This no-cook San Marzano pizza sauce comes together in 5 minutes with whole peeled DOP tomatoes, fresh garlic, and Italian parsley. A simple family recipe that beats store-bought every time.

This San Marzano pizza sauce is made with whole peeled DOP tomatoes, fresh garlic, Italian flat-leaf parsley, and a bay leaf (my mom’s secret touch).
No blending, no cooking, no fuss.
Just crush the tomatoes by hand directly in the bowl, stir everything together, and let it rest for 30 minutes while the flavors come alive.
The result?
A chunky, vibrantly fresh sauce that is worlds apart from anything that comes in a jar.
I’ve been making this exact recipe for decades, and once you try it, I promise you’ll never go back to store-bought.
Creating the perfect pizza starts with the dough.
Since I’ve already shared our family’s cherished pizza dough recipe with active dry yeast, it only made sense to complete the picture with this signature sauce. Together, they are the foundation of every pizza night in our home.
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What You’ll Need
- San Marzano Tomatoes (whole, peeled): This is the non-negotiable ingredient. San Marzano tomatoes are grown in the volcanic soil near Naples and are known for their naturally sweet flavor, low acidity, and few seeds. Look for the DOP certification on the label - that little seal guarantees they are the real thing, not an imitation grown elsewhere. If you truly cannot find them, use the best quality whole peeled tomatoes you can find, but do not substitute crushed or diced tomatoes here.
- Salt: Just enough to bring out the natural sweetness of the tomatoes. Taste before adding more. San Marzanos are already mildly seasoned from the canned liquid.
- Dried Oregano: The classic Italian pizza herb. Dried works beautifully here (unlike in most of my recipes where I prefer fresh) because it has time to bloom and soften while the sauce rests.
- Extra Virgin Olive Oil: Use your best bottle. Since there is no cooking involved, the olive oil’s flavor comes through directly in the sauce. A fruity, mild extra virgin is ideal.
- Fresh Garlic: Fresh only, please. Pre-minced garlic from a jar will give you a sharp, harsh flavor rather than the clean, zesty bite you want here. Local garlic whenever possible.
- Italian Flat-Leaf Parsley (fresh): This is what sets this sauce apart from most pizza sauce recipes you’ll find online. Fresh flat-leaf parsley adds a bright, herbaceous note that dried parsley simply cannot replicate. In a pinch, you can use frozen parsley - I do sometimes! But skip dried altogether.
- Bay Leaf: My mom’s secret ingredient and one I would never leave out. It infuses the sauce with a subtle, aromatic depth that you would not be able to identify but would certainly miss.
- Chili flakes (optional): A small pinch adds warmth without heat. I highly recommend it, but leave it out if you are making this for little ones.
Are you ready to make the best pizza sauce?
Let’s begin!
How to Make San Marzano Pizza Sauce (No Cook)

Step 1: Crush the tomatoes
Open your 28-ounce can of DOP San Marzano whole tomatoes and pour the entire contents into a medium bowl, juice and all. Now comes the fun part: use your hands to crush the tomatoes directly in the bowl, squeezing them between your fingers until you reach a chunky, uneven texture. This hand-crushing method is key - it gives you a rustic sauce with body, not a smooth purée. If you prefer a more uniform texture, use a potato masher. For a completely smooth sauce, a quick pulse in the blender works too. As you crush, remove any hard tomato cores you feel.
Step 2: Add everything else
Add ¼ teaspoon of salt, 1 teaspoon of dried oregano, 1 tablespoon of extra virgin olive oil, 2-3 finely chopped fresh garlic cloves, 2 tablespoons of minced flat-leaf parsley, the bay leaf, and a pinch of chili flakes if using. Stir everything together thoroughly until well combined.
Step 3: Rest (this step is non-negotiable)
Cover the bowl and let the sauce rest at room temperature for at least 30 minutes before using. This is where the magic happens - the garlic softens, the oregano blooms, and all the flavors knit together into something that tastes like it took much longer than 5 minutes to make. For the absolute best result, make the sauce the night before and refrigerate overnight for up to 24 hours.
Step 4: Remove the bay leaf
Before topping your pizza, fish out and discard the bay leaf. Then spread generously and get ready for the best pizza night of your life!

Make sure to visit my Pizza page, where you will find my favorite recipes that use this easy pizza sauce recipe.
Tips
- Always look for the DOP seal. If you can find DOP-certified canned tomatoes (Denominazione di Origine Protetta), use them. It's a guarantee they were grown and packed in the San Marzano region of Italy, where the soil and climate produce tomatoes that are hard to match. If DOP isn't available, go for the best-quality whole, peeled tomatoes you can find. With a sauce this simple, the brand really does matter.
- Quality in, quality out. With only 7 ingredients and zero cooking, there is nowhere for a subpar ingredient to hide. Use real extra virgin olive oil (not just “olive oil”), fresh garlic cloves (not jarred), and fresh flat-leaf parsley (not dried). These small choices make a big difference in the finished sauce.
- Give it time. I cannot stress this enough: 30 minutes minimum at room temperature, but a few hours or overnight in the refrigerator is even better. The sauce transforms as it rests - what starts out as a bowl of separate ingredients becomes a unified, deeply flavored sauce. I often make a double batch on Saturday afternoon for Sunday pizza night.
- This sauce makes about 3 cups. This is enough for two 12-inch pizzas. Any leftover sauce keeps in the refrigerator for up to 3 days or in the freezer for up to 3 months. I freeze it in ½ cup portions, so I always have pizza sauce ready to go.
FAQ
DOP is short for Denominazione di Origine Protetta. This certification guarantees that products, like canned tomatoes, are locally grown and packaged. There is a great article on Serious Eats about the DOP tomato.
San Marzano tomatoes have a naturally sweeter, less acidic flavor than most canned tomatoes, with fewer seeds and a thicker flesh. This means your sauce will be naturally balanced. There is no need for added sugar to cut the acidity, which is something many other pizza sauce recipes require. The flavor is simply cleaner and more vibrant.
Yes! During summer when my dad’s garden was overflowing, my mom would make this with fresh garden tomatoes. The sauce was incredible! Peel and seed ripe plum tomatoes first, then crush them the same way. Outside of peak tomato season, I always reach for DOP canned tomatoes - they are often better than out-of-season fresh tomatoes.
Refrigerate unused sauce in an airtight container for up to 3 days. For longer storage, freeze in portions for up to 3 months. I like to freeze ½ cup amounts in small containers so I can pull out exactly what I need for a pizza night without defrosting a big batch.
The key difference is cooking. This San Marzano pizza sauce is completely uncooked. It goes onto the dough raw and cooks only when the pizza bakes in the oven. Classic marinara sauce is cooked on the stovetop, developing a deeper, richer flavor over time. Both start with the same great tomatoes, but they serve different purposes! For pasta, reach for my Classic marinara sauce or Quick Quick tomato sauce.
Absolutely! I actually encourage it! The sauce is good after 30 minutes of resting, but it is noticeably better after several hours. I often make it the evening before pizza night and let it sit covered in the refrigerator overnight. The garlic mellows, the herbs bloom, and the whole sauce deepens in flavor beautifully.
For a standard 12-inch pizza, you’ll use about ¾ cup of sauce. Spread it thin, the way they do in Italy. This recipe makes approximately 3 cups, which is enough for two 12-inch pizzas with some left over. Resist the urge to pile on the sauce - a thin, even layer lets the tomatoes shine and keeps the crust from getting soggy.
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Looking for more pizza inspiration? Here are a few of our favorite recipes to try next.
Recipe Origins
Once again, I am returning to my roots for this Italian pizza sauce recipe-aka the best pizza sauce recipe!!!
My mom always made this sauce for her slab pizza, except during the summer.
My dad was an amazing gardener, and the vegetables he grew were incredible. Naturally, my mom would whip up fresh tomato pizza sauce using tomatoes from our garden.
She would also spend a few afternoons canning whole tomatoes. Yes, my dad had a large backyard garden.
If you enjoy making pizza, you’ll love this no-cook pizza sauce.
THANKS SO MUCH for following and being part of the She Loves Biscotti community, where you will find Simple & Tasty Family-Friendly Recipes with an Italian Twist.
Ciao for now,
Maria
★★★★★ If you have made this Pizza Sauce Recipe, I would love to hear about it in the comments below and be sure to rate the recipe!
Recipe

San Marzano Pizza Sauce (No-Cook, 5 Minutes)
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Ingredients
- 28 ounce San Marzano tomatoes 796 mL, whole peeled tomatoes
- ¼ teaspoon salt
- 1 teaspoon oregano dried
- 1 tablespoon extra virgin olive oil
- 1 bay leaf
- 2-3 fresh garlic cloves finely chopped
- 2 tablespoons Italian flat-leaf parsley fresh, minced
- pinch chili flakes optional
Instructions
- In a medium bowl, empty the contents of the can of tomatoes. Hand crush the tomatoes.
- Add the rest of the ingredients and combine.
- Allow to sit for about 30 minutes for the flavors to combine.
- Discard bay leaf when ready to use the pizza sauce.
Video
Notes
- If available in your region, purchase canned tomatoes that have been certified DOP. High-quality San Marzano tomatoes are key to this recipe. If they’re unavailable, go for the best-canned tomatoes you can find.
- Each ingredient plays a crucial role in this simple sauce. Opt for high-quality olive oil, fresh garlic, and Italian flat-leaf parsley to maximize flavor.
- Allow the ingredients to meld together at room temperature for at least 30 minutes. This will improve the overall flavor of the sauce. For the best taste, let it rest for a few hours or even overnight in the refrigerator.
Nutrition
I originally published this post on July 9, 2019, and republished it on June 13, 2024, and again on June 3, 2026 with updated content. Thanks for sharing.







Phyllis
Yummy and so easy to make. Thanks for all your great recipes.
Maria
My pleasure Phyllis! Thank you for your kind words ♥
Lynne
Maria,
This is my all time fav pizza sauce recipe. It’s all I make now! My girlfriends and I have been looking for a slab pizza recipe and just came across yours! Can’t wait to try it. We are also from the Montreal area but only 2 friends still live there!
I’m wondering if I could turn this pizza sauce recipe into a marinara/tomato sauce by simmering in my dutch oven for a few hours?
Maria
Hi Lynne, I’m so happy to hear you love the pizza sauce recipe — that truly makes my day! How fun that you and your friends are from the Montreal area too 🙂
If you’d like to turn it into a marinara-style sauce, you can definitely let it simmer a little longer for a deeper flavor. Just keep in mind that traditional tomato sauce doesn’t include oregano — that’s something I reserve for pizza sauce. You might enjoy my Classic Marinara Sauce or my Quick Tomato Sauce— both are perfect for pasta or any dish where you want a smooth, rich tomato flavor. Thanks so much for taking the time to write!