How to Put Up Tomatoes (Freeze Tomatoes the Easy Way)
Tomatoes grow aplenty in the South, so here’s the easiest way to put up tomatoes. Freeze your garden fresh tomatoes to enjoy year-round.
It’s that time of year again (in the South, at least). If you planted tomatoes back at the start of the summer, they are likely coming in by the bucketful right about now. Around this time of year, I feel like I have tomatoes coming out of my ears! Still, I LOVE to grow tomatoes and I know full well this bounty will come in very handy once the growing season is over. As Weezy said in Steel Magnolia’s, “I am an old Southern woman. It is my obligation to wear funny hats and grow tomatoes”.
I actually know very few Southerners who don’t grow tomatoes. They are so easy to grow and produce such remarkably versatile fruit that can be made into any number of dishes and even preserve with ease. So, on the chance that you are also experiencing a bounty of tomatoes, I thought I’d hurry up and get this post to you so that delicious produce doesn’t go to waste.
Preserving tomatoes is so easy though, so you don’t have to wait until you have a bucketful! If you even have one tomato that is quickly ripening with no immediate need for it, use this same method and freeze it to use in a dish on another day. Waste not, want not – and nothing beats a garden-grown fresh tomato.
Of course, you can always can tomatoes, but freezing is just about the easiest (and most inexpensive) way to preserve fresh garden produce so that is the one I’m bringing you today. This method is also more convenient for smaller batches.
Today, I’ll be putting up five heirloom tomatoes from my gardens. They don’t know how lucky they are that I let them turn red! I’ve been frying up green tomatoes left and right here lately but these five managed to grow up despite my fried green tomato love. As I said, this is so easy that you can use this technique to freeze tomatoes whether you have 1 or 100.
Recipe Ingredients
- Tomatoes
- Pot of boiling water
- Freezer bags
How to Put Up Tomatoes
Blanch tomatoes
Our first step is to blanch the tomatoes, so drop them into a pot of boiling water.
Like so.
After a minute or two, the skin will split like this.
Remove them as the skin splits with a slotted spoon and place them in a dish (I use a 9×13 baking dish).
You don’t want to use a plate because when you remove the peels and chop them up there will be a lot of yummy juice involved.
If you have very ripe tomatoes they will take longer to split open. But hang in there, I promise it will happen.
See? Nice and split. Now for the cool part!
Oh, speaking of cool, you’re gonna want to let these cool down a bit. You can either wait half an hour or so or place them immediately in a bowl of ice water to speed up the process.
If you try to peel them now you’ll find they are about as hot as little fireballs!
Then, just take hold of the tomato skin and it pulls right off!
You’ll need to get a knife involved at the top, where the stem was attached. Cut that part off.
I discard all of my skins and tops but they’d be great in a compost bin if you have one.
This is what they look like with the skins removed. You can tell a few of them gave up the ghost rather quickly.
I like it when things obey me, even if it is just a vegetable. We gotta take our little triumphs where we can get them!
Now I chop each one up but you can leave them whole if you prefer.
They are slippery so be careful.
Here they are, all ready to be bagged ( and all).
Freeze tomatoes
I like to write on my bag the date and where they came from.
If your grandmother sent the tomatoes to you, it’s always nice to be able to call and say, “We had the most delicious stew made with your tomatoes today”.
Fill your bag up, get out as much air as you can, and freeze! It’s best to freeze them flat as they’ll retain that shape.
They are now ready to be used in sauces, stews, and anything else you can dream up.
There is NOTHING like your own fresh tomatoes in the middle of winter (or any other time of year for that matter).
Storage
Frozen tomatoes will retain their flavor for up to 12 months. Thaw them in the fridge before using them.
Recipe FAQs
What kind of recipes can I use with my freezer tomatoes?
The options are basically endless, but here are some suggestions:
- Stews: smoked sausage and beef stew, slow cooker beef stew, and famous Alabama camp stew.
- Use them for tomato sauce, tomato salsa, or tomato puree, like my super easy spaghetti sauce.
- Soups: tomato basil soup and pizza soup.
- Crockpot chili
- Easy weeknight suppers instead of canned diced tomatoes, like slow cooker sloppy joes, crockpot swiss steak, and skillet lasagna.
What type of tomatoes can you freeze?
This method for freezing tomatoes works for all types of tomatoes, like Roma tomatoes (also known as plum tomatoes), heirloom tomatoes, and cherry tomatoes. If you use the latter, you can keep the skins on as long as you don’t mind the skins being in whatever you dish you make with them later.
Ingredients
- fresh tomatoes
- boiling water
Instructions
Blanch Tomatoes
- To blanch the tomatoes, drop them into a pot of boiling water. After a minute or two, the skin will split. Remove them as the skin splits with a slotted spoon and place them in a dish (I use a 9x13 baking dish).fresh tomatoes, boiling water
- Cool these down before moving on to the next step. You can either wait half an hour or so or place them immediately in a bowl of ice water to speed up the process.
Cut Up Tomatoes
- Once cooled, take hold of the tomato skin and it pulls right off! You'll need to get a knife involved at the top, where the stem was attached. Cut that part off. Now I chop each one up but you can leave them whole if you prefer.
Freeze Tomatoes
- Fill your freezer bags up (getting out as much air as you can), date them, and freeze! It's best to freeze them flat as they'll retain that shape. Thaw in the fridge overnight before using in your next soup, stew, or supper.
You may also want to check out these posts:
Canning Tomatoes (Complete Video)
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that makes a big difference.
Submitted by Southern Plate reader, Sonya M.
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There is only two things that money can’t buy: True Love and Home Grown Tomatoes!!! My heirloom tomatoes are still green, big, but green. 8-(
I sure do wish I was close enough to try to bribe you for some of your produce, Del!!!
Y’all, Del is Southern Plate’s “gardening guru”, he is the one I go to for advice anytime I need it on anything green!!!
Gratefully,
Christy
Hi Christy,
I was going to look on the internet for a recipe for freezing tomatoes, as I have so many even after giving some away, and what did I find when I opened my email, your recipe for freezing tomatoes. Thank you! It will be great to use my own garden-grown tomatoes in my Italian gravy (sauce).
The article on you was terrific!
Karen
HOW NEAT IS THAT????????? It’s truly amazing how we all seem to be on the same wavelength so often. I love it. I also love this community we have here!
Italian Gravy…love that name for it!!
Thank you so much!
Gratefully,
Christy 🙂
Congrats on the nice article….and to think…..we knew you when!!!
I love jar canned tomatoes…..have never tried freezing them. Do you jar can too? My sister does open kettle canning…so easy….and she makes the best spaghetti sauce with the canned jar tomatoes too. YUM!
Hey ! ~laughs~ You knew me when, hehee!
Don’t worry, I’ll never get “famous”!
I don’t jar can my tomatoes because I have sooooooo much freezer space and this method is so easy. But I know a lot of folks who do can theirs! Either way you go, you sure are right about them making the BEST spaghetti sauce! Even if you just add some home canned or home frozen ones to store bought sauce, it makes a whopper of a difference!
Just reading all the comments on freezing tomatoes. I have been jar canning them the last couple of years, also have some in freezer but my commercial freezer is getting full of green beans, zucchini, peppers, onions and strawberries! Have to can some things!! Can you freeze canteloupe? I am new to your site and I love it!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
I wish my tomatoes did well! Roma and cherry tomatoes are the only kind that seem to do well here! I prepared tomatoes that way a couple of years ago when my husband and I made salsa from scratch. Whew, that was a lot of work!
Congrats on the nice article! You really are getting lots of attention! It’s nice to know you don’t take paid endorsements!
You picked the quote that I’d been thinking about sending to you for a month! It’s on a reusable shopping bag that I bought. Every time I use it, I think, “There a quote Christy would probably like!”
Ooh I had some romas given to me by a friend the other day and I did the hot water bit to get the skins off, then I chopped them up and added them to my spaghetti sauce.
It was DIVINE!!
Thank you so much for that quote, too. I really enjoyed it! I love getting quotes. Every time someone leaves me a new one its like Christmas!
You were so right!!!!
Gratefully,
Christy 🙂
I’ve just finished dinner but Connie and Terri have me thinking about a “mater” sandwich with a slice of vidalia onion on it!!! Yum!!!
The Huntsville article was great!!
Bountiful blessings!!
Thank you so much, Tina!!!
My tomatoes in SE Ohio are not yet ripe. I have plenty of green ones. They were planted May 20th but we have had an unusually cold summer and nights have been as low in temp as low as 49 degrees and tomatoes just don’t like that! One of these days they will all come on at once and then I will be trying out the freezer tips.
Hey now, green ones are the best ones! lol i only let the ones that slip by me turn red most days!
https://southernplatecom.bigscoots-staging.com/2008/07/fried-green-tomatoes.html
YUM!!!
Gratefully,
Christy 🙂
P.S. I simply must get to Ohio one of these days! I talked to some Ohio folks on the phone this morning and boy are y’all some nice people!
LOL…. today, I still have orange fingernails from all the tomatoes that got put up here – froze some sinful pasta sauce, canned some crushed tomatoes and wish I had freezer space for more!
~offers up her freezer~ You jes’ fill it on up, Debbie. I promise not to dig into it – too much. ~grins~
Orange nails, now there is a southern fashion statement!