Condiment Easy Mexican

Fresh salsa with tomatoes

One of the fastest, best-tasting ways to use ripe summer tomatoes without turning on the oven — ripe tomatoes, a little sharpness, a little heat, and enough salt to bring it together.

A bowl of fresh tomato salsa with diced tomatoes, red onion, cilantro, and lime.
Time
15 min
Serves
4 to 6

Fresh salsa with tomatoes is one of the fastest, best-tasting ways to use ripe summer tomatoes without turning on the oven — the recipe is less about strict proportions and more about balance: juicy tomatoes, a little sharpness, a little heat, and enough salt to bring everything together.

Fresh salsa with tomatoes

Makes About 2 cups

Ingredients (6)

Source these from local growers See growers + what's in season →

Instructions

Nutrition

Estimated per serving · 1/3 cup
25 Calories
1 g Protein
5 g Carbs
0 g Fat
1 g Fiber
3 g Sugar
100 mg Sodium
Ingredient intelligence

What to look for when you shop

Best varieties

  • Roma / plum — dense and less watery, ideal for a thick salsa
  • Early Girl — tart, good balance of acid and sweetness year-round
  • Cherry tomatoes — sweet, consistent, no seeding needed
  • Heirloom slicers — complex flavor, wetter; drain briefly before mixing

Ripeness

Yields slightly to gentle pressure; deeply colored all the way to the stem; fragrant. Under-ripe tomatoes give a flat, starchy salsa with no amount of lime fixing it.

Imperfections are fine

Cracked, blemished, or irregular tomatoes from a farm often have more concentrated flavor than perfect-looking supermarket fruit. Trim any soft spots and dice what remains.

Good substitutions

  • Tomatillos for salsa verde — roast or use raw for different profiles
  • Roasted tomatoes for a deeper, smoky salsa
  • Diced mango to replace 1/3 of the tomatoes for a sweet-tart riff

In season

Peak July through September in most US regions. This recipe is worth making only with in-season tomatoes — it does not recover from bland fruit.

How much to buy

About 1 lb of tomatoes (4–5 medium) makes roughly 2 cups of finished salsa.

From a grower near you

Find your tomato grower on CollectiveCrop

Salsa is barely a recipe — it's chopped tomatoes, chopped aromatics, lime, salt. The tomato is 80% of what you're tasting. A supermarket tomato bred for shipping gives you watery, flat salsa no matter how much cilantro and jalapeño you add. CollectiveCrop is how the local grower with actual tomatoes becomes findable. Make this in August with their crop, and it's a different food.

  • In season July through September
  • For this recipe 1 lb / about 4–5 medium tomatoes
  • While you're there Fresh jalapeños · Cilantro · White onion · Limes

At the market

About 1 lb of tomatoes (4–5 medium) makes roughly 2 cups of finished salsa.

Best varieties

  • Roma / plum dense and less watery, ideal for a thick salsa
  • Early Girl tart, good balance of acid and sweetness year-round
  • Cherry tomatoes sweet, consistent, no seeding needed

Good to know

Tips

  • The quality of the tomatoes is the single most important factor — use the ripest you can find.
  • Removing the seeds and watery core gives a thicker salsa that does not immediately pool on the chip.
  • The heat level depends entirely on the chile — start with half and taste before adding the rest.

Storage

  • Refrigerator: up to 3 days; the salsa is brightest and freshest on day 1.
  • Drain any accumulated liquid before serving leftovers.
  • Freezer: not recommended — tomatoes lose their fresh texture completely.

Make ahead

  • Dice the tomatoes and onion up to 1 hour ahead; hold separately in the fridge.
  • Mix the salsa up to 30 minutes before serving to let flavors meld without losing brightness.
  • Add fresh herbs only right before serving.

Variations

  • Mango salsa: replace 1/3 of the tomatoes with diced ripe mango.
  • Roasted salsa: char the tomatoes and jalapeños under the broiler or on a grill first.
  • Salsa verde: substitute tomatillos for the tomatoes and roast before blending.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can you make fresh salsa with tomatoes ahead of time?

You can chop the ingredients ahead, but salsa is brightest shortly after mixing.

What can you serve with fresh salsa with tomatoes?

Serve it with tacos, grilled food, eggs, chips, beans, or grain bowls.

Can you swap one of the main ingredients?

Yes. Different tomato types, onion types, and herbs can all work as long as the salsa stays balanced.

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