Oh my goodness, these were tasty! They were the "light entree" at our meal with hearty grain and veggie side dishes, or I could see making these as snacks for the kids too (and yes, the kids ate them up!). I can also imagine using other pizza toppings like mini pepperoni, sliced olives and other veggies as well as the tomatoes.
You could preroast the veggies and prep the "pizza" in advance and only have to do the final stage of baking at dinnertime. You might need to bake a few minutes longer if you have a straight-from-the-fridge, cold, prepped baking sheet to get the cheese good and melty.
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Showing posts with label tomatoes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label tomatoes. Show all posts
Friday, October 18, 2013
Zucchini "pizza" slices
Sunday, September 29, 2013
Bloody Mary Mix
Tomatoes. Oh my gawd, the tomatoes. We've canned, dehydrated, canned some more, made soup, had salad, sliced them for BLTs, snacked on them right off the vine, canned some more... And now this. This is good. This is different. I like this. I really like this with tequila. That is called a Bloody Maria, by the way.
If you have loads of little half-pint jars, put this mix up in those...fill them three-quarters full. This allows exactly the right amount of room for a scant shot of liquor, an ice cube or two, and a ring of pickled jalapeno...put the canning lid/ring back on and shakeshakeshake...instant cocktail in its own serving cup. Package up two or four of these guys with a 4 oz jar of homemade spicy pickled somethings and a miniature bottle of vodka or three, and it's a darling holiday gift.
The original recipe is here. I used some jalapenos out of our garden instead of hot sauce and added lemon juice to each jar in the amounts recommended by the Ball Blue book (2 tbsp per quart, 1 tbsp per pint, 1/2 tbsp per half-pint) to insure that the tomato juice was acidified enough.
How much you get out of this recipe depends on how thick or thin you want your final product (i.e. how much water you add). We like ours fairly thin, so we got about 4 quarts worth. Your mileage may vary (YMMV)
If you don't want to use this as a cocktail mixer, it would also be an excellent tomato soup.
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If you have loads of little half-pint jars, put this mix up in those...fill them three-quarters full. This allows exactly the right amount of room for a scant shot of liquor, an ice cube or two, and a ring of pickled jalapeno...put the canning lid/ring back on and shakeshakeshake...instant cocktail in its own serving cup. Package up two or four of these guys with a 4 oz jar of homemade spicy pickled somethings and a miniature bottle of vodka or three, and it's a darling holiday gift.
The original recipe is here. I used some jalapenos out of our garden instead of hot sauce and added lemon juice to each jar in the amounts recommended by the Ball Blue book (2 tbsp per quart, 1 tbsp per pint, 1/2 tbsp per half-pint) to insure that the tomato juice was acidified enough.
How much you get out of this recipe depends on how thick or thin you want your final product (i.e. how much water you add). We like ours fairly thin, so we got about 4 quarts worth. Your mileage may vary (YMMV)
If you don't want to use this as a cocktail mixer, it would also be an excellent tomato soup.
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Saturday, May 18, 2013
Shakshuka
I've seen and made multiple versions of the eggs-poached-in-chunky-sauce meal...one with a bed of sauteed spinach and mushrooms, another with caramelized shallots and a marsala-beef consomme reduction, among others. This one is a recipe from the cookbook Jerusalem by Ottolenghi that uses a stovetop-simmered pepper-tomato sauce as the poaching bed. A similar sauce that would probably also work well for cooking eggs this way is this roasted red pepper sauce.
The original recipe calls for harissa, a super-spicy pepper paste, that I don't have on hand. I used some minced jalapeno and ginger from my freezer stash to bring a little heat and depth of flavor to the sauce. If you like things hotter, use more or hunt down some harissa.
To chop your pepper finely enough for this dish, I highly recommend using the food processor. Pulse quickly and stop short of pureeing them. If you use canned tomatoes instead of fresh, drain them very well to shorten the cooking time needed to thicken the sauce.
I like how quickly the sauce went together and how well this recipe lends itself well to prepping ahead and freezing ahead. You can chop all the ingredients for the sauce ahead of time and fridge them, or make the sauce completely in advance. If you're going to freeze the sauce, you can even freeze it in individual portions for a quick meal-for-one. Just bring the sauce back up to a simmer (from its frozen state even!), crack an egg into the sauce, cover and simmer 8-10 minutes. Probably this thaw-and-poach process could even be managed in microwave...I don't know offhand how long to zap an egg to poach it, but if you do, let me know!
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The original recipe calls for harissa, a super-spicy pepper paste, that I don't have on hand. I used some minced jalapeno and ginger from my freezer stash to bring a little heat and depth of flavor to the sauce. If you like things hotter, use more or hunt down some harissa.
To chop your pepper finely enough for this dish, I highly recommend using the food processor. Pulse quickly and stop short of pureeing them. If you use canned tomatoes instead of fresh, drain them very well to shorten the cooking time needed to thicken the sauce.
I like how quickly the sauce went together and how well this recipe lends itself well to prepping ahead and freezing ahead. You can chop all the ingredients for the sauce ahead of time and fridge them, or make the sauce completely in advance. If you're going to freeze the sauce, you can even freeze it in individual portions for a quick meal-for-one. Just bring the sauce back up to a simmer (from its frozen state even!), crack an egg into the sauce, cover and simmer 8-10 minutes. Probably this thaw-and-poach process could even be managed in microwave...I don't know offhand how long to zap an egg to poach it, but if you do, let me know!
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Sunday, January 13, 2013
Roast Redux Salad
Leftovers can sometimes be a hard sell. Not many people like eating exactly the same thing for dinner then lunch, then dinner again. Which can be a problem if you've made, say, a large roast and a LOT is left in the fridge. For some reason, leftover roast (be it beef, pork or lamb) lingers at our house. Maybe because no one wants to deal with slicing it once it's cold, maybe because reheated roast tends to get dry, or maybe because it can be just plain boring to eat the same meat-plus-two-veggies for back-to-back meals.
Interestingly, I couldn't persuade anyone to eat the leftovers of the roast I used to make this dish, but my husband took the leftovers of the repurposed leftovers twice for lunch. This leftover salad is just that good.
This grain-based salad is inspired by a recipe from Julia Child's The Way to Cook for managing leftover lamb roast. I did make this with thinly sliced leftover leg of lamb, but I think it would be good with beef or pork roast too. I made it with bulgur as the grain base (per Julia's directions), but rice, quinoa or couscous would be good too...just be sure to cook the grain according to package directions.
Now the tomato and onion roasting is NOT a fast process and you don't really have to do it (Julia didn't, she just put these ingredients in her salad raw). But it made the winter hothouse tomatoes de-lish-us and roasting takes that sharp, bitey heat out of the onion that you'll get if you leave it raw.
You can do all of this a day in advance, which is precisely what I did (if you roast the veggies, I'd fridge them for 2 or 3 days even, for as long as you fridge your leftover roast). I got to walk in the door after work to a fully prepared meal. And THAT, in addition to how good it tasted, is the real beauty of this meal.
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Interestingly, I couldn't persuade anyone to eat the leftovers of the roast I used to make this dish, but my husband took the leftovers of the repurposed leftovers twice for lunch. This leftover salad is just that good.
This grain-based salad is inspired by a recipe from Julia Child's The Way to Cook for managing leftover lamb roast. I did make this with thinly sliced leftover leg of lamb, but I think it would be good with beef or pork roast too. I made it with bulgur as the grain base (per Julia's directions), but rice, quinoa or couscous would be good too...just be sure to cook the grain according to package directions.
Now the tomato and onion roasting is NOT a fast process and you don't really have to do it (Julia didn't, she just put these ingredients in her salad raw). But it made the winter hothouse tomatoes de-lish-us and roasting takes that sharp, bitey heat out of the onion that you'll get if you leave it raw.
You can do all of this a day in advance, which is precisely what I did (if you roast the veggies, I'd fridge them for 2 or 3 days even, for as long as you fridge your leftover roast). I got to walk in the door after work to a fully prepared meal. And THAT, in addition to how good it tasted, is the real beauty of this meal.
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Monday, July 9, 2012
Shrimp Amatriciana
This is a Rachael Ray recipe originally. She wraps the shrimp in pancetta for beautiful presentation. I don't worry so much about that presentation crap. My less-attractive-but-still-delicious way of prepping this dish ahead also lets you organize it as a freezer kit, which I don't feel comfortable doing with shrimp that you've had to thaw and handle as you'll do if you wrap it with pancetta.
I've made this dish with regular ol' American bacon instead of pancetta and it's quite tasty. The difference between Italian pancetta and most conventional bacons is smoking...bacon is smoked, pancetta is not. Bacon is also usually cut much thicker than pancetta is. So if you want to use it to wrap the shrimp in, unless you have really big shrimp or really thin bacon, you'll need to halfway-cook the bacon first to keep from having overcooked shrimp with still-raw bacon wrappers. Of course, if you skip the wrapping (like I do), you don't need to worry about this at all.
To make a freezer kit, dice up your bacon/pancetta and wrap well. Dice the onion and put in a freezer container. Combine white wine and basil (I have basil puree already frozen and just take a lump out of that stash) in a freezer container. Package all together with shrimp and cooking instructions. Make sure to have some whole canned tomatoes in the pantry along with your pasta (I label the boxes and cans that belong to a kit so I don't forget and use them for something else).
If you're just prepping ahead for same day or next day cooking, you can use fresh tomatoes. I'm using 1 pint cherry tomatoes and 3 medium normal tomatoes cuz that's just what I have on hand. Chop/combine ingredients as suggested above and fridge.
Slap a note somewhere in your workspace when you start cooking that you'll need to grab 1/2 cup of pasta water before draining. I *always* forget this part.
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I've made this dish with regular ol' American bacon instead of pancetta and it's quite tasty. The difference between Italian pancetta and most conventional bacons is smoking...bacon is smoked, pancetta is not. Bacon is also usually cut much thicker than pancetta is. So if you want to use it to wrap the shrimp in, unless you have really big shrimp or really thin bacon, you'll need to halfway-cook the bacon first to keep from having overcooked shrimp with still-raw bacon wrappers. Of course, if you skip the wrapping (like I do), you don't need to worry about this at all.
To make a freezer kit, dice up your bacon/pancetta and wrap well. Dice the onion and put in a freezer container. Combine white wine and basil (I have basil puree already frozen and just take a lump out of that stash) in a freezer container. Package all together with shrimp and cooking instructions. Make sure to have some whole canned tomatoes in the pantry along with your pasta (I label the boxes and cans that belong to a kit so I don't forget and use them for something else).
Mise-en-place |
Slap a note somewhere in your workspace when you start cooking that you'll need to grab 1/2 cup of pasta water before draining. I *always* forget this part.
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Wednesday, June 6, 2012
Fez-Style Baked Fish
This is a new twist (for me) on flavors for fish...I love the combination of tomatoes and olives, potatoes and saffron, garlic and cumin but I've never applied it to fish. The original recipe calls for cilantro along with parsley, but I'm one of those people to whom cilantro tastes weird so I substituted garden mint (read: I can't remember what variety of mint it is anymore) for the cilantro. I also didn't have cherry tomatoes on hand, so I used a 15 oz. can of cut-up, drained whole tomatoes instead.
Here's what I did this morning...I mixed up the marinade for the fish (which is still thawing a leetle), parboiled the potatoes and put them in my baking dish, and sliced/assembled the rest of the veggies. I put the fish in the marinade (even if it's not totally thawed) later in the afternoon before we went out. When we got home, I put the 3 components together in the baking dish while the oven preheated and baked 30 minutes while wrestling the kiddos into a dinner-appropriate state of cleanliness. If I had been prepping the night before because I'd be gone all day, I'd go ahead and marinate the fish starting in the morning but not overnight due to the acid content of the marinade.
Another make-ahead thought...if you have leftover boiled potatoes from another meal, use those in this dish! A single layer of pre-cooked taters in a square baking dish will do you.
One more note...my husband liked this very well as a fish dish, but also thought it would rock as a chicken dish. Just bake 30-40 minutes for chicken breasts, until they're cooked through.
Adapted from http://www.nytimes.com/2012/05/09/dining/baked-fish-fez-style-recipe.html
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Monday, February 27, 2012
Prep-ahead Plan for Salad Nicoise
I love, love, love salad nicoise with all its little components...marinated olives, hard-boiled eggs, steamed green beans, boiled new potatoes, roasted fish and citrusy-garlicky vinaigrette...but it's kind of a pain to make from Step Zero. That is, if you have to make each of those individual components just for the salad, that's a lot of steps and a lot of work.
Despite the hoity reputation of French cuisine, I think most French dishes originated with busy housewives who had more pressing things to do than sit around pitting gourmet olives, shelling hard-boiled eggs and quartering green beans lengthwise each day for dinner. I'll bet the first Nicoise woman to make this salad had a bunch of stuff leftover from other meals, and put it all together for dinner before it got barmy.
I think the best way to make this is to plan ahead and make extras of the things you'll need for the salad as meal components the day or two before...if you want to serve salad nicoise on Wednesday, boil eggs for snacks and breakfast on Sunday and set aside 3; serve boiled potatoes with dinner on Monday, and fish/steamed green beans on Tuesday and make make twice as much to set aside half for the salad; and on Wednesday make vinaigrette and wash lettuce. Easy-peasy.
The traditional components of salad nicoise happen to show up at a lot of holiday meals, too...olives from the relish tray, deviled eggs (they're basically hard boiled eggs with a little mayo), green beans and baked or boiled potatoes as side dishes. Why not throw those leftovers together to make a salad nicoise, holiday-leftover-style? With Easter coming in just over a month, I'm keeping this idea on the back burner.
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Despite the hoity reputation of French cuisine, I think most French dishes originated with busy housewives who had more pressing things to do than sit around pitting gourmet olives, shelling hard-boiled eggs and quartering green beans lengthwise each day for dinner. I'll bet the first Nicoise woman to make this salad had a bunch of stuff leftover from other meals, and put it all together for dinner before it got barmy.
I think the best way to make this is to plan ahead and make extras of the things you'll need for the salad as meal components the day or two before...if you want to serve salad nicoise on Wednesday, boil eggs for snacks and breakfast on Sunday and set aside 3; serve boiled potatoes with dinner on Monday, and fish/steamed green beans on Tuesday and make make twice as much to set aside half for the salad; and on Wednesday make vinaigrette and wash lettuce. Easy-peasy.
The traditional components of salad nicoise happen to show up at a lot of holiday meals, too...olives from the relish tray, deviled eggs (they're basically hard boiled eggs with a little mayo), green beans and baked or boiled potatoes as side dishes. Why not throw those leftovers together to make a salad nicoise, holiday-leftover-style? With Easter coming in just over a month, I'm keeping this idea on the back burner.
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Tuesday, January 31, 2012
Make ahead Wheat Berry Salad
This salad is one of my top 10 favorite recipes. The whole wheat kernel base is layered with artichokes, bitter greens, peppers and olives and finished with the classically Greek lemon-olive oil-feta flavor party. Once you've got the wheat berries prepared, it goes together quickly and only gets better over the course of a couple days in the fridge...read: it *likes* to be made ahead and the leftovers are delicious! It can stand to be out of the fridge for awhile (and tastes better served at room temp anyway) so it's suitable for picnics or dinner at your kids' Little League games.
It's also a recipe that I never quite make the same way twice...it depends on what I have on hand and how willing I am to have 1/2 a can of something hanging around after I finish the recipe. It's not so much a recipe anymore as guidelines :D Originally, it was a recipe from the Washington Post food section. They recommended serving this as a side dish with grilled fish or chicken, but I serve it most often as a vegetarian main dish.
Wheat berries are the whole kernel of wheat, what comes off the plant before it gets flattened into cereal or ground into flour. When cooked, the individual kernels are chewy and toothsome. They pop between your teeth like caviar or grapes. They have a nutty, grainy flavor and make a much more flavorful salad base than rice (the usual grain-and-vegetable salad suspect) in my opinion.
Cooking the wheat berries is a lot like cooking dry beans. Some folks say they can be cooked without soaking first, but I prefer the results from soaking then cooking. You can do either the overnight soak, then cook them, or do a "quick soak"...just like for beans! Here is how I put together this salad last night for dinner tonight...I put the wheat berries in a saucepan covered with 1" of water and brought it to a boil. I boiled for 2 minutes, then turned off the heat and covered the pan. I let them stand for 1 hour (this is the "quick soak" method) while we put the kids to bed. Then I drained them, rinsed them, covered them again with water, brought to a boil, reduced the heat, covered and simmered for 50 minutes while I zoned out and watched TV. Drain. Ta-dah! Cooked wheat berries! I measured and chopped the remaining ingredients this morning, but I could have done that while the wheat berries were cooking for 100% Dinner Done Yesterday ;)
This recipe lends itself to tweaking...use regular black olives or the fancy marinated olive bar ones, use fresh red bell pepper or roasted red pepper, use radicchio or arugula or a handful of salad from a bag of spring mix, whatever you have on hand!
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It's also a recipe that I never quite make the same way twice...it depends on what I have on hand and how willing I am to have 1/2 a can of something hanging around after I finish the recipe. It's not so much a recipe anymore as guidelines :D Originally, it was a recipe from the Washington Post food section. They recommended serving this as a side dish with grilled fish or chicken, but I serve it most often as a vegetarian main dish.
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Wheat berries |
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Top Row: Red bell pepper, black olives, radicchio Middle Row: Feta, chickpeas, lemon Bottom Row: Radicchio, cherry tomatoes, artichokes |
This recipe lends itself to tweaking...use regular black olives or the fancy marinated olive bar ones, use fresh red bell pepper or roasted red pepper, use radicchio or arugula or a handful of salad from a bag of spring mix, whatever you have on hand!
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Wednesday, November 2, 2011
Garlic Artichoke Pasta

Until I had a toddler, we never had dairy beverages in the fridge routinely. I had to buy milk or cream or half-and-half specifically for a recipe that called for it. These days, I use whole milk for all recipes calling for cream or half-and-half because it is what we have in the fridge. So use whatever you happen to have here (or use canned evaporated milk, if you are like pre-toddler, dairy-drink-less me) if you throw this recipe together out of "ingredients on hand". If you're planning to make a meal kit for this recipe, you can freeze an appropriate amount of milk or cream, rely on having some in the fridge on Dinner Day or buy canned evap milk for the "pantry kit".
Comparatively, cream and half and half will be the highest in calories and fat, then evaporated milk and regular milk. If you get non-fat evap milk, you'll get the best of both worlds...the lighter caloric/fat profile of milk with the rich mouthfeel of cream.
So a meal kit for this recipe will look like this: canned tomatoes, canned artichokes, box of pasta and can of evap milk (if using) labelled and stored in the pantry with garlic+dry herbs and milk/cream (if using) on hand or frozen in ziptop bags. OR everything except milk mixed together and frozen with pasta/evap milk in the pantry.
The one gripe I have about this recipe is that it's a crockpot recipe that still requires significant cooking right before dinner. The joy of the crockpot is that you don't have to cook at dinnertime, right? Boiling pasta isn't hard, but getting the water up to a boil takes time...more time than I'm willing to spend to "finish" a crockpot meal.
The solution is to cook the pasta almost fully in advance, toss it with a bit of oil or butter to keep it from sticking, fridge it and stir it into the crockpot at the end to warm up and finish cooking through. Or you can boil the pasta at the last minute, whatever works with your schedule. Just please don't rinse the pasta...rinsing washes away starch which will prevent the pasta from sticking to itself but then it also won't stick to the sauce. Besides, the starch is where the flavor lives (yes, pasta does have a flavor of its own) so rinsing washes away flavor, too.
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Sunday, September 11, 2011
Tomato Soup
I am not a Campbell's tomato soup fan, but I do like homemade tomato soup, especially with summer-ripe garden tomatoes. If you can or freeze, a pint of homemade soup boiled to half its volume will replace a can of store-bought concentrated soup for recipes that call for it. Just leave out the milk for all make-ahead preparations, and add 1 tbsp per cup of soup when you reheat it.
I have a couple of favorite recipes, but here's the most versatile of the bunch. You can peel and seed the tomatoes before proceeding with the recipe which saves a good bit of straining at the end, or skip this step (especially if you're only doing a small batch of soup) and sieve out seeds and skin at the end. You can also choose to roast or not to, depends on your time frame and preference. For putting up, you can freeze or can...if you can a soup made with a stock (be it beef, chicken or vegetable), you really should pressure-can...although before I knew what I know now, I canned tomato soup containing chicken broth in a boiling water bath and have lived to tell the tale. So do as you will.
Peeling tomatoes is not hard (especially compared to sieving 3 gallons of soup a ladleful at a time). To peel tomatoes, take a small paring knife and cut the stem out in a cone-shaped cut. Cut a shallow "X" on the bottom of the tomato and slice lightly across any cracked bits of skin (important if you're using heirloom or homegrown tomatoes which tend to be tastier but also less "perfect" than store-bought).
Bring a gigantic pot of water to the boil (or a smaller one, but give yourself time to let the water reheat between batches), and drop the prepped tomatoes in. Have another large pot filled with ice and water at the ready. Boil the tomatoes 1-2 minutes. Keep an eye on them, and pull the ones whose skins peel back first. Different varieties, different stages of ripeness affect how long the tomatoes need to boil before they start peeling. Pull tomatoes as they begin to peel, and leave the tougher ones a minute or two more. Drop them right into the cold water, partly to keep from cooking the bejeepers out of them and partly to make them easy to handle quickly.
Once all your tomatoes are chilly, start pulling the skins off. It's kinda like peeling a sunburn ::blark:: Don't worry if you don't get every bit of skin. To seed them, just squish the tomatoes like they're stress balls. Cut big ones in half before squashing them silly. Don't worry if you don't get every last seed out. Now you'll have a pile of really horrifying-looking but delicious seeded, skinned tomatoes. Proceed with your recipe.
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I have a couple of favorite recipes, but here's the most versatile of the bunch. You can peel and seed the tomatoes before proceeding with the recipe which saves a good bit of straining at the end, or skip this step (especially if you're only doing a small batch of soup) and sieve out seeds and skin at the end. You can also choose to roast or not to, depends on your time frame and preference. For putting up, you can freeze or can...if you can a soup made with a stock (be it beef, chicken or vegetable), you really should pressure-can...although before I knew what I know now, I canned tomato soup containing chicken broth in a boiling water bath and have lived to tell the tale. So do as you will.
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Cored and "X"d tomatoes |
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Parboiled, in the cold water bath |
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Peeled "zombie" tomatoes |
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Thursday, August 11, 2011
Easiest-Easier-Easy: Tomatoes

Other ways to use an abundance of fresh tomatoes include: canning, green beans with tomatoes, grilled marinated okra, oven-baked zucchini, frittata, tomato sauce (enchilada and pizza), tomato soup, Bloody Mary mix or any place else you'd used canned tomatoes or prepared tomato juice (just blitz the tomatoes in a processor or blender, then strain through a fine-mesh strainer for juice).
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Monday, July 25, 2011
Fried Green Tomatoes
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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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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