This roasted tomato salsa is a bright, rustic example of early Mexican cooking, built on simple technique rather than heavy seasoning. Roasting the tomatoes deepens their natural sweetness, while raw onion and green chile add bite and freshness. Vinegar provides a clean acidity in place of lime, and oregano gives a subtle herbal note that hints at the dish’s 19th-century origins. Finished with sliced avocado, the salsa feels both familiar and grounding, clearly recognizable as salsa while retaining a texture and balance that sets it apart from many modern versions.
Prep Time 15 minutesmins
Cook Time 25 minutesmins
Ingredients
2lbripe tomatoesjitomates
2–3 green chilesserrano or similar, finely chopped, to taste
½white onionfinely chopped (raw)
½tspfine saltor to taste
¼tspblack pepper
1½tbspvinegarapple cider or mild wine vinegar
1½tbspolive oil
1tspdried oreganolightly crushed
1ripe avocadosliced
Instructions
Roast the tomatoes
Preheat the oven to 425°F (220°C). Place whole tomatoes on a baking sheet and roast for 20–25 minutes, turning once, until the skins blister and blacken in spots.
Peel and crush
Allow the tomatoes to cool slightly, then peel off the skins. Transfer to a bowl or molcajete and gently crush by hand. Do not purée.
Build the salsa
Add the chopped green chiles and raw onion to the crushed tomatoes.
Season
Stir in the salt, black pepper, vinegar, olive oil, and crushed oregano until just combined.
Finish with avocado
Top with sliced avocado just before serving or gently fold it in.
Serve
Serve at room temperature with tortilla chips, bread, or alongside grilled meats and vegetables.
Video
Notes
Keep the texture rustic. Crush the tomatoes by hand or with a mortar rather than blending. This preserves the chunky texture that defines early salsa and keeps the flavors distinct.
Use vinegar lightly. Start with the listed amount and adjust gradually. The goal is brightness, not sharpness, especially since this recipe relies on vinegar instead of lime.
Add avocado just before serving. Folding it in too early can cause it to break down and discolor. Slicing and adding at the end keeps the flavor fresh and the presentation clean.