Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Rao's is overpriced, bland junk in a bottle. A total rip off.
Agree. I've given it several attempts... every time it was just... mid. The hype for it on here is very cringe.
Cringe like when a middle-aged mom tries to talk like a teenager?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Rao's is overpriced, bland junk in a bottle. A total rip off.
Agree. I've given it several attempts... every time it was just... mid. The hype for it on here is very cringe.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Rao's is overpriced, bland junk in a bottle. A total rip off.
Agree. I've given it several attempts... every time it was just... mid. The hype for it on here is very cringe.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think the quality has already gone down over the past year or so. Oh well. There are lots of other good jarred sauces.
Like...?
We get whatever is on sale in the $8+ price range. They are almost all good and interchangeable
Anonymous wrote:Rao's is overpriced, bland junk in a bottle. A total rip off.
Anonymous wrote:I usually make my own marinara, but I love Rao's - it is the best jarred sauce for my money, and it's not even close. Disappointed to hear this. I hope it doesn't turn into a sugar or salt bomb like other jarred sauces.
Anonymous wrote:Rao's is overpriced, blank junk in a bottle. A total rip off.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Good god, people. All of you having a fit over jarred sauce. With good quality canned tomatoes and spices, you can make better sauce in no time at all for a fraction of the cost.
How do you make yours? I’ve tried and usually prefer the expensive jarred stuff. And the convenience alone is worth a ton.
NP. You can make an excellent simple sauce (the Raos I've tried tastes like this simple sauce), or if you have time you can make a more complex sauce.
For the simple sauce, saute garlic in olive oil. Hand chop it if you have time, or use jarred if you don't. A minute over low heat is fine, but don't let it brown. Grab a couple of cans of plain tomatoes, nothing added to them. Give them a quick whirl with a hand blender to chop them up well but not to the point of being smooth. Dump them in the pan with the sauteed garlic, a little salt and pepper, and let it cook for about 20 minutes. It may need ~1 teaspoon of sugar because canned tomatoes can be acid. That's it. If you want a little depth of flavor and you have some boxed chicken broth already in the fridge, drop some in as well. Let it cook down if you add the chicken broth. If you like spices in your sauce, add some the last few minutes of cooking, such as oregano and basil. Done inside of 30 minutes.
You can make a tomato sauce with tomatoes from your garden, and freeze for future use. That's more involved and takes half a day. You add onions, garlic, chopped fresh tomatoes, etc. I like the depth of flavor that chicken broth gives. I think I saw a recipe that had you add some chicken wings, which you fish out before you blend the sauce at the end.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hey, we still have Carbone. And Wegman’s Grandma sauce.
Ooh, tell me more about this grandma sauce. Always trying new stuff at Wegmans but haven’t even noticed it on the shelf!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think the quality has already gone down over the past year or so. Oh well. There are lots of other good jarred sauces.
Like...?
We get whatever is on sale in the $8+ price range. They are almost all good and interchangeable
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why would it change it?
It’s like when Coke bought Honest Tea. It was profitable, just not profitable enough for them to continue to bother with. So they killed the product and consumers lost out on a tasty low-sugar slightly sweet drink option.
There’s no way Campbell’s will keep Rao’s the way it is. That’s just not how these giant corporations work.
Honest Tea became Just Ice Tea. Same owner.
https://eatthechange.com/products/just-ice-tea
Ice tea? It’s Iced tea. Good lord.