne
  • 1/2 teaspoon salt
  • 1/4 cup honey

Instructions

  1. In a medium sized bowl, whisk together all ingredients. Pour sauce into a storage container (such as a pint mason jar). Cover and leave at room temperature for two days. Move to the refrigerator for longer storage.

Nutrition

  • Serving Size: 1 tablespoon

Why Make Probiotic Homemade Ketchup?

Did you know that our gut is often referred to as “our second brain”, and is a major part of our immune systems?

Instead of popping a probiotic pill, how about incorporating live culture (probiotic) foods into what we eat every day? As you can see from the recipe above, it doesn't have to be complicated.

In her e-books and e-courses, Wardee and the Traditional Cooking School crew make fermenting easy and delicious.

I have yet to try a recipe of hers and have it taste nasty – honest! She's my go-to person when I have questions about this sort of thing.

If you'd like to learn more about her Lacto-Fermentation E-book, click here or on the image below. If you purchase through my site, I receive a commission and you get a great product from people I trust. Thank you!

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For those who are new to canning (or would like a refresher) check out, “How to Can Food at Home – Quick Guide to Safe Home Canning“.

You may also enjoy:

  • Pickle Relish Sweetened With Honey
  • No Canning Required Dill Pickles
  • Easy Horseradish Sauce with Fresh Horseradish Root – Hot or Cream Style

Originally published September 2013, updated in 2016, 2018.

2 Homemade Ketchup Recipes - One for Canning, One Probiotic (2024)

FAQs

How long will canned homemade ketchup last? ›

Pack and Store Your Homemade Ketchup

Ketchup will keep 3 weeks in the fridge or 6 months in the freezer. Ketchup can also be water bath canned using the hot pack method.

What are the ingredients in ketchup? ›

Ingredients: TOMATO CONCENTRATE FROM RED RIPE TOMATOES, DISTILLED VINEGAR, HIGH FRUCTOSE CORN SYRUP, CORN SYRUP, SALT, SPICE, ONION POWDER, NATURAL FLAVORING.

What are the ingredients in clear ketchup? ›

Tomato Concentrate, High Fructose Corn Syrup, Vinegar, Corn Syrup, Salt, Onion Powder, Spice, Natural Flavors.

Can you eat 20 year old canned food? ›

Good news: Shelf-stable canned goods are safe more or less indefinitely, lasting up to five years or more according to the USDA.

How do you increase the shelf life of ketchup? ›

Follow the “keep refrigerated after opening” instruction. Keep the cap or lid tightly closed after each use. Flies and bugs may leave their eggs or microbes on the exposed condiment. Use a clean spoon when scooping condiment from the jar.

What is an unhealthy ingredient in ketchup? ›

Two ingredients of concern in ketchup are salt and sugar. Per tablespoon, ketchup contains 4 grams of sugar and 190 milligrams of sodium. Although 4 grams of sugar doesn't seem like a lot, much of it comes from added sugar, as opposed to the natural sugar found in tomatoes.

What was the original recipe for ketchup? ›

Smith observes that the first published recipe for ketchup in English—a thin mixture of vinegar, white wine, anchovies, shallots, lemon peel, horseradish, and a passel of spices described in Eliza Smith's The Compleat Housewife from 1727—includes a note that “the clear Liquor that comes from Mushrooms” may be added to ...

What is Mcdonald's ketchup made of? ›

Ingredients: Tomato Concentrate From Red Ripe Tomatoes, Distilled Vinegar, High Fructose Corn Syrup, Corn Syrup, Water, Salt, Natural Flavors.

Why is vinegar added to ketchup? ›

Let's look at the ingredients of ketchup. Most of them contain vinegar, which will inhibit the growth of bacteria, which will cause the ketchup to go bad. Even those not vinegar based contain tomatoes, which are a fairly acid fruit. That acid will also inhibit bacteria growth.

Does homemade ketchup taste better? ›

Homemade ketchup is simple and much more flavorful than anything you can buy at the store. I use 4 tablespoons of sugar, but adjust the sugar to your taste.

What are the raw materials for ketchup? ›

The main ingredients of ketchup are tomatoes, sweeteners, vinegar, salt, spices, flavourings, onion, and/or garlic. The types of sweetener used are usually granulated cane sugar or beet sugar. Other sweeteners include dextrose or liquid sugar in the form of corn or glucose syrup.

What is the number one ingredient in ketchup? ›

U.S. Heinz tomato ketchup's ingredients (listed from highest to lowest percentage weight) are: tomato concentrate from red ripe tomatoes, distilled vinegar, high-fructose corn syrup, corn syrup, salt, spice, onion powder, and natural flavoring.

What are the ingredients in natural ketchup? ›

version involves simmering tomato purée (or crushed tomatoes) with vinegar, maple syrup, and spices. We prefer using a tomato product that contains just tomatoes because added citric acid can detract from the bright tomato flavor.

What is the highest grade ketchup? ›

U.S. Grade A is the quality of tomato catsup that possesses a good color; that possesses a good consistency; that is practically free from defects; that possesses a good flavor; that possesses a good finish; that has a total solids content of not less than 33 percent, by weight; and that scores not less than 85 points ...

How long does homemade canned tomato sauce last in a jar? ›

You will need four pint-sized jars with sealable lids for canning; the lids and jars need to be sterilized, which can be done by boiling in a large pot for 10 minutes. Let them dry before filling. Canned tomato sauce will remain good for up to a year, stored in a cool, dark place.

How long are homemade canned goods safe to eat? ›

Properly canned food stored in a cool, dry place will retain optimum eating quality for at least 1 year. Canned food stored in a warm place near hot pipes, a range, a furnace, or in indirect sunlight may lose some of its eating quality in a few weeks or months, depending on the temperature.

What is the shelf life of home canned tomatoes? ›

High acid foods such as tomatoes and other fruit will keep their best quality up to 18 months; low acid foods such as meat and vegetables, 2 to 5 years. While extremely rare, a toxin produced by Clostridium botulinum is the worst danger in canned goods.

How do you store ketchup long term? ›

Food safety experts say that while ketchup is shelf-stable, it generally tastes better when kept cold. “I'm shocked there's a controversy,” said Martin Bucknavage, a food safety specialist at Penn State University. “If you want to maximize the quality of your ketchup, you keep it in the fridge.”

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