I couldn't wait for all these gorgeous tomatoes hanging on our tomato vines to come ripe (and I'm a little scared of how many tomatoes we'll have when they do), so I thinned the herd and made fried green tomatoes.
I prefer Paula Deen's buttermilk-and-flour recipe to the cornmeal-dredged recipes I've eaten before. Using actual buttermilk (rather than reconstituted from dry buttermilk powder) produces a thicker batter coating, but you can get tasty results with the thinner reconstituted buttermilk as well. The upside to a flour-egg wash-cornmeal coating, however, is that you can do all the dredging ahead and freeze those guys. Just fry them from their frozen state. The flour coating will turn into glue in the freezer. So pick your process and product.
You can also can sliced green tomatoes for future frying. If you still have a bumper crop of green tomatoes right before your first killing frost in the fall, you can put them up same as you would ripe tomatoes. Slice them, pack them into clean canning jars, add 2 tbsp of lemon juice to each quart canned, fill with hot water and process for 45 minutes in a boiling water bath. They'll come out softer than if they were fresh, but they're still dredge-able and fry-able.
Lastly, an A.Ma.Zing thing to do with leftover fried green tomatoes is make paninis with bacon and provolone...put a few fried green tomatoes on a hoagie roll with a slice of provolone and a couple slices of bacon, and toast it up in a sandwich press (or a George Foreman grill, which is our ersatz panini press).
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