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I had made pasta with fresh tomatoes exactly once.
Yeah it was tastier than canned tomatoes. And it also took me half a day to make. In the end I just dumped the pasta into the pan with tomatoes. Canned tomatoes are like 3x faster, because they take no preparation time beyond opening the can.
The variety of tomatoes matters little, the heat treatment will average the taste, so it's okay to use the cheapest tomatoes for this, as long as they didn't start to rot.
Edit after reading others' replies: maybe the tomatoes in my country are just better, even the cheapest variety is tasty enough eaten raw, and the only time I could find tomatoes that are picked green and are ripening on the shelf is during winter, when all fresh vegetables are hydroponics, and even then you have some choice.
The recipe:
Get fresh tomatoes. Wash tomatoes. Cut tomatoes in 2 or 4 pieces each, you'll mash them anyway so thin slices do not matter. Fill the biggest bowl in your kitchen with sliced tomatoes. I was using like 2 kg of tomatoes, they wouldn't fit into the pan until simmering down.
Fry diced onions and carrots in a pan, using a generous finger-thick layer of olive oil, until the onions are golden and carrots are sweet.
Dump tomatoes into the pan. Cover with a lid, cook on a slow fire for about 15-20 minutes. Mash and stir each 3 minutes so they won't burn. Cooking less will preserve taste of fresh tomatoes, cookig longer will make it taste closer to canned pasta sauce. But cooking for less than 5 minutes will keep tomatoes stay in big chunks, so you won't be able to make your sauce stick to the pasta.
Boil pasta while tomatoes are cooking.
Dump Italian spice mix onto the pan. Turn off the heat, let it simmer for 1 minute.
Dump pasta into the pan, stir, slurp your tomato-pasta soup from the pan like an animal, contemplate your life choices when you have trouble standing after eating 3 kg of food.