Fresh Tomato Salsa
This is a bright, chunky raw salsa, pico de gallo's saucier cousin, built entirely from ripe tomatoes, white onion, fresh chile, cilantro, and lime. Chopping everything by hand keeps the texture crisp and the tomatoes juicy rather than pulpy, while a short rest lets the salt draw the juices together so every bite tastes seasoned all the way through. No cooking and no blender, and it comes together in about half an hour.
Finely dice about 680 g (1½ lb) ripe Roma tomatoes and scoop out the wateriest seeds, then combine in a bowl with ½ cup finely diced white onion (rinsed under cold water to tame its bite), 1 to 2 minced seeded jalapeños, ½ cup chopped cilantro, 1 grated garlic clove, 2 tablespoons fresh lime juice, and 1 teaspoon salt; toss well, let it sit 15 minutes so the salt pulls the juices together, then taste and adjust salt and lime before serving with chips or spooning over tacos.
- Chop everything by hand and uniformly small, since a blender turns fresh salsa into soup.
- Salt and rest 15 minutes, then taste and adjust lime and salt right before serving.
- Control the heat with the chile: seeds and ribs out for mild, left in for real fire.
Equipment
- Sharp chef's knife
- Cutting board
- Mixing bowl
- Fine-mesh sieve
- Citrus juicer
- Fine grater or microplane
Ингредиенты
Salsa
- 680 g ripe tomatoes (Roma or vine), about 5 Roma or 4 medium
- 100 g white onion, finely diced, about 1/2 small onion
- jalapeños, seeded and minced, adjust to taste
- 15 g fresh cilantro, chopped, leaves and tender stems
- garlic clove, grated
- 30 ml fresh lime juice, from about 1 lime
- 6 g fine sea salt, plus more to taste
- ground cumin (optional), for a warmer note
- sugar (optional), only if tomatoes are very tart
Приготовление
- ШАГ01
Core the tomatoes and cut them in half. With your thumb or a small spoon, scoop out most of the watery seed pockets and discard them, then dice the flesh into roughly 6 mm (1/4-inch) pieces and add them to a mixing bowl. Removing the wet gel is the single best thing you can do to keep the salsa from turning soupy.
- ШАГ02
Finely dice the white onion and tip it into a fine-mesh sieve. Rinse under cold running water for about 20 seconds and shake dry. This washes away the harsh sulfur compounds so the raw onion tastes sweet and crisp instead of sharp, then add it to the tomatoes.
- ШАГ03
Halve the jalapeños lengthwise. For a mild salsa, scrape out the seeds and the pale inner ribs where most of the heat lives; leave them in if you want it hot. Mince the chile very finely and grate the garlic on a microplane so it disappears into the mix rather than hitting you in one raw bite.
- ШАГ04
Gather the cilantro, including the tender stems, which carry plenty of flavor, and chop it roughly. Add it to the bowl along with the chile and garlic.
- ШАГ05
Pour in the lime juice and add the salt, plus the cumin and sugar if using. Toss everything gently but thoroughly so the salt and lime coat all the tomatoes.
- ШАГ06
Let the salsa stand at room temperature for 15 minutes so the salt draws out the tomato juices and the flavors marry. Taste and adjust, adding more salt for depth, more lime for brightness, or a pinch of sugar if the tomatoes are tart. Serve at room temperature for the best flavor.
Make ahead
Chop the onion, chile, and cilantro a few hours ahead and keep them in the fridge separate from the tomatoes. Combine and salt everything 15 to 30 minutes before serving so the flavors meld without the tomatoes weeping too much. Salsa made more than a day in advance will need a quick drain and a fresh squeeze of lime to wake it back up.
Storage
Store in an airtight container in the fridge for up to 3 to 4 days, though it is brightest within the first 48 hours. Drain off any liquid that pools before serving and refresh with a squeeze of lime. Raw tomato salsa does not freeze well, as the tomatoes turn mushy once thawed.
Variations
Fire-Roasted Salsa
Char the whole tomatoes, a halved onion, and the jalapeños under a hot broiler or on a dry comal until blistered and blackened in spots, about 8 to 10 minutes. Cool, then chop and combine as written. The charring adds a smoky, restaurant-style depth and a softer texture.
Mango Salsa
Fold in 1 cup of diced ripe mango or pineapple and cut the onion back slightly. The sweet-tart fruit plays beautifully against the chile and is especially good spooned over grilled fish or shrimp tacos.
Extra-Hot Habanero
Swap the jalapeños for half a finely minced habanero (seeds removed) plus one serrano. Add it a little at a time and taste as you go, since habanero heat builds fast and keeps climbing as the salsa rests.
Serve with
Nutrition per serving
Nutrition values are estimates based on the metric measurements. Adjust as needed.
Частые вопросы
What tomatoes are best for this salsa recipe?
Firm, meaty tomatoes with less water work best, which is why Roma or plum tomatoes are the go-to. Vine-ripened or beefsteak tomatoes are great in peak summer, but scoop out the seeds first. Avoid pale, mealy off-season tomatoes, as they will make the salsa watery and bland no matter how well you season it.
Why is my salsa watery, and how do I fix it?
Two things cause a watery salsa: tomato seed gel and salt drawing out juices. Scoop out most of the seeds before dicing, and if it still pools liquid after resting, drain it in a sieve for a few minutes. Salting too far ahead also releases more water, so season closer to serving.
How long does fresh tomato salsa keep?
Kept in an airtight container in the fridge, this salsa recipe stays good for 3 to 4 days, with the flavor and texture at their peak in the first day or two. Pour off any accumulated liquid and add a fresh squeeze of lime before serving leftovers. It is not suited to freezing while raw.
How do I make it milder or spicier?
The heat lives in the chile's seeds and white inner ribs, so remove them for a mild, family-friendly salsa. For more kick, leave some seeds in, use both jalapeños, or step up to serrano or habanero. Add chile gradually and taste as you go, because the heat intensifies as the salsa rests.
Can I use a blender or food processor?
You can, and it gives you a smoother, pourable restaurant-style dip. Pulse in short bursts rather than pureeing so it does not liquefy. For a classic chunky pico-style salsa recipe, though, hand-chopping is worth it: the distinct pieces of tomato, onion, and chile give the best texture.
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