I've Been Waiting All Year For These
After a couple of days of unsuccessfully trying to come up with the perfect way to begin this post (including sitting and staring at a blank computer screen for minutes on end), I finally realized that clever, flowery prose extolling the virtues of homegrown tomatoes to gardeners and foodies is totally unnecessary.
The tomatoes are ready. Enough said.
Either you get it, or you don't. (And if you don't, we need to have a serious talk as soon as possible.) So now that we have that settled, I'm going to skip the chit chat and simply tell you what I do each summer as soon as there are at least a few handfuls of ripe tomatoes out on the vines. I call it Summer In A Bowl, and it is so easy to make it can hardly be called a recipe.
To me it is the essence of summer. It's another example of the Less Fuss, More Flavor way of cooking I find myself turning to more and more. Over the years, I've simply learned that the better the ingredients, the less you need to do to them. And that, to me, is pure kitchen bliss.
So go find yourself the best tomatoes you can, toss together this basic recipe, and then let your imagination run wild—or simply eat it all up straight from the bowl with a spoon.
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Farmgirl's Basis Of Summer In A Bowl
Note: Any ingredient aside from the tomatoes can be omitted.
Vine-Ripened Tomatoes
Onions or Scallions
Fresh Basil
Fresh Oregano
Olive Oil
Vinegar
Fresh Garlic or Good Garlic Powder
Salt & Pepper to taste
If desired, slice the ends off the tomatoes and squeeze out the seeds and some of the juice. (No matter what, you will end up with quite a bit of rich, scrumptious juice in the bottom your bowl. I don't waste a drop, usually slurping it up like soup, but for slightly less sloppy serving purposes you can always dish it up with a slotted spoon.)
Chop up the tomatoes and onions however you like and place them in a large bowl. An assortment of tomatoes will add color and flavor (I prefer heirloom varieties). For this batch, I used finely chopped purple onion from the garden and loved those bright spots of color, too. Add the chopped basil and oregano, plus olive oil and vinegar to taste. (I use just a splash each of extra-virgin olive oil and white balsamic vinegar.)
Toss in some chopped garlic or garlic powder (click here to learn about my source for top quality herbs and spices at amazingly low prices), and some good salt & pepper to taste. Stir everything together with a large spoon until thoroughly combined.
Now you can stop right here and have a perfectly delightful dish that will taste wonderful served alongside everything from steak to shrimp to salami and cheese sandwiches. (It will also look its best if served right away.) But if you allow it to sit at room temperature for a couple of hours, something truly magical will happen to this simple concoction as it mellows on the counter. Just leave the spoon in the bowl (if you dare) and give it a good stir every once in a while. (Refrigerating tomatoes—whether whole or cut up—will always, always steal away some of their flavor.)
You will probably be quite content to eat several dozen servings of this before you begin to think about what other things you might do with it. But this is where the real fun begins. Here are enough ideas to keep you chopping up and celebrating your bounty of garden fresh tomatoes (no matter whose garden they come from) for the rest of the summer.
The easiest thing to do is to add one special ingredient to the basic mix. Almost anything you love will work. This time I used a few Oil Cured Moroccan Olives I discovered languishing in a jar in the fridge. I chopped them into tiny pieces and their pungent flavor and super saltiness provided just the right touch. You could also add practically any other kind of olives, or some of those beautiful fresh caper berries you can sometimes find on gourmet olive bars. Or chopped anchovies or a smidge of anchovy paste. Or a handful of pinenuts. Some freshly chopped sweet red pepper or a few roasted red peppers from a jar would slide right in quite nicely.
You could add cheese, such as freshly grated pecorino romano or some of those baby mozzarella balls that come swimming in delightfully herby olive oil. Stir in crumbled up feta with kalmata olives, or chunks of rosy pink leftover roast leg of lamb and diced sharp cheddar. You could even toss in some day old cubed French or Italian bread or a can of garbanzo or Great Northern beans.
What you do not want to add to this dish are cucumbers. We are not making Greek Salad (which I also happen to adore). We are celebrating the tomato in all of its seasonal glory, and the cucumbers will only steal away some of the limelight from the true star of the show. There are no supporting actors in this dish--only a glorious background chorus of perfectly cast characters. (No, I don't have a single cucumber in the garden yet, but really, that is not why I am declaring them cuca non grata in this recipe. Honest.)
And how to serve it besides straight out of the bowl? On toasted baguette slices or next to a plate of eggs. Tossed with homemade fettuccine or a package of pasta spirals. Piled on a bed of fresh greens with big garlic croutons and freshly grated parmesan reggiano sprinkled on top. Stirred into some nice cooked lentils or a stash of leftover rice. Spooned into warm homemade pita breads.
I warned you the possiblities are endless. Enjoy.
© Copyright FarmgirlFare.com, the vine-ripened foodie farm blog where Farmgirl Susan shares recipes, stories, and photos from her crazy country life on 240 remote Missouri acres.
Fantastic! I have to get my tomatoes from the farmers market. In my west coastal garden mine are still green!
ReplyDeleteThat is what I made last night for dinner tossed with whole wheat penne, some beautiful black olives and cannelini beans. Yum !
ReplyDeleteoh delicious. for some reason my tomatoes seem to have hit standstill (though none have been plucked clear like last summer!)
ReplyDeleteFirst post from a devoted lurker...
ReplyDeleteIf sweet Cary hasn't eaten all the arugula flowers, scatter a handful over your tomato salad. Pure poetry, and delicious too!
My favorite food in the whole world is a tomato, plain, with just a little salt. But your recipe sounds delicious.
ReplyDelete. . . but, I think I might add a little cilantro . . .
ReplyDeletei knew we could count on farmgirl -- saving the planet, one homegrown tomato at a time. brava, bellissima!
ReplyDeletekevin, adding the cilantro begs for a little avocado & a teeny pinch of cayenne, but be cautioned you may invite the scorn of the purists. feel free to blame me, but call it salsa.
is a quick plunge into boiling water to loosen the skin too bourgeois or simply heaven?
one last suggestion: try a mild goat cheese in place of mayo, on a well-olive oiled ciabatta, yeahyeah don't forget the basil maybe even a dollop of kalamata olive paste.
play pink martini's hang on little tomato cd.
ah, sweet happiness.
peace & love
No need to boil water to skin ripe summer tomatoes: just draw the back of a small knife firmly down the skin, from pole to pole, all around and it will zip off easily.
ReplyDeleteYum Yum Yum! My favorite variation is with garlic rather than onion, no vinegar, let it sit for a while, serve w/ freshly grated parmesian over pasta. OOOh i cannot wait...
ReplyDeleteMy tomatoes are not *quite* ready yet! Sigh...
MMmmmm....truly summer in a bowl. My version is tomatoes with lots of basil, some fresh cippolini onions, kalamata olives, baby mozzarella, and homemade croutons rubbed with fresh garlic. Drizzle all with olive oil and a little balsamic. And that is dinner.
ReplyDeleteLooks wonderful. As soon as my tomatoes ripen, I'll make my own version of Summer in a Bowl with your 'guidelines'. And thanks for the tip on the cucumbers. I have plenty of those right now, and generally just eat the smaller ones whole, like a piece of fruit or a candy bar. Yum!
ReplyDeleteI found this glorious blog and tried the tomato recipe for dinner tonight. It was divine!
ReplyDeleteI can relate to the farmgirl thing, I live on 40 acres in Upstate NY. Love the country and everything about it. My friends think I'm nuts but I wouldn't trade a day on *Walton's Mountain* for a place in the city!
I'll be visiting your blogs often!
There is only one thing to say about this post and those photos...AMEN (agreeing wholeheartedly!) Truly the taste we dream about all winter long ;)
ReplyDelete(A different) Cary from Serenity Farms
my favorite simple tomato recipe is solely based on timing. pick the tomato in the heat of the day when the temperature of the fruit is as close to 98.6 as possible. don't leave the garden. for heaven sake don't even get close to a refrigerator. just take a bite and let the juices spurt and trickle where they may. warning: if you have more than 20 tomato plants you might need to hose yourself off before entering the house.
ReplyDeletek-)
One of my favorite books to read to my daughter when she was younger was "First Tomato Soup" (http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0803711751/103-6618526-4208649?v=glance&n=283155). It described the excitement around the first tomato of the summer, and how the resulting soup was a gift for someone special. :) Cheers for summer.
ReplyDeleteYes, to hell w/ the pretty prose and on w/ the flavors of summer!!
ReplyDeletePass me the bowl please...
Bruno
Fabulous!! That's my favorite way of cooking, too -- using very good ingredients and keeping it simple. Those tomatoes look wonderful.
ReplyDeleteOh wise Farmgirl, I have a tomato question for you. Due to our unstable weather patterns of the last month, I have scads and scads of split tomatoes. Everything I read tells me that I should not can them. What would you do? (I promise not to sue if I get food poisoning!)
ReplyDeleteI tried this at the weekend using the remnants of my "Striped Blister Beetle" ravaged veg plot here in NE Oklahoma and it was excellent.
ReplyDeleteI made this salad for dinner Friday night after a trip to the local farm market ...It was delicious - thank you!
ReplyDelete