Best Thick Canned Salsa Recipe with Step-by-Step Tutorial

Say goodbye to store bought salsa and hello to the homemade canned salsa recipe of your dreams! Learn how to create a delicious salsa for canning with this easy step-by-step tutorial that’s safe, uses all natural ingredients, and is thicker than typical canned salsas. Perfect for parties, potlucks, and snacking at home – it’s our family’s favorite and I know it will become yours, too!

✩ What readers are saying…

jars of canned salsa with a bowl of salsa and chips

Our family LOVES salsa – if we don’t eat it everyday, at least I think it’s safe to say we eat it every other day.

So of course I would want to make homemade canned salsa from the garden tomatoes, peppers, and onions we grow – in fact after jams, it was one of the first types of foods I canned.

It took a number of years, though, to find a safe salsa recipe that was “the one.” Many were just way to runny, or were bland tasting, or too strong with one flavor. But mainly they were usually too watery.

When I finally did find my favorite salsa recipe for canning, there was no going back – every August and September I make enough batches to see us through to the next season.

Store bought canned salsa can’t hold a candle to this amazing salsa!

Finding a Safe Salsa Canning Recipe

The one thing I learned when teaching myself to can salsa was that in order to use a water-bath canner to make salsa shelf stable, it’s important to use a recipe from a trusted source that uses USDA guidelines.

This is because there are so many low-acid ingredients in salsa (peppers, onions, and garlic) that it creates a delicate balance between the acid (tomatoes and usually another ingredient like vinegar or lemon juice) and the low-acid ingredients.

So I started testing recipes from a Kerr canning book, the Ball Blue Book, the Oregonian newspaper, Oregon Extension Agency, and some preserving books from the library that all used safe guidelines. While they all had good flavor (I was using wonderful produce, after all!), they were usually still really watery and/or vinegary.

I think others felt the same way, because a recipe soon appeared on the USDA home preservation website for a Tomato-Tomato Paste Salsa. It called for two 12-oz cans of tomato paste and 2 cups bottled lemon juice instead of vinegar, which produced a thick sauce and minus the overly vinegar taste.

Sadly, my search for the best recipe wasn’t at an end, though. We found that the salsa wasn’t very spicy and when I took the time to look at the ingredients of bottled lemon juice (it must be bottled – fresh lemon juice doesn’t have the consistent acid level for canning) I saw that bottled lemon juice is full of preservatives!

Great. I’ve got all these organically grown vegetables and I’m adding preservatives. Boo.

canned salsa in white bowl above with chips and jars

Finding The Best Salsa Recipe for Canning

I continued looking for the perfect canned salsa recipe and finally found the one that is now our favorite in a book from the library that published tested recipes (I wish I had the title, but I just copied the recipe all those years ago before blogging).

UPDATE: A commenter shared that my base recipe is the same as this recipe on the Bernadin Canning website! You can see what I changed and added, especially standardizing the jalapenos since they can differ so much in size from year to year and variety. ALSO – you can add fresh cilantro if you want, even though I’ve suggested to not in the comments (I never add it and forgot it was originally included…).

It used just one small can of tomato paste and only 3/4 cup of vinegar, so it’s still thick and the vinegar doesn’t overpower the flavor (since the recipe calls for vinegar you can substitute bottled lemon or lime juice – I’d look for organic that doesn’t have all the preservatives in it).

IMPORTANT NOTE: according to preservation educators it is safe to substitute bottled lemon juice OR bottled lime juice for the vinegar in salsa recipes if you wish, but NOT the other way – it is not safe to substitute vinegar for lemon juice in other recipes, since lemon is more acidic than vinegar.

I adapted the recipe by increasing the peppers by 1/2 cup, and then decreasing the onion by a 1/2 cup to keep the recipe in balance. This makes the salsa a bit more spicy, which we like. But if your spice level is lower, use 1/2 cup more onions and 1/2 cup less peppers!

I also added a few more dry seasonings which is okay to change in canning recipes since it doesn’t affect acidity.

You can NOT add any other ingredients to this recipe, including things like mango, pineapple. It has not been tested with these ingredients.

This homemade salsa recipe is really easy, too – the majority of time is spent prepping the ingredients, though a food processor makes it quicker. It cooks for only 30 minutes, which gives you just the right amount of time to get all the canning equipment in order and jars cleaned. Perfect, right?

Salsa ingredient & equipment notes

Here are notes on a few of the main ingredients:

  • Tomatoes – If you will be leaving the skins (see notes below) you’ll want garden grown or organic tomatoes. Roma style paste tomatoes create a thick texture, but slicing and heirloom tomatoes add a lot of flavor, so I use some of each. You can use all paste tomatoes, but using all slicing tomatoes will produce a thinner salsa (though it’s totally safe to do if you only have slicing tomatoes!).
  • Peppers – Keeping to the amounts listed, you can use literally any pepper you’d like, hot, mild, or even sweet bell peppers. The combo I like best is to use mainly mild Anaheim or Poblano peppers with a few spicy jalapenos. Find any combo you like, but do not go over the total pepper amounts listed in the recipe card.
  • Vinegar (or bottled lemon juice) – I prefer vinegar to preservative-laden bottled lemon juice, but you can use an equal amount of juice if you can’t do vinegar. Make sure the vinegar is listed at 5% acidity – I’ve seen some at 4% and that’s too low for canning recipes.

Here are the tools and equipment you’ll need to safely can salsa:

weighing fresh tomatoes on a vintage scale

Salsa Canning Recipe: Step-by-Step

1) Start with 4-6 pounds of washed tomatoes

I use about half slicing tomatoes and half paste tomatoes- the slicers have great flavor and the paste tomatoes add thickness, so I like to include both. You can do any ratio or all of one or the other.

chopping tomatoes in a food processor

2) Chop Tomatoes

You can peel, core, and chop the tomatoes by hand OR use the food processor method to cut your prep time drastically!

After many years of blanching to peel and hand chopping, I now just core and quarter the tomatoes and use the food processor to chop them- peel and all!

No one can tell there are peels in the finished salsa and it takes SO much less time. This is awesome – do it and you won’t be sorry.

Either way you chop, you want to measure out 7 cups. There are both large and small tomato chunks in the processed option, but it’s not a big deal.

The One Drawback to Processing

When hand-chopping tomatoes, you can drain any water that accumulates while cutting them, which helps make a thicker salsa. However, this doesn’t work with the quicker processing method, so the resulting salsa is a bit thinner, but the savings in time totally makes up for it, in my opinion.

Do I have to peel tomatoes for canned salsa?

Update on safety of using skins in canned products: After a number of readers mentioned that they wondered if it was safe to keep the tomato skins on, I reached out to the Oregon State Extension Office about it. The professor I emailed with spent quite a bit of time researching this, saying, “this one has been killing me – very difficult to track down any reliable information.”

It basically boils down to this:

“Due to the consistent history of using peeled tomatoes in canning recipes, processing conditions using skin-on tomatoes have never been evaluated. It is possible that the skins have minimal to no impact on the thermal transfer, but this has not been verified.” Joy W., Associate Professor, Oregon State University Extension

She cited the studies that have been done on tomatoes, finding some bacteria in the cores but that the remainder of the tomato was low in bacteria, as well as the recommendation to always add citric acid or lemon juice since the 1970s.

There’s nothing else, and the NCHFP mainly states removing the peels are for texture reasons.

So here’s my take that I wrote back to her:

“With modern appliances like food processors, we can chop the tomatoes and skins for products like chutney and salsa and have no issues with taste and texture. The tomatoes are still cored, so the root and stem ends that might have bacteria in them (according to the study you mentioned) are removed. Also, my tomatoes are grown and harvested by me using no pesticides.

Since we eat the skins of my peppers grown right next to the tomatoes and can them with the skins in jellies and chutneys, why not the tomatoes?

Because of this, I’ll keep processing the tomatoes for chutney and salsa with the peels because it saves so much time, but I will mention the caution to my readers with your recommendation and let them make their own decision.”

So – you choose!

Option: one commenter said he has been canning tomatoes for 40 years with skins – he simply gives them a bath in a bowl of white vinegar and water before coring. So if this makes you feel better, go for it!

3) Transfer tomatoes to a stock pot

Once you have 7 cups, place the prepped tomatoes into a large 6-8 quart stock pot (use a 12 quart for a double recipe).

using gloved hand to remove seeds in hot pepper

4) Prepare Peppers

You’ll want to break out gloves for this next step – trust me, you will want gloves for this part. The one time I didn’t use them I couldn’t sleep that night because of the burning sensation in my hands that no amount of washing could remove!

  • Once you’re gloved up, cut in half and seed enough Anaheim or Pobalano chilies to equal 1-1/2 cups chopped, using a food processor or chopping by hand.

Note on the photos: I was doubling the recipe when taking these photos, so there is more in each one than a single batch would call for – so yes, you can double the recipe!

peppers chopped in a food processor

TIP: Just use the food processor you used the tomatoes for. You can simply cut the peppers in large chunks and put them in a food processor. I like the way the processor chops them mostly fine, but also leaves a few larger pieces so that there are some peppers in every spoonful.

  • Once chopped and measured, put the mild peppers in the stockpot with the tomatoes.
  • Then chop jalapeño peppers to equal 1/2 cup, seeding if desired (leaving the seeds will result in a spicer salsa). Add them to the stockpot.

TIP: if you want a milder salsa, you can skip the jalapeños and use all milder peppers. If you’d like it spicier, decrease the mild peppers and increase the jalapeños. You can play around with the types of peppers you like best, just not the amount – a total of 2 cups of peppers for one batch is the limit for safety.

onions chopped in a food processor

5) Prepare Onions

Peel and quarter onions, chopping enough to equal 1-1/2 cups, either by hand or in the same food processor you’ve been using, and add to the stock pot.

garlic cloves in food processor to chop

6) Mince Garlic

Again, finely chop the garlic by hand or throw them in the processor, too.

TIP: I usually add these in with the peppers or onions as they chop better with other ingredients, even though the photo doesn’t show it.

NOTE: there are 6 cloves instead of the 3 the recipe calls for – remember I’m doubling the recipe, in order to get 10 to 11 pints out of each canning session.

salsa ingredients added to large stock pot

7) Cook Salsa

Once the garlic is in the pot, add the remaining ingredients listed in the recipe card.

Bring to a boil then reduce the heat and boil gently for 30 minutes. Stir often, making sure it doesn’t burn on the bottom

TIP: cheap, thin-bottomed stock pots tend to burn, but thicker-bottomed pots don’t – it’s worth it to pay a few dollars more. #lessonlearned

Go here to see the canning essentials tools I use and recommend.

8) Prep For Water Bath Canning

While the salsa is cooking, you can prepare your water-bath canner, jars, and lids.

Here’s step-by-step canning guide where I take you through the whole process if you’ve never canned before.

And here is a video tutorial you can watch as well:

Wait, do I have to can it? Can I freeze salsa?

Nope, you don’t have to can salsa – you can freeze salsa! Just let the finished salsa cool enough to put into freezer safe containers and be sure to leave a good 2-inches headspace to allow for expansion.

TIP: A bonus to freezing salsa is that you can put as many peppers or other fresh ingredients you want in the salsa, including more fresh cilantro. You don’t have to worry about low-acid food ratios if you’re not canning to make them shelf stable.

cooked salsa ready for canning

After 30 minutes, the salsa will have cooked down, looking nice and salsa-y, with flavors all melded into yummy goodness.

You can taste it at this point to see how spicy it is (every year my peppers are different, depending on our summer weather) and add cayenne pepper if you’d like to increase the spiciness.

You can also add salt, pepper, or dried herbs (again, dry ingredients are fine to add – you just can’t add anything else fresh).

jars of salsa in canner

9) Water Bath Canning Salsa

Fill pint jars with salsa leaving a 1/2-inch headspace, attach lids and place in a boiling water bath canner.

Bring to a boil and process pint jars for 20 minutes.

Turn off heat and let jars sit for 5 minutes. Remove jars from canner to a towel-lined surface.

Cool completely, check the seals, label and store in a dark, cool pantry for a year to a year and a half.

canned salsa on chip over white bowl

That’s it – you’ve made and canned your own salsa!!

Having homemade canned salsa from garden fresh ingredients in the depths of winter is always worth it. Not only do you save money, it can’t compare with the typical flavorless bottled stuff!

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canned salsa on chip over white bowl
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4.99 from 296 votes

Best Thick Canned Salsa Recipe

Learn how to create a delicious canned salsa that's safe, uses all-natural ingredients, and is thicker than typical canned salsas. Perfect for parties, potlucks, and snacking at home.
Prep Time40 minutes
Cook Time50 minutes
Total Time1 hour 30 minutes
Yield: 4 to 5 pints
Author: Jami Boys

Equipment

  • Food Processor optional
  • large stock pot 6-12 quarts
  • boiling water canner,
  • 5-6 pint canning jars
Click for Cook Mode

Ingredients

  • 7 cups chopped cored, peeled tomatoes (if using a food processor, no need to peel), about 4-6 pounds depending on how big cores are and how much needs to be cut out and if processing
  • cups chopped onion
  • cups mild chopped green chili peppers *anaheim, poblano, or even red/yellow sweet for a milder salsa
  • 1/2 cup jalapeños ** finely chopped (and seeded if you’d like – leaving the seeds makes it spicer)
  • 3 cloves garlic minced
  • 1 (6 ounce) can tomato paste
  • 3/4 cup white or apple cider vinegar***
  • 1 teaspoon ground cumin
  • 2 teaspoons salt
  • 1 to 2 teaspoons pepper
  • 1 to 2 teaspoons dry oregano
  • 1 to 2 teaspoons cayenne powder to taste

NEW Option:

Instructions

  • In a large stainless steel stockpot, combine all the ingredients. Bring to a boil over medium-high heat, stirring constantly to prevent scorching.
  • Reduce heat and boil gently until thickened, about 30 minutes. Stir often to prevent burning.
  • Prepare canner, jars, and lids.
  • Ladle hot salsa into hot jars, leaving 1/2-inch headspace. Wipe rim and attach lids.
  • Place jars in canner, covering by at least 1-inch and bring to a boil. Process for 20 minutes, turn off burner, remove lid and let jars sit for 5 minutes before removing them to cool on a towel-lined surface for 12 to 24 hours. Check seals before labeling and storing.

Notes

*Don’t forget the gloves when working with hot peppers!
**An older version of this recipe called for “8 jalapeños,” which I have standardized to 1/2 cup chopped jalapeños using a USDA recipe to determine the best measurement since each year my jalapeños are different sizes.
***It is okay to substitute bottled lemon juice OR lime juice if you’d prefer (it must be bottled).
Variation for peppers: you can adjust the TYPE of pepper to your tastes – more hot peppers, less hot peppers (you can even use sweet bell peppers) you just CANNOT go over the total of the 2 cups called for in the recipe (1-1/2 cups mild hot peppers + 1/2 cups jalapeños). 
High Altitude Adjustment: If processing at an altitude of higher than 1000 feet above sea level you’ll need to adjust the processing time according to this chart.

Nutrition

Serving: 1/4 cup | Calories: 17.5kcal | Carbohydrates: 3.26g | Protein: 0.84g | Fat: 0.22g | Saturated Fat: 0.04g | Sodium: 271.05mg | Potassium: 150.23mg | Fiber: 1.16g | Sugar: 1.02g | Vitamin A: 1804.74IU | Vitamin C: 34.95mg | Calcium: 33.72mg | Iron: 1.45mg
Did you make this recipe?Mention @anoregoncottage or tag #anoregoncottage!

Your Questions Answered

Can I use quart jars to can salsa?

This is a question I get a lot but unfortunately, it is not recommended to can salsa in any jar larger than a pint (16 ounces) because there are no tested recipes that use quart jars.

That said, you can find recipes on Google that show canning in quarts, but they aren’t official, tested recipes found in publications like Ball Blue Book of Canning and the National Center for Home Food Preservation.

In the end, it’s up to you, but I can’t recommend it – and definitely not for this recipe, as the processing times have only been tested for pint jars.

Do you have to cook salsa before canning?

Yes, in order to be able to safely can in a boiling water canner or pressure canner, you must heat the salsa to boiling before canning.

Is vinegar or lemon juice better for canning salsa?

Both are used in salsa recipes – it depends on the flavor you’d like and if you don’t mind the preservatives that are found in bottled lemon juice.

Lemon juice has slightly less effect on flavor than vinegar and is more acidic. Vinegar is a bright, classic flavor with less acidity.

Since lemon juice is more acidic, you can safely substitute an equal amount of bottled lemon juice for vinegar in a recipe that calls for vinegar (like I mention ou can do in this recipe), but you cannot substitute vinegar for lemon juice in a recipe that’s been tested with lemon juice because vinegar would reduce the acidity, making the salsa unsafe after canning.

Can I use lime juice instead of vinegar when canning salsa?

Yes, when the recipe calls for vinegar, you can substitute an equal amount of bottled lime juice, just like using bottled lemon juice.

Why can’t I use fresh lemons or limes for canned salsa?

The acidity of fresh lemons and limes vary too much for safely canning salsa. Bottled juices are standardized according to FDA regulations providing the consistency needed for home food preservation. “The final acidity of a food product is critical to deter the growth of microorganisms that can cause spoilage or foodborne illness.” source

Can I use citric acid for the lemon juice and/or vinegar in salsa recipes for canning?

This is another question I get quite a bit, so I did some researched and found that according to Oregon State Extension it is not okay since there are no reliable research based recipes that use citric acid. They do not recommend it as it would be too risky.
An alternative that the extension agent mentioned if you can’t do either lemon or vinegar is to can garden tomatoes plain with citric acid and then use the canned tomatoes to make salsa and eat fresh.

More Easy Tomato Canning Recipes

This recipe has been updated – it was originally published in September of 2009 and updated in 2017 and 2024.

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Recipe Rating




4.99 from 296 votes (231 ratings without comment)

437 Comments

  1. Awesome salsa I used jalapeños for the mild chilis Serranos and 1 Carolina reaper for the jalapeño’s we like hot salsa.5 stars

  2. Greetings. In the past I have either given away or gorged myself on my abundant tomato crop (small garden 12 tom, 4 zucchini [red & green], red onions, 6 chilis [jalepeno, serano, and others], 2 cucumber, 4 bell pepper [red & yellow], 4 basil, and others. Garden is mostly a salsa garden — fresh salsa.

    Well, this year, I have/had a dilemma. I recently had 80 lbs of tomatoes ripen at once. I have been for the first time canning or pickling cucumbers and zucchini as Bread & butter, B&B with a kick, Dill, and Dill with a kick, plus Sweet. I am fairly confident in doing that successfully.

    But tomatoes scare me with the dangers. After looking at 50+ recipes that all wanted unripe green bell peppers (UCK), I came across your recipe. What drew me to it was not just the ingredients but your detail explanation and information allowing us to alter it slightly.

    How we altered the recipe:
    • 1/3 cup lemon juice + 1/2 cup apple cider vinegar [still 3/4 cup of acid.
    • a mixture of chilis plus our ripened yellow bell pepper to get 2 cups of peppers and the heat we wanted.

    It tasted good, although warm off the stove before we bottled it, it was FREAKING AWESOME after cooling it in the fridge a couple of days. we finished a jar in less than 30 minutes. I do not think it will last until December.

    THANK YOU!!!
    – gerald martin davenport5 stars

    1. What a wonderful review, Gerald – I’m so glad the steps were helpful and clear enough that you felt you could use your treasure of tomatoes (that’s my goal so I’m thrilled!). Maybe you need to make another batch? 🙂

      1. Mrs. Boys… We made four batches.
        last one I had a little more lime juice than a 1/3 of a cup so shrunk the apple cider vinegar, and the salsa has a more lime essence to it.

        Nice, but not the flavor of the first three batches. Another learning experience.

        Again, thank you for your awesome instructions — i am purchasing your cookbook.

        – gerald5 stars

  3. Hello. I’ve made this before (and it was delicious) but as I’m revisiting my messy printed recipe, I wanted to ask you something before I proceed. The recipe calls for 7 cups of chopped, cored, peeled tomatoes, unless you want to process them. That’s what I did in my Vitamix. Should I still use 7 cups? It seems like that would be more volume in that liquified form. Just checking. Thanks so much!5 stars

    1. I’m so glad this is a go-to recipe for you, Kelly!
      I suppose if the Vitamix chopped the tomatoes really fine, then maybe 6.5 cups, but I just coarsely chop in a food processor and use the 7 cups. To be honest, going a bit more on tomatoes won’t really affect the acid level because they are mostly acid – it’s not the same as adding more low-acid ingredients. At least not the 1/2 cup or so we’re talking about.

  4. Hi, this is my first year growing a garden and attempting to preserve it. I was planning on just making sauce so have been throwing my tomatoes and green peppers in the freezer to save until I have all the tomatoes from the garden. Can I use the frozen tomatoes and peppers in this recipe? Can’t wait to try it!

    1. Yes, but you need to make sure you don’t inadvertently add more peppers since the volume will be compressed with freezing/thawing. If you frozen them diced, measure them before thawing, pressing down a bit, which I think will give you similar to a fresh diced measurement. I’d partially thaw the tomatoes, slip off the skins and then just roughly chop with a knife (I’d skip the food processor option with frozen – and the skins remove easily, so no need to use them here though you can dehydrate them to use as a tomato powder!). Hope this helps – let me know how it goes!

  5. Yummy, easy recipe! I made a triple batch and got 17 pints. It only took me about 2.5 hours from start to finish, even with peeling the tomatoes. Using a blender for all of the veggies helps it go smoothly!!
    Thanks for the great recipe.5 stars

  6. I’ve canned and pickled lots before, but never salsa.

    This year I had so many tomatoes I needed a new use for them other than just sauce / paste.

    I was worried that this would be a watery recipe, however it turned out thick and rich.

    I split the “mild peppers between ancho poblano and bell peppers and stuck with jalapenos for the other. Came out as a nice medium heat.

    The only real modifications were, instead of the vinegar I split the 3/4 cup between 2 tbsp red wine vinegar, 3 tbsp concentrated lime juice, 1/2 cup concentrated lemon juice, and topped of the 3/4 cup total with pickling vinegar. As well instead of the cayenne I used smoked paprika.

    I made a 6 x batch yesterday with cilantro and it was possibly the best salsa I have ever had. The whole family loved it, including some rather picky kids.

    It was so good I’ll make another 6 x batch tomorrow but with habaneros for me.

    Thanks so much for sharing this.5 stars

  7. I like to try different salsas each summer and my husband says this is the best one yet. I agree! The combination of cumin and oregano and the right mix of peppers make it delicious. I omitted the cayenne, just personal preference. Thanks for a great recipe!5 stars

  8. I canned this salsa yesterday and it’s wonderful – I know I’ll make it again! Question: Can this be canned in 1/2 pint jars? Would the processing time be the same? Thanks for all the great recipes!5 stars

  9. Hello,

    Thank you for your recipes and info. Have you had trouble with what I call tomato skin “fish bones”? Where the skin rolls up and is pokey? If it gets in your salsa it is not good. I do not have that problem when I make fresh salsa then cook it and can it… only when I roast it? It can happen with some types of peppers too.
    If you reach out to OSU…why does it require 2x as much vinegar to can whole tomatoes compared to lemon juice, but it is a 1 for 1 exchange in salsa? Lastly, I canned some tomato sauce last year and tried citric acid in 1 batch, when we opened those they were horribly bitter even baking soda did not fix it? I am curious if others have had that experience….but I am also wondering about some spices lending to bitterness over time when canned that could have caused it? Just trying to make the most of the tomatoes and peppers 🙂 TY!!5 stars

    1. The texture of tomato skins in canning is why most places tell you to remove the skins. I think it’s a personal preference and you can decide if you want to peel them first or process like I do. I do have an easier way to peel tomatoes here. As for the vinegar/lemon juice issue, bottled lemon juice is more acid than vinegar, so you need more vinegar. If a recipe calls for lemon juice you HAVE to use that – you can’t sub vinegar because it is lower acid. You can, however, sub lemon juice for vinegar since you’re only raising the acidity by doing that. I pretty much only use citric acid in tomatoes and haven’t noticed that, but again, if you do then stick to adding lemon juice to your preserves. 🙂

  10. This was my first attempt at canning, and already it is a neighborhood favorite. I only got 4 pints, but cooked it down. I can’t wait to make more! Thank you!5 stars

    1. I’m so glad to know this, Abby, and that my recipe helped you feel confident to can salsa! Also really impressed that you shared it right away – we’re usually hoarding it, lol.

  11. I don’t even remember how many years it’s been since I first stumbled upon this post on Pinterest but I’m so glad I did. I look forward to using this recipe and canning salsa each summer; I just wish I had enough tomatoes to make enough to last a full year. 😉 Thanks for sharing your recipe with us; it’s my personal favorite.5 stars

  12. This is such a time saver! I love thick salsa and use it for snack and also for a baste or meat garnish. Chips stay crunchy and salsa stays on the chip for an awesome scoop of goodness. 5 stars!5 stars

  13. Just tried this recipe today for the first time. The flavor was really good! I did use a food processor so I left the peel / skin on. How long is this shelf stable for?5 stars