| | |  | Tomatoes | Home » » » » Hunt's Diced Tomatoes Fire Roasted With Garlic, 14.5-Ounce Units (Pack of 12) | | | | | | | Description: | | Hunt's tomato-based products have been staples in American kitchens for more than 100 years, from canned tomatoes, pasta sauces, and tomato sauces and paste to ketchup and barbecue sauce | | | Features: | |
• 100% natural
• Quality you can taste
• 20% of daily vegetables
• Kosher
| | | Product Details: | | | Product Weight:
| 174.0 Ounces | | Package Length:
| 12.0 inches | | Package Width:
| 9.0 inches | | Package Height:
| 4.5 inches | | Package Weight:
| 12.0 pounds | | Average Customer Rating:
| based on 4 reviews |
| | | | Customer Reviews: | |
Average Customer Review:
( 4 customer reviews )
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
2 of 2 found the following review helpful:
Fire roasting adds flavorJul 21, 2010
By Toni
"Toni"
I use a lot of canned tomatoes in cooking, and have started to use fire roasted in place of plain diced tomatoes in recipies where I want a more smokey flavor. I drain a can and sprinkle them on pizza along with grilled vegetables and some crumbled feta cheese. Also use them to make a quick vegetable soup with some added frozen vegetables, oregano and chicken broth. I don't find a great deal of flavor in most canned tomato products, and have appreciated the extra flavor in these.
1 of 1 found the following review helpful:
A flavorful alternative to he produce sectionNov 19, 2011
By Cresence Eberle A while back, I realized that the produce section tomatoes I was buying didn't taste like the tomatoes I remembered from 60 years ago. While I'm sure that Tomatoland documents this better than I can, they tasted like cardboard, had thick and tough skins, were gassed into looking red and ripe when they weren't, and worst of all were costing me $2-3 a pound and more.
Gourmet alert (or maybe I mean gourmand alert)! What I'm going to say next may upset you if you have preconceived ideas about how to eat tomatoes
Like any other enterprising senior citizen who is tight on cash, I switched to these when using tomatoes in salads. Actually, what I started doing was tossing these into a colander, along with garbanzos, mushrooms, black pitted olives, and green salad olives. I prefer these diced tomatoes over canned generic diced tomatoes, because the garlic gives them more taste and depth of flavor. And then I toss a portion of the concoction over lettuce. Sometimes I just eat it by itself. With dressing, of course, whatever seems handy at the time.
I consider it a win when I can get these for $1.15 a can or less, but I will go up to $1.25 a can before I start checking the supermarket sales instead. By the way, this should make pretty good salsa as well when mixed with hot peppers, but I haven't tried that yet. I also have mixed these in with spaghetti sauce to give it more body. Since I use cheap sauces like Ragu, these help dress it up a lot.
Bon appetite!
1 of 1 found the following review helpful:
Doesn't seem as sugary as the green pepers/celery/onion version.Oct 04, 2011
By Ghost(Ghost(M)) These are decent tomatoes (I tried the green pepers/celery/onion version first, and discovered it had sugar added, so it was no good). This product is better, except what's with the here price? Two-fifty a 15 oz can, really? I got mine in Wegman's for slightly over a dollar a can normal (or slightly less than a buck when on sale). Recommended, but don't buy them here.
DeliciousNov 10, 2011
By SolarWindWalker Hunt's Diced Tomatoes Fire Roasted With Garlic, mixed with Hormel Chili with beans and elbow macaroni makes a great meal. or In a crock pot add ham, pole beans, red potato, carrots, celery and Hunt's Diced Tomatoes Fire Roasted With Garlic. MMM MMM good....
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