Two jars of canned tomatoes next to fresh tomatoes on the table

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Canning tomatoes is a Slavic specialty. These babies are so good with hot mashed potatoes or plov. Don’t these pictures give you fuzzy feelings? I can’t help but think about my Mom’s “pomedori” (tomatoes).

My Mom and Aunt Tanya collaborated to give me this recipe. I’m so excited to get this tomato canning tutorial recorded and to share it with you all. Canning tomatoes was way easier than I imagined it would be and I’ve included some time saving tips!!

This recipe yields six quart-sized jars of canned tomatoes. You can easily double everything if you have a ridiculous amount of tomatoes. Happy canning!

A close up of canned tomatoes

Ingredients for Canning Tomatoes (recipe updated Aug 2024): 

6 lbs small tomatoes (1 lb per jar). Pick small tomatoes that fit through the mouths of your jars
10 cups water
1 1/2 cups white vinegar (5% acidity)
3 Tbsp non-iodized salt (we used fine sea salt)
3 Tbsp granulated sugar
1/2 bell pepper, seeded and sliced into 1/2″ strips
1/2 Tbsp peppercorns, divided
6 dill flowers
6 bay leaves
6 garlic cloves,  chopped
Horseradish Leaf (optional), torn into 6 pieces

Pro Tip: When canning tomatoes, the National Center of Home Food Preservation has guidelines on proper acidification for canning tomatoes. If you are going to substitute vinegar, please see their Canning Tomatoes Guidelines.

Home Canning Tools:

Canned Tomatoes

How To Make Canned Tomatoes:

To Sterilize Jars:

Preheat oven to 215˚F.
Wash all of your jars and lids with soap and warm water.
Place jars in the oven on the bottom rack for 20 minutes or until completely dry. Boil lids to sterilize them.

To make the Syrup:

1. In a large pot, combine water. Add salt, sugar, and vinegar. Bring to a boil until salt and sugar are dissolved.

Canned Tomatoes-6

Filling your Jars:

1. Divide your sliced bell pepper, peppercorns, dill, bay and horseradish leaves (if using), among six quart-sized jars.

Canned Tomatoes-2
Canned Tomatoes-3 Canned Tomatoes-2-2

2. Add washed tomatoes and pack them in as tightly as you can without squishing them. Pour boiling hot syrup over your tomatoes.

Canned Tomatoes-3-2 Canned Tomatoes-4-2

I re-used the jar lids and then I come to find out that this is a big no-no in the canning world :-O, so as a rule, don’t use old, deformed or dented lids or ones that have gaps or defects in the sealing gasket. ALWAYS BUY NEW LIDS!

Two jars of canned tomatoes with dill and garlic

3. Screw the lids on enough to keep a tight seal in place but don’t over-tighten them since air bubbles need to be able to escape.

Current Canning Guidelines:

Get up to date on the most recent canning guidelines here. It’s a great resource to answer frequently asked canning questions. Current guidelines recommend:

  1. Place packed cans into the canning pot and cover with 1-2 inches of water. Bring to a boil and process 15 minutes.
  2. Remove from the pot and leave at room temperature undisturbed for 12-24 hours. You may hear a pop when the jars fully seal.
  3. After 24 hours, check that the seal has formed by pushing down on the center of the lid – it should not move at all. If the seal does not form, refrigerate tomatoes and enjoy within 3 months.

Signs of Spoiled Canned Food:

With any type of canning, we follow this advice: “When in doubt, throw it out”
Discard and do not eat or taste any canned food if you notice any of the following:

  • the jar is leaking, bulging, or swollen
  • the jar looks damaged, cracked, or abnormal
  • the jar spurts foam or liquid upon opening
  • the canned food is discolored, moldy, mushy, slimy, or smells bad

Canned Tomatoes Recipe

4.58 from 19 votes
Author: Natasha of NatashasKitchen.com
Two jars of canned tomatoes next to fresh tomatoes on the table
These canned tomatoes are so good with hot mashed potatoes or plov. This recipe yields six quart-sized jars of canned tomatoes. You can easily cut everything in half and make just 3 jars if you don't have a ridiculous amount of tomatoes. Store at room temp or cooler for up to a year.
Prep Time: 1 hour
Cook Time: 15 minutes
Total Time: 1 hour 15 minutes

Ingredients 

  • 6 lbs tomatoes, 1 lb per jar*
  • 10 cups water
  • 1 1/2 cups white vinegar, (5% acidity)
  • 3 Tbsp non-iodized salt, we used fine sea salt
  • 3 Tbsp granulated sugar
  • 1/2 bell pepper, seeded and sliced into 1/2" strips
  • 1/2 Tbsp peppercorns, 5 per jar
  • 6 dill flowers
  • 6 bay leaves
  • 6 garlic cloves, chopped
  • 1 horseradish leaf, (optional), torn into 6 pieces

Instructions

To Sterilize Jars:

  • Preheat oven to 215˚F. Wash all of your jars and lids with soap and warm water. Place jars in the oven on the bottom rack for 20 minutes or until completely dry. Boil lids to sterilize them.

To make the brine:

  • In a large pot, combine water, vinegar, salt, and sugar. Bring to a boil, stirring to dissolve sugar and salt.

Filling your Jars:

  • Wash and prep all vegetables. Divide your sliced bell pepper, peppercorns, dill, bay leaves, garlic and horseradish leaves (if using), among six quart-sized jars.
  • Add tomatoes and pack them in as tightly as you can without squishing them. Pour boiling hot brine over your tomatoes.
  • Screw the lids on enough to keep the seal in place but don't over-tighten them since air bubbles need to be able to escape.
  • Place packed cans into the canning pot and cover with 1-2 inches of water. Bring to a boil and process 15 minutes. Remove from the pot with jar lifter and leave at room temperature undisturbed for 12-24 hours. You may hear a pop when the jars fully seal. After 24 hours, check that the seal has formed by pushing down on the center of the lid - it should not move at all. If the seal does not form, refrigerate tomatoes and enjoy within 3 months.

Notes

*Pick small tomatoes that fit through the mouth of the jar. You can fit more tomatoes in the jar if they are smaller. 
Course: Condiments, Side Dish
Cuisine: American
Keyword: Canned Tomatoes
Skill Level: Easy/Medium
Cost to Make: $
Natasha's Kitchen Cookbook

Recipe updated Sept 2019. The water to vinegar ratio is based on the Ball Blue Book Grape Tomatoes recipe. We also updated canning process instructions to reflect new canning standards. 

4.58 from 19 votes (5 ratings without comment)

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Recipe Rating




Comments

  • Katrina
    March 30, 2016

    How long would I leave the tomatoes to stand until they are pickled fully?

    Reply

    • Natasha
      natashaskitchen
      March 30, 2016

      I would give it at least a week or more.

      Reply

  • Laura
    March 5, 2016

    I am wondering how you serve these? They seem more like a pickled tomato, not an Italian type. Do you just eat them as is? Or put them in recipes? I am always looking for new ways to use up my tomatoes. Thanks

    Reply

    • Natasha
      natashaskitchen
      March 5, 2016

      Laura, we usually eat them as is, paired with potatoes or rice 😀.

      Reply

  • Taras
    October 13, 2015

    For those of you who used this recipe and had tomatoes with burst skins just use a large sewing needle to poke holes in the tomatoes. This helps alleviate the pressure inside the tomato when you heat it up. You can also use a sausage pricker that you can find on Amazon and The Sausage Maker. Hope this helps, Taras

    Reply

    • Natasha
      natashaskitchen
      October 13, 2015

      That is a great tip! Thank you Taras!

      Reply

  • Ali
    September 15, 2015

    Would it make a huge difference if used a green bell pepper?

    Reply

    • Natasha
      natashaskitchen
      September 15, 2015

      Ali, green pepper would be great as well :).

      Reply

  • christina
    September 11, 2015

    hi natasha
    thank you for your receipes. they are easy to follow and so simple.

    To make this say 1 – 2 large jars, could you tell me the receipe.

    Reply

    • Natasha
      natashaskitchen
      September 11, 2015

      This recipe would make 3 of the large 1 gallon jars. If you want 1 jar, just divide everything by 3.

      Reply

  • Marina
    July 17, 2015

    I just took mine out of the oven and noticed that they had been leaking. I tightened the cans really well so I don’t think the lids were loose. These were new lids too so they should have a good seal. You mentioned air bubbles escaping so could this be normal? Did I possibly put too much brine?Thanks!

    Reply

    • Natasha
      natashaskitchen
      July 17, 2015

      It does sound like maybe you overfilled the jars.

      Reply

  • anna
    December 17, 2014

    i tried this again recently and had MUCH better results. I cut the recipe to 1/6th, used pickling salt and used heaping spoons and added a bit more vinegar. They turned out great, exactly the flavor i had in mind. I used roma tomatoes and after the hot liquid was poured on them they cracked, also since i hot water bathed them they became a bit more soft, is there anyway to prevent this, or use another tomato so the skin stays intact on some of them, i like that sensation of poping into the tomato skin. If i used tomatos on the vine and poured lukewarm liquid would that be okay? Basically i love the flavor but i dont like my tomato texture

    Reply

    • Natasha
      natashaskitchen
      December 18, 2014

      Thanks so much for sharing your method! It might have something to do with store-bought versus homegrown tomatoes. I’ve always canned with Mom’s tomatoes and the skin usually stays intact. Sorry, I don’t really have more insight into that.

      Reply

  • Vicki
    October 8, 2014

    Hello! If I blanch the tomatoes by boiling and then dumping them into ice water(to have then without peels), will it change the recipe at all? Or should I stick to how your recipe has the tomatoes?

    Reply

    • Natasha
      natashaskitchen
      October 8, 2014

      To be honest, neither my mom or I have ever made tomatoes without the skins. It would probably make the liquid murky but I’m not sure how else it would change the recipe. Without trying it myself, it’s hard for me to recommend it. Sorry, that’s not super helpful.

      Reply

  • Luba
    August 27, 2014

    One more question, when you put the jars in the oven, do you put them on a baking sheet or anything, or straight onto the oven racks? I’m canning tomatoes today and want to double check – so they don’t burst on me

    Reply

    • Natasha
      natashaskitchen
      August 27, 2014

      You could put them on baking sheets if you’re concerned. It won’t make a difference.

      Reply

  • Luba
    August 26, 2014

    Natasha, can I use quart size jars instead? Mostly just me and hubby eat canned tomatoes so don’t want to make in a big jar for just two of us. Would I have to change any measurements? I’ll just put less tomatoes and the other things into each jar

    Reply

    • Natasha
      natashaskitchen
      August 26, 2014

      You don’t have to change anything; just less in each jar; as many as you can fit 🙂

      Reply

  • Nataliya
    December 30, 2013

    I recently opened one can of tomatoes and they aren’t how I expected them to be. They taste kinda weird and i would say not marinated enough or they dont have enough taste and kinda hard too. They marinated for few month already and tomatoes were from my garden too. I did everything by the recipe, and my hubby wont eat them now. Plus I made a double batch so 12 cans will go to waste. Did I do something wrong or its just not to my taste how this recipe is?

    Reply

    • Natasha
      natashaskitchen
      December 30, 2013

      Is it possible that you used iodized salt? Or even kosher salt (which is less salty)? It’s so hard to say without being there. We made 6 jars this year and every one that we have opened has been well marinated and the tomatoes are soft. Could it be the salt?

      Reply

      • Nataliya
        January 4, 2014

        no i used non iodized salt.

        Reply

        • Natasha
          natashaskitchen
          January 4, 2014

          Hmmmm…. And you’re sure you used all of the correct proportions of vinegar/water/salt/sugar?

          Reply

          • Nella
            January 24, 2014

            I was actually just reviewing recipe and checking if I missed something too. We been opening ours and they didn’t turn out. Was going to ask you before I made them but forgot…my mom in law uses the vinegar from russian store that I believe is 7 or 9 %, higher than regular…could it be that I had used just the regular strength vinegar like in your picture? She told me that could be why they are not marinated enough and pretty hard tomatoes.

          • Natasha
            natashaskitchen
            January 25, 2014

            I just used regular vinegar. Did you use un-ripened hard tomatoes? I just opened one of our cans and they were pretty soft and tasted fine. Did you use non-iodized salt? Also, did you put them in the oven for 15 min at 350˚F? If you thought they were too bland, you could easily do 1 1/2 cups vinegar and 6 Tbsp salt for a little extra zing. I’ll update the recipe; I think they’d be even better with a little extra zing! 🙂 Thanks so much for you feedback. I hope that helps! 🙂

          • Nella
            January 27, 2014

            Ya followed recipe exact…I will have to try with more vinegar this summer 🙂 Could be that husband’s mom has maybe different recipe so he’s used to different taste too. Thanks 🙂

          • Tasha
            March 22, 2014

            Hi Natasha –

            You said you updated the recipe? What were the proportions from the old one? I made these for the first time last summer – I LOVE the tomatoes I get in Russian stores – and I just tried them today. They were PERFECT! So I don’t want to mess with whatever recipe you had here before. I thought i had printed it out but now i can’t find it. 🙁 I have to make these again, and more of them, this summer! Seriously, they were PERFECT. I’m going to go have some more right now. 🙂

          • Natasha
            natashaskitchen
            March 23, 2014

            There is just slightly more vinegar and salt to bump up the flavor a notch. From 5 to 6 Tbsp of salt and from 1 1/3 cup to 1 1/2 cup vinegar. That is the only change 🙂

          • Tasha
            March 23, 2014

            Okay, great, thanks – I’ll still use the old version. Because did I mention that they were PERFECT? 🙂

          • Natasha
            natashaskitchen
            March 23, 2014

            Thank you so much 🙂 I had a couple comments that people thought they weren’t salty enough, but I guess everyone has a different affinity for salt. I tried them and thought they were good too, but a little bit more couldn’t hurt 🙂

  • Olya
    September 25, 2013

    Canned tomatoes today 😉 question: why are you not allowed to reuse lids?

    Reply

    • Natasha
      natashaskitchen
      September 26, 2013

      The reason why is that the seal could be compromised.

      Reply

  • anna
    September 20, 2013

    I opened can 1 of the tomatoes and it was not marinaded enough, i waited 8 days. Will it get stronger if i wait more, my tomatoes were very large roma tomatoes-do you think this is why it was not done?

    Reply

    • Natasha
      natashaskitchen
      September 20, 2013

      Did you do everything the same as in the recipe? Did you use the same salt? You should probably give it 3-5 days more in the fridge if it doesn’t taste strong enough.

      Reply

  • Kristina
    September 19, 2013

    I didn’t see to boil tomatoes, was I supposed to? I canned 5 jars yesterday. I hope it wasn’t a waste.

    Reply

    • Natasha
      natashaskitchen
      September 19, 2013

      That is the “best practice” We put the jars in the oven and it worked well 🙂

      Reply

  • Oksana
    September 17, 2013

    Hello Natasha, do you place your cans in boiling water for 10 mins after you take them out of the oven?

    Reply

    • Natasha
      natashaskitchen
      September 17, 2013

      I clarified this in the post. I realize I added it in there a little confusingly (is that a word?). Current standards say that it’s safest to boil the tomatoes for 10 min in water instead of putting them in the oven. I Don’t have a pot big enough to hold my cans so I use the oven method instead. Hope that helps 🙂

      Reply

      • Bette
        August 15, 2021

        I think to be food safe you need to use the boiling water method to can. I know the oven method works, but it may not guarantee food safe results. The boiling is to kill off any pathogens in the produce. This is what my friend who taught me to can emphasized.

        Reply

        • Natasha
          August 15, 2021

          Hi Bette, please see the section in the post titled: “Current Canning Guidelines:”

          Reply

  • dina
    September 14, 2013

    I add garlic and little bit of mustard seeds taste good too. And for pickles i like this recipe if u like to share with any one. Same way like u do tomatoes but the syrup is different. 4 liters of water, 800gr sugar, 500gr vinegar 9%( i did try with 5%not working well for some reason) 4 tablespoons of salt(i take Kosher) boil every thing and then fill your jars with syrup put in the stove for 5-6 min. Some recipes not working for pickles and tomatoes, but i did try for both and one i mixed tomatoes and pickles works perfect.Enjoy.

    Reply

    • Natasha
      natashaskitchen
      September 14, 2013

      Thank you Dina so much for sharing!!

      Reply

  • Maria Halyna Lewytzkyj-Milligan
    September 12, 2013

    I will be trying this! дякую!

    Reply

    • Natasha
      natashaskitchen
      September 12, 2013

      You are welcome Maria, let me know how they turned out. My husband just canned 5 more cans today :).

      Reply

  • Lesia
    September 9, 2013

    I am making these…thank you.

    Off topic…do you have or anyone out there a recipe for zucchini cavier with mayo?

    Reply

  • anna
    September 8, 2013

    Guess who picked up 6 1/2 gallon mason jars today……… i happened to come across them totally by accident at Walmart. I am excited!

    Reply

    • Natasha
      natashaskitchen
      September 8, 2013

      Fun!! Are you making the tow-maters then?

      Reply

      • anna
        September 9, 2013

        Yes i am . Oddly enough however i found pickling cucumbers at the store which usually i do not find and if i do they are always very unworthy of purchasing. So now i will probably make 3 jars tomato and 3 jars cucumber but can i use the same recipe for pickles?

        Reply

        • Natasha
          natashaskitchen
          September 9, 2013

          The pickle recipe is a little different. I’ll try to get the recipe posted in time this season. No promises, but I will try! 🙂

          Reply

      • anna
        September 9, 2013

        I can not find the dill you are using, with the flowers. I only have dill weed. Also after heating up in the oven for 15 minutes, do we remove while the jars are still hot?

        Reply

        • Natasha
          natashaskitchen
          September 9, 2013

          Yes, remove while jars are hot. Use oven mitts and do it carefully. If you can, tighten the lids nicely before you pull them out of the oven to prevent hot spills.

          Reply

          • anna
            September 10, 2013

            Off topic but i might have a recipe you would like for dessert, it is a nutella almond macaroon torte with chocolate espreso bean shavings.

          • Natasha
            natashaskitchen
            September 10, 2013

            Oh my gosh, yes please!! Email it to me: natashaskitchen@yahoo.com Thank you! You’re awesome!!

  • natasha
    September 7, 2013

    is it ok if i cut few tomatoes in half? I remembered you said you can cut everything in half so for some reason i thought you meant its ok to cut tomatoes lol.. hopefully it wont ruin everything now.

    Reply

    • Natasha
      natashaskitchen
      September 7, 2013

      Oh, I meant to cut the recipe in half, not the tomatoes. I think it should still be ok, but the tomatoe juices will be in the can and the liquid won’t be as clear and pretty.

      Reply

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