Red Wine, Tomato & Rosemary Sauce
Submitted by boomboom
Red wine, tomato, and rosemary sauce simmers a French mirepoix with red wine, tomato paste, and fresh rosemary, then thickens with arrowroot for a glossy, fat-free finish. Versatile for meats, polenta, and pasta.
YIELD
8 servingsPREP
20 minCOOK
35 minREADY
55 minThis is a fat-free, oil-free sauce that doesn’t taste like it’s missing anything. The vegetables get water-sautéed instead of cooked in oil, then a long simmer with red wine, tomato paste, and a generous handful of fresh rosemary builds the kind of depth most people associate with butter-based sauces.
The arrowroot finish is the move that puts this in a different class. Whisked into cold water and stirred slowly into the simmering sauce, arrowroot thickens without the cloudy, starchy taste of a flour-based roux. The result is a sauce that goes glossy and clear, more like a French demi-glace than a tomato sauce.
Use this over grilled meats, roasted vegetables, polenta, or as an unconventional pasta sauce that’s lighter than a typical marinara. Two tablespoons of red wine vinegar at the end sharpen the whole thing.
Pro Tips
- Use a wine you’d happily drink. The flavor concentrates as it reduces, so cheap or off wine ruins the sauce.
- Dissolve arrowroot in cold water before adding; hot water causes it to clump.
- Don’t boil the sauce after adding arrowroot. Hard boiling breaks down the starch and the sauce thins back out.
- Make ahead. The flavor improves significantly after a night in the fridge.
Variations
- Swap arrowroot for cornstarch at the same ratio if arrowroot isn’t available.
- Add 8 ounces of sliced mushrooms with the mirepoix for more body and umami depth.
- Stir in a tablespoon of butter at the end (off-heat) for a richer, glossier finish if fat is no longer a concern.
Ingredients
Directions
Sauté onion, carrots, celery and garlic in 2 teaspoon water for 5 min.
Place in a heavy 3 quart pot along with remaining ingredients except ⅓ cup water and arrowroot.
Bring to a boil, cover partially, and simmer for 15 to 20 minutes until vegetables are tender.
Whisk together cold water and arrowroot until smooth and fully dissolved.
Slowly pour into simmering sauce, stirring constantly.
Lower heat and continue stirring as sauce thickens and becomes shiny, about 5 minutes.
If necessary, add more dissolved arrowroot or cornstarch, a teaspoon at a time, until sauce reaches desired consistency.
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