Costco Pizza Sauce

Servings: 2 Total Time: 40 mins Difficulty: Easy
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Costco Pizza Sauce is the sauce I make when I have dough ready and do not want a jar that tastes overly sweet. This version uses whole peeled tomatoes, dried oregano, black pepper, salt, garlic, and olive oil.

The pack gives exact amounts for pepper, tomatoes, salt, and oregano, while the source method also uses olive oil and minced garlic without amounts. I list those as to-taste pantry items because the sauce needs them, but I do not invent a measurement.

I simmer the sauce for about 25 minutes, crushing the tomatoes in the pan. That short simmer thickens it enough for pizza without turning it into a heavy pasta sauce.

Before I start Costco Pizza Sauce, I take a minute to think about what the recipe is really asking for. Some of these Costco-style recipes are more about careful heating, chilling, or assembly than complicated cooking.

Why I keep coming back to this

  • Whole peeled tomatoes give the sauce body and a fresh tomato taste.
  • Oregano blooms in the warm oil and smells like pizza immediately.
  • The sauce simmers about 25 minutes, just long enough to thicken.
  • There is no added sugar in the base recipe.
  • I can make it ahead and refrigerate it for pizza night.
  • It works on pizza, calzones, breadsticks, or quick flatbreads.

What I use and why it matters

  • olive oil.Olive oil starts the garlic and helps the oregano bloom. for the skillet
  • minced garlic.Garlic gives the sauce its savory first note. to taste
  • 1/8 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper.Pepper adds a little warmth.
  • 14 ounce can whole peeled tomatoes.Whole peeled tomatoes crush into a sauce with better texture than thin puree.
  • 1/2 teaspoon salt.Salt sharpens the tomato flavor.
  • 1/2 tablespoon dried oregano.Oregano gives the sauce its pizza-shop smell.

I do not treat the ingredient list as a place to casually rewrite the recipe. The quantities are here for a reason, even when the original source was a little awkwardly parsed. When I want a different result, I change the handling first: I cut pieces smaller, drain something better, warm a sauce more gently, or give the food a few extra minutes to settle before I change the amount of an ingredient.

How I make it

Step 1 — Warm oil and garlic

I heat olive oil in a large skillet over medium heat. Once the oil is hot, I add minced garlic and cook for about 1 minute, just until fragrant. Garlic burns fast, so I stay close.

Step 2 — Bloom the seasoning

I stir in the dried oregano, black pepper, and salt and cook for another 30-45 seconds. This wakes up the oregano and seasons the oil before the tomatoes go.

Step 3 — Crush the tomatoes

I add the 14-ounce can of whole peeled tomatoes and crush each tomato with a wooden spoon as it hits the pan. I like a slightly rustic sauce, so I do not blend it unless I need it very smooth.

Step 4 — Simmer until thick

I bring the sauce to a low boil, then reduce the heat and simmer for about 25 minutes, stirring now and then, until it reaches the thickness I want for pizza.

Step 5 — Taste and store

I taste the finished sauce and adjust seasoning if needed. I use it immediately or cool it and transfer it to an airtight container for later.

Timing and texture cues I watch

The times in this Costco Pizza Sauce method are the frame, but I still pay attention while I cook. I look for the cue that matches the food: fruit should look glossy but not bruised, sauce should thicken enough to coat a spoon, chicken should reach its safe temperature, pasta should stay al dente, and baked desserts should set before I slice them. That habit keeps me from overcorrecting a simple recipe.

I also set up the serving pieces before the final step whenever I can. A hot skillet dish loses its best texture if it waits around, while a chilled salad or pie needs enough cold time to taste settled. Having the plates, bowl, knife, sauce, or side dish ready makes the last few minutes calmer, and the food gets to the table the way I intended.

Tips from my kitchen

  • Do not burn the garlic.One bitter minute can flavor the whole sauce.
  • Crush tomatoes in the pan.It gives texture without extra tools.
  • Simmer uncovered.I want extra liquid to cook off so the pizza crust does not get soggy.
  • Taste at the end.Tomatoes vary in acidity and salt.

Mistakes I avoid

  • Changing the quantities too soon.I make the recipe once close to the listed amounts before deciding what needs adjusting.
  • Crowding the pan or bowl.When food needs browning, folding, or chilling, extra space usually gives me a better texture.
  • Skipping the final check.I taste sauces, check the center of hot dishes, and look for set edges on desserts before I call anything done.
  • Serving without a pause.A short rest, chill, or gentle toss often fixes texture in a way more seasoning cannot.

The other mistake I try to avoid is making the dish harder than it needs to be. If the recipe is a shortcut, I let it be a shortcut and focus on the details that matter most: even pieces, clean heat, enough salt, a dry surface when browning is the goal, and a serving plan that keeps the texture from fading before anyone eats. I would rather do a simple thing carefully than add noise that does not improve the plate.

Variations I have actually tried

  • Smoother sauce:I blend it after simmering for a thinner pizza layer.
  • Spicy sauce:I add red pepper flakes with the oregano.
  • Herby sauce:I add basil after simmering so it stays fresh.
  • Garlic-heavy:I use more minced garlic when the pizza toppings are simple.
  • Thicker dip:I simmer a few minutes longer for breadsticks.

When I make a variation, I keep the main method steady. I swap one flavor at a time, then pay attention to whether the texture changes. That keeps the recipe dependable, and it also tells me which change actually helped instead of turning dinner into a guessing game.

Storing and make-ahead notes

I refrigerate cooled sauce in an airtight container. It thickens as it chills, so I stir it before spreading on dough. For longer storage, I freeze small portions and thaw them overnight in the refrigerator.

What I serve with it

I spread this on pizza dough, spoon it into calzones, serve it with breadsticks, or use it on quick tortilla pizzas. A thin layer is enough; too much sauce makes the crust soft.

Frequently asked questions

Why is my pizza sauce watery?

It likely needed more simmering, or the tomatoes were very juicy. I simmer uncovered until the sauce is thick enough to leave a trail when I drag a spoon through it.

Does this sauce contain sugar?

No added sugar is in this version. Tomatoes have natural sweetness, and I rely on simmering and salt for balance.

Can I use crushed tomatoes?

Yes, but the texture will be smoother from the start. I prefer whole peeled tomatoes because I can control how chunky the sauce stays.

Can I make it ahead?

Yes. I often make it a day ahead and refrigerate it. The flavor settles nicely overnight.

How much sauce should I use on pizza?

I use a thin, even layer. If I can barely see dough through the sauce, that is usually enough for a crisp crust.

If you use this on homemade pizza dough, tell me whether you keep it chunky or blend it smooth.

Costco Pizza Sauce

Prep Time 15 mins Cook Time 25 mins Total Time 40 mins Difficulty: Easy Servings: 2 Calories: 11 kcal Dietary:
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Description

A simple Costco-style pizza sauce with whole peeled tomatoes, oregano, salt, black pepper, garlic, and olive oil. I crush the tomatoes in the pan and simmer the sauce for about 25 minutes.

Ingredients You’ll Need

Instructions

  1. Heat olive oil in a large skillet over medium heat.
  2. Add minced garlic and saute until fragrant, about 1 minute.
  3. Stir in dried oregano, black pepper, and salt and cook for 30-45 seconds.
  4. Add the whole peeled tomatoes, crushing each one with a wooden spoon as it goes into the saucepan.
  5. Bring to a low boil, then reduce the heat and simmer for about 25 minutes, until thickened.
  6. Taste and adjust seasoning if needed.
  7. Use immediately or transfer to an airtight container for later.

Nutrition Facts

Servings 2


Amount Per Serving
Calories 11kcal
% Daily Value *
Sodium 479mg20%
Potassium 51mg2%
Total Carbohydrate 3g1%
Dietary Fiber 2g8%

Calcium 61 mg
Iron 1.4 mg

* Percent Daily Values are based on a 2,000 calorie diet. Your daily value may be higher or lower depending on your calorie needs.

Note

The source method includes olive oil and garlic without amounts, so I list them without quantities.

Simmer uncovered for a thicker pizza sauce.

Crush whole tomatoes with a wooden spoon.

A thin layer of sauce keeps pizza crust from getting soggy.

Keywords: costco pizza sauce, homemade pizza sauce, whole peeled tomato sauce, oregano pizza sauce, simmered tomato sauce

Frequently Asked Questions

Expand All:
Why is my pizza sauce watery?

It likely needed more simmering, or the tomatoes were very juicy. I simmer uncovered until the sauce is thick enough to leave a trail when I drag a spoon through it.

Does this sauce contain sugar?

No added sugar is in this version. Tomatoes have natural sweetness, and I rely on simmering and salt for balance.

Can I use crushed tomatoes?

Yes, but the texture will be smoother from the start. I prefer whole peeled tomatoes because I can control how chunky the sauce stays.

Can I make it ahead?

Yes. I often make it a day ahead and refrigerate it. The flavor settles nicely overnight.

How much sauce should I use on pizza?

I use a thin, even layer. If I can barely see dough through the sauce, that is usually enough for a crisp crust.

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