Smoked Whole Tomatoes that stay fresh for months ?
namfon
13 years ago
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James McNulty
13 years agosharonann1
13 years agoRelated Discussions
What variety is best for canning whole tomatoes
Comments (18)I grew Rutgers for perhaps 15 years. I was told they were good canning tomatoes. They were, BUT they tended to split at the tops when ripe and consequently produced a nice large tomatoe that was 20% wasted. About 10 years ago I had canned all my Rutgers and decided I wanted to make some salsa. I went to a local farmers market in search of some canning tomatoes. Bough a half bushel, took them home, processed them for the salsa recipe and discovered, to my everlasting joy that they were far superior to the Rutgers in both taste and cannability. I took the basket back to the farmer market seller and asked what those tomatoes were. She replied: Mountain Pride. I told her I was going to make her a hell of a deal. I traded that basket for one Mountain Pride tomatoe. I took it home, cut it open, collected the seeds and I have been growing MPs ever since. Excellent canning, excellent taste, little to no waste. You should try them. Highly recommended for canning....See MoreWhat would you make with a whole Flat of Tomatoes!
Comments (17)Oh yeah, fresh yummy tomatoes! First I'd make some fresh salsa and then I'd have a nice tomato sandwich with Miracle Whip on White Bread and maybe a couple of tomato omelettes. After that I'd scrounge up some zucchini and make this: Gratin of Zucchini & Tomatoes Contributed By: EatingWell 3 cloves Garlic, crushed 2/3 cup Fresh basil leaves 1 tsp Fresh thyme leaves 2 cups Fresh whole-wheat breadcrumbs, divided 1/2 cup Finely chopped sweet onion, such as Vidalia 3 Large ripe tomatoes, diced 1 tbsp Red-wine vinegar 1/4 tsp Salt, divided 3 tbsp Extra-virgin olive oil, divided 3 Medium zucchini (about 1 3/4 pounds total), sliced on the bias about 1/4 inch thick Freshly ground pepper to taste 3/4 cup Freshly grated Parmesan cheese Preparation 1. Preheat oven to 400 degree F. Coat a 9-by-13-inch baking dish (or similar gratin dish) with cooking spray. 2. Put garlic, basil and thyme on your chopping board; mince well. Spread half the breadcrumbs evenly in the prepared baking dish. Strew onion over the breadcrumbs. Distribute half the diced tomato over the onion, then sprinkle with half the garlic-herb mixture. Sprinkle with vinegar and 1/8 teaspoon salt. 3. Heat 2 teaspoons oil in a large nonstick skillet over medium-high heat. Add a third of the zucchini; you want it to saute, not stew, so do not crowd it. Saute, turning the pieces once, until golden and not quite tender, 1 to 1 1/2 minutes per side. When the slices are done, use a fork to transfer them to the gratin, overlapping the slices. Cook the remaining zucchini in two batches, each time using 2 teaspoons oil. Strew remaining tomatoes and garlic-herb mixture over the zucchini. Season with the remaining 1/8 teaspoon salt and a grinding of pepper. Toss the remaining 1 cup breadcrumbs with the remaining 1 tablespoon oil and sprinkle over the gratin. 4. Bake the gratin until bubbly hot, 20 to 25 minutes. Remove from the oven and immediately sprinkle with Parmesan. After that, I'd make tomato soup, I love KatieC's roasted tomato and garlic soup posted above or this one from Fannie Farmer: Pure Cream of Tomato Soup The Fannie Farmer Cookbook Servings: 7 cups. Ingredients 5 tablespoons butter 1/2 cup chopped onion 4 tablespoons flour 4 cups milk 1/2 bay leaf 1 1/2 teaspoons sugar 1 1/2 teaspoons salt 1/2 teaspoon baking soda 3 cups tomatoes, chopped (fresh or canned) Preparation Melt the butter in a soup pot. Add the onion and cook over medium heat, stirring, until the onion is softened but not browned. Sprinkle the flour over the butter mixture and continue to stir and cook for 1 to 2 minutes. Slowly add the milk, bay leaf, sugar, and salt and continue to cook and stir until slightly thickened. Stir the baking soda into the tomatoes. Add the tomatoes to the milk, and bring just to a simmer. Remove from the heat and put through a strainer. Taste and correct seasonings. Reheat before serving. While I was at it, I'd make Sol's tomato tart. Geez, I wish I could post a picture of that, it's a think of beauty, but here's the recipe anyway. My favorite isn't really quiche, but it is. It's Sol's Tomato Pie, which is actually just a quiche with that mustard layer on the bottom crust. TOMATO TART Crust This makes two 9-inch tart shells. 2 1/2 cups AP flour 3 tablespoons semolina flour 1 teaspoon salt 12 tablespoons [1 1/2 sticks] cold, unsalted butter 3 tablespoons cold solid shortening Ice water Preheat oven to 400°F. Put the flours and salt in food processor. Pulse a couple of times, just enough to integrate the ingredients. Add the butter and shortening all at once and pulse until the mixture looks like moist crumbs and no chunks of butter or shortening remain. Sprinkle ice water over the surface of the dough. Repeat with 3 more tablespoonsful. Pulse to just bring the dough together. The dough should be past crumbly, but holding together. Cut the dough in half and wrap each half in plastic wrap. Press each half to form a disk. Refrigerate at least 30 minutes before rolling out. Then roll out one disk to 1/4" thick. Fit into your tart pan, and chill 30 minutes. Dock the bottom of the tart. Line it with parchment or foil, and weigh it down with pie weights or dried beans. Place tart shell on center rack in the oven and bake 10 minutes. Remove paper and weights from the pan. Return it to the oven and bake another 10-15 minutes or until the tart is a light-golden brown. Remove from the oven and set on wire rack to cool. Filling 12-15 plum tomatoes, cored and cut into 1/4"-thick rounds 2 tablespoons Dijon mustard * 1 cup coarsely grated Gruyere cheese 1 teaspoon Herbes de Provence 2 large eggs 1/4 cup light cream 1 teaspoon salt A few turns of freshly ground black pepper Preheat oven to 375°F. Put the tomato slices in a colander and place in the sink. Let them sit for 15 minutes to drain off any excess liquid. Spread the mustard evenly over the tart shell. Sprinkle the cheese over the mustard and sprinkle the Herbes de Provence over the gruyere cheese. Working from the outside in, lay the drained tomato slices in overlapping, concentric circles, covering the crust completely. Whisk the eggs in a bowl, whisk in the cream, salt and pepper. Pour this custard evenly over the tomatoes until it comes to about 1/4 inch from the top edge of the crust. Bake for 1 hour, to 1 hour and 20 minutes, or until the custard is set. Annie...See MorePasta with Fresh Tomatoes
Comments (16)These suggestions all look great! I laughed when I saw this thread title today. I started a sauce last night with Fresh Tomatoes for pasta tonight... I just threw 2 chopped beautiful red home grown tomatoes in a fry pan with a bunch of halved cherry tomatoes (also from a friend's garden), chopped onion, chopped garlic, slices of red pepper, slices of yellow pepper and cooked over low heat for about an hour last night. Tonight it's add the spices, mushrooms, and anything else I think I want. I may add some red wine (I think I have a bottle open) and possibly some black olives. I tried the sauce last night and man, is it sweet! Love those sweet tomatoes this year. DH gets his favorite - spaghetti with ground beef, chopped onions and Ragu from a jar. (Lunch today is a bacon and tomato sandwich. Yum!)...See MoreYour Best Stay Fresh Longer Food Storage Tips !!!
Comments (10)Two adults here, as well. Wasted food is the most expensive food you purchase, so I do careful meal plans to help reduce that "forgotten" something-'er-other, especially in the crisper drawer. I dehydrate, freeze, or vacuum seal with a FoodSaver for longer storage. Instead of waiting for the celery go go limp, I'll dehydrate a portion of it. Works great in soups, casseroles, etc. I also dry the celery leaves. Can't get all those mushrooms used? Slice and dehydrate them. I make entire soup mixes with a wide variety of dehydrated foods. We eat dehydrated zucchini as a substitute for potato chips. Hard cheese keeps longer in FoodSaver bags. When grapes are on sale, I'll stock up and freeze them in FoodSaver bags. I like the green bags for bananas, as well as freezing or dehydrating bananas when I can get a deal on them. FoodSaver canisters are great for leaf lettuce and fruit in the refrigerator. They keep much longer when vacuum-sealed. When potatoes are buy a 5# bag - get one free, I make them into mashed potatoes and freeze them in dollops and vacuum seal the dollops in FoodSaver bags. Otherwise, we'd never be able to use 5#, let alone 10#... I also cook and mash sweet potatoes and dehydrate them on the fruit roll-up trays. When crispy-dry, I run them through the blender and make sweet potato powder. Reconstitutes to make mashed sweet potatoes by adding hot water. I do the same thing with tomatoes for tomato powder. Reconstitute it with water for making pizza sauce, etc. It's amazing how many tomatoes you can get in a quart jar when you dehydrate them, and even MORE when you make tomato powder. Ripe fruit can be made into fruit roll-ups. You can dehyarate yogurt. I even dehydrate lean cooked meat cut into 1/2-inch cubes. After they are dry, I package it in FoodSaver bags and stick it in the freezer. Make sure your refrigerator is 40°F, or colder, and your freezer is 0°F or colder. Food degrades faster when those temperatures are warmer. -Grainlady...See Morereadinglady
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