5-Minute No-Cook Pizza Sauce (With Canned Tomato Sauce) » the practical kitchen (2024)

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Learn how to turn a can of tomato sauce into a flavorful classic no-cook pizza sauce in less than 5 minutes. This is my go-to pizza sauce because it's so easy and quick to make.

This simple red sauce for pizza uses canned tomato sauce, fresh garlic, salt, and dried herbs to make enough sauce for 3-4 medium pizzas or one focaccia pizza. No cooking required!

5-Minute No-Cook Pizza Sauce (With Canned Tomato Sauce) » the practical kitchen (1)

I make homemade pizzas from scratch all the time. They're one of my favorite easy dinners. I make my overnight thin crust pizza dough in advance (it freezes well too), and pizza is such a practical way to use up or repurpose leftovers into a new dinner!

Thanks to a preheated baking steel and hand-stretched pizza dough, a whole pizza can come together in about 8-10 minutes and can be on the table quickly.

As I've tweaked and adjusted my go-to classic red pizza sauce recipe over the years, my goal has always been to keep it as low-effort as possible without sacrificing flavor. We're going for speed and ease here, people!

BTW, this is the same pizza sauce I use for my classic pepperoni pizza, hot honey pizza, supreme pizza, and even my DIY bagel bites! So if you like those pizzas, you'll love this sauce.

Why Make a No-Cook Pizza Sauce

There are dozens if not hundreds of varieties of pizza sauce out therebut nothing, imo, is more iconic than a simple and straightforward classic no-cook red sauce.

While I can't claim this is an authentic "New York-style" pizza sauce with any authority, it is, like most New York pizza sauces, a no-cook red sauce.

Because this pizza sauce isn't cooked, it has that nice bright, fresh, and acidic tomato flavor with just the right amount of bite from the garlic.

"Cooking your sauce will make your pizza taste like it was topped with pasta sauce rather pizza sauce. Sauce variants like vodka sauce ought to be cooked, but when it comes to plain pizza sauce, don’t cook it when it comes to New York-style pizza."

—Joe Rosenthal, How to Pizza

Pizza sauce vs. marinara sauce, what's the difference? Marinara sauce is cooked! Marinara sauce is what you use for chicken parm, spaghetti sauce, etc. It's usually made from whole canned or crushed tomatoes that are cooked down to soften them. Marinara sauce is thicker than pizza sauce, and will have a cooked tomato flavor, rather than a bright fresh tomato flavor.

Neapolitan Pizza Sauce vs. No-Cook Pizza Sauce

Neapolitan pizza sauce originates in Naples, Italy, where there is are very strict guidelines certifying what qualifies as a "true" Neapolitan pizza.

Traditionally, Neapolitan pizzas are made with a simple no-cook pizza sauce, but the ingredients needed are very specific. That means using ingredients sourced from specific regions and prepared in very specific ways.

For example, tomatoes must come from the Campania region and be crushed by hand, in order to even begin claiming any sort of Neapolitan authenticity. You can read more about the Associazione Verace Pizza Napoletana (AVPN) regulations on their website.

So while this is a no-cook pizza sauce, and it is very similar in style to a Neapolitan pizza sauce, it is not a true Neapolitan pizza sauce.

Why Use Canned Tomato Sauce

While many no-cook pizza sauce recipes call for whole canned tomatoes, I prefer using canned tomato sauce since it has already been reduced slightly and pureed just the right amount. It's ready-made for pizza sauce.

Whole canned tomatoes still need to be pureed and only come in much larger quantities. I'm not about to get out an immersion blender or food processor out if I don't need to. I also don't need a huge quantity of pizza sauce.

5-Minute No-Cook Pizza Sauce (With Canned Tomato Sauce) » the practical kitchen (2)

One 6 ounce can of tomato sauce makes just about enough pizza sauce for 3 medium pizzas, so you won't end up with a lot left over. It also freezes nicely, so if you have extra it won't go to waste.

The dried herbs are technically optional, but I like adding them because I don't always have fresh oregano or thinly sliced fresh basil for topping my pizza.

If you're planning on topping your pizza with fresh herbs after it bakes, you may decide you don't need the dried herbs in your pizza sauce. It's really up to you!

Ingredient Notes

Here are the ingredients that you'll need to make this simple no-cook red pizza sauce using canned tomato sauce! See recipe card (at the end of the post) for quantities.

5-Minute No-Cook Pizza Sauce (With Canned Tomato Sauce) » the practical kitchen (3)
  • Tomato Sauce - This recipe uses one 6 oz can of unsalted* tomato sauce. I'm not usually picky about the brand; I look for whatever is cheapest. Make sure you're getting tomato sauce, not tomato paste or puree. There shouldn't be any other ingredients in it but tomato and maybe citric acid or water. If you use a tomato sauce with salt in it, you may want to reduce the amount of salt you add to it!
  • Garlic - One medium-to-large garlic clove or two small garlic cloves. I don't recommend using jarred garlic here if you can avoid it only because it's hard to get those pieces small enough to truly blend into the sauce. If you're using jarred garlic, you'll get the best results with a mini food processor!
  • Salt - I've written this recipe with a salt measurement that works for both fine sea salt or table salt. In my cooking, I useDiamond Crystal Kosher Saltwhich half as salty as other brands, including other brands of kosher salt. So if you also use DCKS, you may need to 2X the amount of salt in the recipe.
  • Dried oregano & basil - These add that classic pizza flavor to the sauce. I don't recommend using fresh herbs in the sauce as they tend to wilt and don't cook as nicely as dried herbs do. Save fresh oregano or fresh basil for after baking!

*If you use a tomato sauce that already has salt in it, taste it before you add any salt!

Instructions

This is another one of those so-simple-it-hardly-needs-a-recipe recipes, so I'll keep it brief, but here's what I think is the simplest way to make this pizza sauce.

(I've included some other methods further down the post in case you don't have a Microplane zester or whisking just isn't your thing.)

5-Minute No-Cook Pizza Sauce (With Canned Tomato Sauce) » the practical kitchen (4)

Combine all the ingredients in a medium mixing bowl. Grate the garlic cloves into the bowl using a fine Microplane zester.

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Whisk well until completely combined. Taste and adjust as needed — more salt, more herbs, more garlic, etc.!

Turning the garlic into a paste is super important for maximizing that strong garlic flavor. According to America's Test Kitchen, grating the garlic into a paste on a zester "breaks down as many cells as possible, creating sharply-flavored, pungent garlic."

Slicing or rough chopping garlic doesn't quite break the garlic down the same way zesting does.

5-Minute No-Cook Pizza Sauce (With Canned Tomato Sauce) » the practical kitchen (6)

Since garlic is the only ingredient in this recipe that needs to be broken down this finely, I find it's more practical to grab a zester rather than do it by hand with a knife. If you don't have a zester, you can paste garlic with a knife instead.

Other Ways to Make It

If you don't have a Microplane zester or would rather not whisk the sauce, here are two other options for how to make this no-cook pizza sauce:

  • Food Processor or Bullet Blender: Combine all of the ingredients in the bowl of a mini food processor (like my fave KitchenAid 5 cup cordless food chopper) until smooth, about 60-90 seconds. You may need to scrape down the bowl a few times. Look at the size of the garlic pieces — they should be tiny specks you can barely see, not slivers!
  • Garlic Paste with a Knife: Use a knife and a pinch of salt to turn the garlic clove into a paste by alternating smashing, smearing, and mincing it against a cutting board before stirring it into the sauce. (For more visual detail on how to make garlic paste, check out my recipe for ciabatta garlic bread!)
  • Garlic Press - Use a rocker-style or hand held garlic press to turn the garlic cloves into a paste. You'll still have to do the shallots and rosemary by hand.
  • Jarred Garlic: This works best if you're using a food processor or bullet blender to break the minced garlic pieces down even further. If you don't have one, I recommend spooning the garlic into a plastic baggie and running a rolling pin over it a few times to create a paste. To add it to the sauce, just snip a corner off the baggie and squeeze the paste out like a piping bag).

How to Spread Pizza Sauce

The best way to spread pizza sauce is with the back of a spoon. Pizzerias often use ladles which come in specific measurements to ensure every pizza has the same amount of sauce.

The deep curve at the bottom of the ladle makes it easy to spread the sauce evenly without any sharp edges tearing or catching on the dough.

For home pizza making purposes, a regular old dinner spoon works just fine. Sweep it gently across the surface of the dough taking care not to apply too much pressure — you don't want the dough to stick to the peel!

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How Much Pizza Sauce For One Pizza

When you're making a thin crust pizza, you need less sauce than you think. About 3, maybe 4 tablespoons is plenty.

You don't need to be precise, just aim for a thin layer of sauce with some spots where you can still see the dough peeking through.

If you want to be precise, you're aiming for about 1.5-2 ounces of sauce per medium pizza.

The pizza will bubble up and shift in the oven as it cooks and the cheese melts, so don't worry if it looks streaky. It will all even out in the oven.

Spread the sauce fairly close to the edges of the crust — leave only about half an inch of bare crust as a border.

If you've stretched the crust properly, the outer edge of the crust will bubble up in the oven as the pizza shrinks slightly. The sauce helps weigh it down so you don't end up with a huge outer crust and a small surface area of cheese and sauce.

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Pizza Sauce Storage Notes

Refrigerate this no-cook pizza sauce for up to 7 days in an airtight container (I use one of these 8 ounce deli containers) or freeze for up to 3 months.

The sauce will thicken and might even separate slightly in the fridge; that's normal. Just give it a stir to use it again.

5-Minute No-Cook Pizza Sauce (With Canned Tomato Sauce) » the practical kitchen (9)

Substitutions & Variations

This is a great base recipe that you can absolutely tweak and customize to make it your own. Here's some suggestions to get you started:

  • Spicy: Add ⅛ teaspoon red pepper flakes.
  • Sweet: Add ¼ teaspoon sugar.
  • Garlic Powder: Use ⅛-1/4 teaspoon garlic powder instead of a whole clove of garlic. The flavor won't be quite as fresh, but it works in a pinch!
  • Italian Seasoning: Replace the dried oregano and dried basil with the same amount of dried Italian seasoning blend. (If the seasoning blend has salt in it, reduce the amount of salt in the recipe.)
5-Minute No-Cook Pizza Sauce (With Canned Tomato Sauce) » the practical kitchen (10)

Top Tip

Don't feel beholden to the ingredient measurements here. This is a very simple base recipe and you can absolutely tinker with it to find your own perfect no-cook pizza sauce combination of garlic, herbs, and seasonings!

Recipe FAQ

Does pizza sauce need sugar?

Some people add sugar to their pizza sauce to cut down on the acidity from the tomatoes. Others add it because they prefer a sweeter pizza sauce. I don't think this recipe needed the added sugar but I also prefer a more acidic, less sweet sauce. If you'd like to add sugar to this recipe, add ¼ teaspoon at a time, tasting as you go.

Is canned tomato sauce the same as pizza sauce?

While you absolutely can use plain canned tomato sauce as pizza sauce, I think it tastes better when you add a bit of additional flavor to it!

Can I use tomato paste instead of tomato sauce?

I don't recommend it. Tomato paste has been cooked down much longer and is much thicker and more intense in flavor. It's not as easy to spread and won't have that same bright, fresh, tomato flavor you expect from pizza.

📖 Recipe

5-Minute No-Cook Pizza Sauce (With Canned Tomato Sauce) » the practical kitchen (11)

5-Minute No Cook Pizza Sauce (Using Canned Tomato Sauce)

Rebecca Eisenberg

This simple red sauce for pizza uses one can of tomato sauce, fresh garlic, salt, and dried herbs to make enough sauce for 3 medium pizzas in less than 5 minutes. No cooking required!

5 from 3 votes

Print Recipe Pin Recipe Save

Prep Time 5 minutes mins

Total Time 5 minutes mins

Course Condiment

Cuisine American, Italian

Servings 3 pizzas

Ingredients

  • 6 ounces salt-free tomato sauce (1 small can)
  • 1 clove garlic
  • ½ teaspoon salt (use 2X diamond crystal kosher salt)
  • ½ teaspoon dried basil
  • ½ teaspoon dried oregano

Instructions

  • Combine the canned tomato sauce, salt, dried basil, and dried oregano in a bowl. Use a microplane zester to grate a clove of garlic into the sauce. Whisk well. Adjust seasoning to taste.

  • Use immediately or refrigerate for up to a week.

RECIPE NOTES

  • If using a tomato sauce that has salt in it already, wait to add the salt until after you mix everything together. Taste it before you add any salt!
  • Store in the fridge for up to 7 days. Some thickening and separation may occur, simply stir before use.
  • This pizza sauce can be frozen for up to 3 months. It is still safe to eat after that, you may just begin to notice the texture and flavor aren't as vibrant and smooth.

YOUR NOTES

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Tried this recipe?Leave a comment and let me how it was!

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5-Minute No-Cook Pizza Sauce (With Canned Tomato Sauce) » the practical kitchen (2024)

FAQs

Should I drain canned tomatoes for pizza sauce? ›

If you'd like a thicker sauce, strain the tomatoes from their juices before blending. This isn't just for convenience — a no-cook sauce will actually taste better on your pizza, giving you that fresh, zippy tomato flavor, even after it has been baked in a hot oven.

Is canned tomato sauce the same as pizza sauce? ›

Tomato sauce is similar to pizza sauce, but they are not the same. The main difference between tomato sauce for pasta and pizza sauce is that pasta sauce is cooked in the preparation of the sauce and pizza sauce is an uncooked tomato sauce that cooks along with the pizza.

Do you need to cook tomato sauce before putting it on pizza? ›

Mix together water, tomato paste, and olive oil in a large bowl or jar. Add garlic, oregano, basil, rosemary, salt, and pepper; mix well. Let sauce stand for several hours to let flavors blend. No cooking is necessary; just spread on dough.

How do you doctor up canned tomato sauce? ›

8 Ways to Elevate Canned Spaghetti Sauce
  1. 1 - Extra virgin olive oil. Adding a good amount of a flavorful olive oil will go a long way in infusing flavor into your sauce. ...
  2. 2 - Fresh garlic. ...
  3. 3 - Meat. ...
  4. 4 - Hot pepper flakes. ...
  5. 5 - Red wine. ...
  6. 6 - Fresh or dried herbs. ...
  7. 7 - Cheese. ...
  8. 8 - Cream and/or butter.
Feb 26, 2018

How do you make canned pizza sauce better? ›

13 Ways To Upgrade The Flavor Of Store-Bought Pizza Sauce
  1. Mix in Parmesan cheese for a greater depth of flavor. ...
  2. Stir in melted butter to balance acidity. ...
  3. Add garlic powder for a smooth and well-seasoned sauce. ...
  4. Pour in red wine for a more robust taste. ...
  5. Blend in Calabrian chile peppers for a spicy kick.
Mar 4, 2024

Can I use tomato sauce instead of pizza sauce? ›

While you absolutely can use plain canned tomato sauce as pizza sauce, I think it tastes better when you add a bit of additional flavor to it!

What sauce is closest to pizza sauce? ›

5 Pizza Sauce Alternatives
  • Other tomato-based sauces. Traditional pizza sauce is made using canned tomatoes, garlic, olive oil, onion, and herbs like basil and oregano but there are so many other tomato sauce options that offer different flavour profiles. ...
  • Pesto. ...
  • Alfredo. ...
  • Tapenade. ...
  • Extra-Virgin Olive Oil.

What kind of pizza is made with tomato sauce? ›

If you're looking for the type of pizza made with tomato sauce, oregano garlic, and olive oil, this portion is simply for you. A classic Neapolitan pizza without cheese is called a pizza Marinara. This tomato sauce-based dish has no cheese and is made entirely of tomatoes, garlic, and oregano.

Do Italians put tomato sauce on pizza? ›

Tomato sauce on pizza is an AMERICAN creation, not Italian, says food historian at the University of Parma - sparking outrage in his home country. Tomato sauce on pizza was invented in America, not Italy, according to an Italian food historian - and veteran pizzaiolos in Rome have been left furious over the claim.

Can you eat pizza sauce without cooking it? ›

Yes, you can eat pizza sauce raw. Most pizza sauces are made from simple ingredients like tomatoes, garlic, and fresh herbs, which are all safe to eat raw. The cooking process deepens the flavors and melds them together, but it's unnecessary for safety reasons.

What are the best tomatoes for pizza sauce? ›

SUMMARY – San Marzano are the tomatoes by excellence for classic red sauce pizza. Some other varieties include the Pomodorino del Piennolo- yellow or red. If San Marzano is impossible to find where you live, oblong peeled tomatoes are the best next choice.

How much tomato sauce for 12 inch pizza? ›

Use 1/4 cup of sauce for each 30cm / 12″ pizza. Spread it evenly across the pizza base (hopefully homemade!) using the back of a spoon, leaving a 1cm / 1/2″ border for the crust. Sprinkle with 130g / 4.5 oz mozzarella cheese then toppings of choice – here are our Favourite Pizza Topping recipes.

Does spaghetti sauce make good pizza sauce? ›

You are not alone when you ask "can i use pasta sauce for pizza?" Using pasta sauce as a pizza sauce is an increasingly popular trend among homemade pizza lovers. It is a great way to add some variety to your pizza and make it more flavorful.

What is pizza squeeze? ›

Convenience meets taste with Contadina's Original Pizza Squeeze®! Made with 100% vine-ripened Roma tomatoes and the squeeze bottle makes it easy to get rich, authentic pizza flavor at home. Use it for homemade pizza, English muffin pizza snacks or even pasta with a pizza flare.

Are you supposed to drain canned tomatoes? ›

Drain whatever else you'd like, but leave your canned tomatoes undrained. While this may seem a little bit strange, you're actually avoiding washing away those savory juices. Canned tomatoes themselves may make up the bulk of your can, but aren't the only part of the vegetable that's worth hanging onto.

Should I drain diced tomatoes for pasta sauce? ›

Tips and tricks:

Diced tomatoes are not ideal for making sauces, unless they are blended first. Drain the diced tomatoes slightly if a thicker sauce or salsa is desired.

Do you use the liquid in canned tomatoes? ›

And as for canned tomatoes — that liquid is not only some of the best tomato juice you'll ever taste, but also a great way to thin any sauce, soup, or stew that would benefit from some lightly salty tomato flavor.

Can you use canned diced tomatoes on pizza? ›

You can use canned whole or diced tomatoes if you don't mind a more textured sauce. You can also use fresh tomatoes here! Roma tomatoes, cherry tomatoes, and San Marzano tomatoes are our favorite varieties for sauces since they have very concentrated flavor.

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