tomatoes

The Perfect Lunch

Posted in cooking, food, tomatoes on November 1st, 2009 by blesse – Be the first to comment

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The gar­den pro­duced another plen­ti­ful bounty of toma­toes today. Cos­to­luto Gen­ovese, Zuc­chero, and Martino’s Roma, the first two from seeds pur­chased in Italy. These will be used in tomorrow’s batch of tomato sauce, but a later foray into the gar­den pro­duced my lunch. I sliced a Brandy­wine tomato, still warm from the sun, and placed the slices on top of a crunchy slice of freshly baked bread, added fresh basil and a dol­lop of hum­mus, then driz­zled it all with olive oil. Perfect!

Perfect_Lunch

Note: This was orig­i­nally pub­lished on Sep­tem­ber 26, 2009. In the switch to the new Word­Press site, for some rea­son it wasn’t uploaded.

Tomato Sauce Marathon

Posted in Recipes, cooking, freezing, tomatoes on September 20th, 2009 by blesse – Be the first to comment

I men­tioned in one of my posts last week, that I had three boxes of organic toma­toes, Early Girl, that I pur­chased at the Great Basin Food Coop. On Fri­day, I got busy mak­ing tomato sauce for freez­ing. I used recipes in a arti­cle by Georgeanne Bren­nan that were in her arti­cle, “From Vine to Freezer — Tomato Sauce for All Year,” which appeared in the San Fran­cisco Chron­i­cle last July. I decide to take on all three recipes, Basic Tomato Sauce, Roasted Roma Sauce, and Roasted Heir­loom Tomato Sauce.

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I began with the first one, which I cooked last week, with toma­toes from our gar­den. I sliced about twenty pounds of Early Girls, which filled the six­teen quart stock pot that Vicki gave me for my birth­day. They cooked on medium for about two hours, then I ran them through the food mill.

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Then I tack­led the roasted roma sauce, which used my entire twenty-pound box of romas. They were sliced, then baked with olives, capers, mar­jo­ram and anchovies—the secret ingre­di­ent. After bak­ing in the oven for about 2 1/2 hours, I pureed the sauce in the food proces­sor, leav­ing it slightly chunky. The result was a piquant sauce that will make the per­fect base for put­tanesca sauce.
Roasted heir­looms with the next chal­lenge, Chero­kee Black and Brandy­wine toma­toes, oven roasted with olives, fresh basil, spices, bal­samic vine­gar, then sim­mered with white wine. This was also run through the food mill, yield­ing a dark rich sauce that will be superb with pasta, fish, or roasted vegetables.

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I did most of this in one day, the kitchen was roast­ing, prob­a­bly 100 degrees and floor was a mess and there seemed to be tomato residue every­where. Still, the results were fab­u­lous, I’ve put 60+ twelve-ounce bags of sauce in the freezer.