Showing posts with label tomato. Show all posts
Showing posts with label tomato. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 9, 2012

Cooking with Zoe: Tomatoes Galore



The Farmer's Almanac, which I hadn't even looked at since I was a kid rummaging through my grandfather's ranch house curiosities but is apparently a regularly referenced guide here, tells me that it is officially fall now. The students have had their first round of exams, the leaves are changing color, and my tomatoes have nearly all together petered out.  

My first tomato harvest yielded this little salad with fresh basil from my herb garden. And as my father-in-law, who helped me transplant my seedlings, predicted, I've had more tomatoes than I would have asked for. He is a more generous man than me. When he has a bountiful harvest and winds up with more fruit than he would have naturally purchased at a store, he gives it away to anyone who will take it. I am a bit of a hoarder. So instead of sharing much of my tomatoes, I have challenged myself to get creative and find ways to use my fruit at a rate that keeps up with their ripening. I've lost one or two from falling behind. But in the process, I've made:

1) Caprese paninis

2) Spaghetti with tomato meat sauce



3) Pesto pizza with goat cheese, caramelized onions, chicken, and of course, tomatoes

4) Roasted corn and Tomato soup [recipe from the William Sonoma catalogue], good enough to make twice



5) Breakfast burritos [sausage, eggs, cheese, and diced tomatoes wrapped in a warm tortilla]

6) Bruschetta [I dice the tomatoes, add olive oil and balsamic vinegar to coat, salt, pepper (fresh ground if it's available), garlic salt (fresh garlic if I have the energy), lots of basil, and other italian spices to taste (such as oregano, thyme, a hint of rosemary, sage, and savory)]

7) Salsa, using this recipe from my sweet friend Jamilah:

1 cup red onion chopped
1 cup chopped cilantro(it takes a lot, you could even add more than this)
1 can diced tomatoes (I like to use the seasoned kind with onion and flavoring)
1 cup frozen corn
Salt, pepper


Combine in bowl, add white vinegar until the level of liquid is about an inch deep. Taste test.


Optional ingredients: fresh cucumber and green pepper chopped fine


8) Turkey sandwiches with sliced tomato

9) Chicken Vegetable Soup [see this recipe from Cooking Light - this was SOOOoooo good and surprisingly filling!]

And I have a few more tomatoes left on the vine, still ripening. Any more ideas for how I might use them? Not too shabby for the cost of about one good sized tomato and the transplant fertilizer! I feel like this if the first time in my life an investment has paid off so fruitfully. ;)

Saturday, September 8, 2012

Cooking with Zoe: Simple Math

The students are back, classes have resumed, and I've pulled out a light jacket a time or two this week (more for inside the house than out, but still . . . ). Summer is coming to a close. 

That also means it's time to see how well my garden did. The Maine weeds proved a bit too voracious for this mother-of-a-toddler to combat this year, but I did manage to preserve the life of a few of my seedlings. I was able to harvest some beans, though not quite enough that I can think of much to do with them other than just eat them raw. Ideas?  I saw a few herbs through to fruition, including some dill, which I'd never seen flowering like this before:


I used the dill this week to make some tzaziki for some chicken kebabs. It was ok, I need a better tzaziki recipe. I think kokkari in San Francisco ruined me on tzaziki, theirs was so good that no other can ever live up to it. C'est la vie. 

I was also able to harvest a little bit of basil. And I seem to be having a nice crop of tomatoes coming along. Sofia and I planted these as seeds, nurtured them in our "nursery" (Sofia's craft table by a nice window), and transplanted them with the assistance of Grandma and Grandpa Reyes. We are very proud of them. Only two have been ripe enough to eat so far, but even if the rest get consumed by japanese beetles, we will feel like the summer was a grand success. I used one tomato to add to some scrambled eggs this morning. Sofia wasn't so into that idea, but Manny and I enjoyed it. For the other tomato, I put two and two together and came up with this combination:


+


=


The tomato was delectable, the basil was a bit too peppery for this use, but it was still fun eating an entire dish that came from our garden. 

Summer 2012 = success.