Simply tomato, p.1

Simply Tomato, page 1

 

Simply Tomato
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Simply Tomato


  Copyright © 2023 by Martha Holmberg

  Photographs copyright © 2023 Ellen Silverman

  All rights reserved. No portion of this book may be reproduced—mechanically, electronically, or by any other means, including photocopying—without written permission of the publisher.

  Design by Toni Tajima

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  Published by Artisan,

  an imprint of Workman Publishing Co., Inc.,

  a subsidiary of Hachette Book Group, Inc.

  1290 Avenue of the Americas

  New York, NY 10104

  artisanbooks.com

  Artisan is a registered trademark of Workman Publishing Co., Inc., a subsidiary of Hachette Book Group, Inc.

  ISBNs: 978-1-64829-037-4 (hardcover); 978-1-64829-315-3 (ebook)

  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data on file

  This book is dedicated to all the tomato breeders, seed savers, farmers, mad scientists, pollinators, ladybugs, and other creatures who make tomato gardening fascinating and fun. And to John and Charlotte, who make life the same way.

  Contents

  Welcome

  My Thoughts on Recipes

  Advice on Key Ingredients That Aren’t Tomatoes

  With So Many Tomatoes, How to Choose the Right One?

  General Tomato Terminology

  Canned Tomatoes Aren’t Second-Class Citizens

  Tomato Snacks and Drinks

  Tomato Salads

  Tomato Soups

  Tomato Pastas and Risottos

  Tomato Main Dishes

  Tomato Side Dishes

  Tomato Tarts and Pastries

  Resources

  Acknowledgments

  Index

  About the Author

  Welcome

  I’m assuming that because you’re reading this, you feel about tomatoes the way I do: you’re crazy about them. Whether you grow your own or simply look forward to the first Cherokee Purple at the farmers’ market, you feel a little ripple of joy when you hold a ripe tomato in your hand.

  But lots of fresh vegetables and fruits are delicious, so what is it about tomatoes that inspires such passion in so many people? My theory is that we are first attracted by the sensuous color and shape of a tomato but then get hooked by the flavor, which is a complex dance between sweet, tangy, and that elusive umami flavor (more on that in a minute). And then there’s the haunting fragrance of the leaves (see here).

  Every year, I grow as many tomatoes as I can find space for, although I am not a very knowledgeable gardener. I skim the research, experiment with a few new ideas, talk to my plants (that’s critical), and hope for the best. Fortunately for me, my tomato plants have always been obliging and rewarded me with pounds and pounds of beautiful fruit, which I spend the summer consuming in every way I can think of—in salads, soups cold and hot, gratins, tarts, drinks, pastas, pastas, and more pastas.

  But this cookbook is devoted to cooking with tomatoes in all their forms, with recipes for using both fresh and canned tomatoes, of course, but also for what I think of as “semi-preserved” tomatoes: roasted tomatoes, tomato confit, pickled tomatoes, jams, tomato paste, and tomato water and syrup. Every year, I spend hours turning my tomatoes into these components, stashing them in the freezer, fridge, or cupboard to use in other dishes later in the year.

  The benefit to these semi-preserved forms isn’t that they keep a long time, it’s that they’re so dang good and fun to make. The transformation of a tomato’s fresh delicate raw character into something beyond—deeper, chewier, sweeter—is one more of the daily miracles that make home cooking so satisfying.

  What’s not in this book is the most basic of preserving methods—canning. You can find countless resources for that in books and online, and given that canning tomatoes for long storage on a shelf involves some food-safety risks and generally should be done using a pressure canner, I like to leave the instructions to the experts. One reliable source is the Ball Blue Book Guide to Preserving; the 37th edition was published in 2015, and you can learn plenty from Ball’s website (see Resources).

  Doubling Down on Flavor

  Researchers have identified hundreds of flavor compounds in tomatoes, about sixteen of which seem to create the unique “tomato” flavor. No one is quite sure which substances play what roles in creating flavor, and in any case, we as normal people can’t see the compounds when we look at a tomato, so we won’t be choosing between a Green Zebra and a Mr. Stripey based on their relative levels of 2-isobutylthiazole and geraniol. We make our choices by tasting.

  The flavor element that I find most intriguing in a tomato is glutamate. This is the substance that contributes to umami flavor, which is best described as meaty or savory. Umami is now widely accepted as the “fifth flavor,” flavor being the sensation that we perceive through the sensors on our tongues. You probably remember the diagram from elementary school: sweet, sour, salty, bitter—and now, umami. A perfect example of umami is the flavor of the meat juices on the bottom of a roasting pan. Other high-umami foods include aged cheeses, dried mushrooms, soy sauce, fish sauce, and nutritional yeast.

  Unlike most fruits and vegetables, tomatoes are quite high in glutamate—typically 246 milligrams per 100 grams (mg/100 g) for a fresh raw tomato, around 600 mg/100 g for a dried tomato, and 750 mg/100 g for tomato paste—and the riper the tomato, the higher the level of glutamate. For comparison with other high-glutamate foods, dried mushrooms clock in at around 350 mg/100 g, aged Spanish jamón has around 500 mg/100 g, Vietnamese fish sauce has 1,300 mg/100g, and 4-year-old Parmigiano (yum) has a whopping 2,200 mg/100 g.

  Glutamate isn’t the only compound that adds umami. Meat and fish contain an umami-providing nucleotide called inosinic acid, which, when combined with glutamates, intensifies the savory flavor.

  As I learn more about the interaction of glutamate-rich foods, I understand why dishes that create layers of umami from several of these ingredients are often my favorites. Tomato-Peach Salad with Lime-Ginger Dressing, which includes a dash of fish sauce, is a perfect example, as is Braised Beef Short Ribs with Tomato, Dried Porcini, and Red Wine, an umami triple threat of tomato paste, browned beef, and dried porcini.

  How This Book Is Organized

  Simply Tomato is divided into predictable—though slightly arbitrary—chapters, from snacks and drinks to pastries. (Sorry, no desserts.) I say “arbitrary” because I’ve got Susie’s Tomato and Zucchini Gratin in the side dish chapter, but I’ve enjoyed many a dinner eating that gratin as my main dish, and on a hot day, a bowl of ice-cold gazpacho—in the soups chapter—makes a fine main dish as well. Not to mention that a couple of G & T & Ts from the snacks and drinks chapter and a bag of potato chips constitute dinner in my house now and again. So if you don’t find what you’re looking for in one chapter, check the others or the index.

  In each recipe, I list the form of tomato that I consider ideal, but when another form would also be delicious, I list that along with any modifications you might need to make to adapt the recipe.

  My Thoughts on Recipes

  I have been developing and writing recipes for more than thirty years, both for my own dishes and for talented chefs, where my role as a co-writer is to translate their inspiring restaurant creations into something a home cook would be happy to make. But even after all this time, my point of view on recipe writing is still evolving. While parts of a recipe look like a formula—precise measurements (including metric!), temperatures, technical terms—a useful recipe is anything but formulaic. The variables involved in cooking are endlessly shifting, from shopping for ingredients to choosing equipment to regulating your cooktop . . . not to mention that I love cilantro and you don’t, and your idea of “mildly spicy” would have me reaching for the fire extinguisher.

  And, of course, most of what we’re cooking with is made by nature, with a wide range in how juicy, tender, stringy, bitter, spicy, and/or creamy your [fill in the blank] is.

  So rather than write my recipes striving for the strictest precision, I write them with plenty of descriptions, hints, tips, and guidance so that you have the knowledge you need to accommodate the differences between your life and mine. I try to imagine the hundreds of choices and decisions a cook will make, from doing the mise en place to adding the final seasoning to a dish, and I call out those moments of inflection so that you can pay special attention to them.

  Regardless of the ever-shifting variables in cooking, a few principles are constant. Please read the following guidelines so you can get the best possible outcome from the recipes in this book.

  Initial read-through: Please review the recipe before you start cooking. I know it’s tempting to jump into a recipe sauté pans ablaze, especially when you’re in a hurry, but ultimately you’ll save time and angst by reading through the whole thing first. Start with the ingredients list, where much of the prep work takes place. This is called mise en place, meaning “put in place.” You’ll not only put ingredients and equipment in place, but you’ll also wra ngle them into the form the recipe requires, such as diced, drained, toasted, etc.

  If a recipe entails a task that needs a big chunk of time, such as long cooling or overnight marinating, I signal that up front in the headnote so you don’t get an unpleasant surprise. Nonetheless, reading through the entire process lets you understand how the whole flow will go.

  Serving size: Honestly, what’s a serving size? Who is doing the eating? What else are they going to eat for that meal, or on that day? I calculate servings by averaging what I think I (as a human on the smaller side) and my boyfriend (a larger-model human) would want to eat. But if I say a pasta dish serves two or three and you eat all of it yourself, bravo for you.

  Burner temperature: I usually indicate whether your pan should be over low, medium, medium-high, or high heat, but these are relative terms. The heat coming from your burner when the dial is pointing to the middle—medium—may not be the same as mine.

  And the burner is only half the equation, because all pans conduct heat differently, liquids evaporate at differing rates depending on the shape of the pan, and the list goes on. All that to say, don’t obey my instructions to cook something on medium-high if it seems like your burner needs to be cranked up or down a notch in order to do what it’s supposed to do—brown, sizzle, sear, or simmer.

  Cooking time: One of the hardest things to quantify in cooking is how long to cook something. A familiar vignette in any cooking school is the student asking the chef “How long should I cook this?” and the chef responding “Until it’s done.” Annoying, yes, but true. I find that the best way to determine doneness is by describing what I’m looking for. Browned just around the edges or all over? Simmered until syrupy? In every recipe, I try to give the clues that let you know it’s time to do something—flip, take from the oven, add another ingredient—so while you should pay attention to the range of minutes I suggest (and set your timer), please use the cooking times as guidelines, not absolutes, and trust your senses.

  Tasting (or rather taste, adjust, taste again): I can’t tell you how critical tasting is to your success with any recipe, and tasting begins before you even turn on the stove. I start by tasting my raw ingredients in order to get a baseline sense of their flavors before I begin to cook (okay, not all of them . . . not tasting the baking powder). If I’ve opened a new bottle of olive oil, I’ll take a sip to see whether it’s grassy, sharp, or nutty. When using fresh herbs, I’ll nibble a leaf; sometimes basil can be kind of astringent, or maybe this bunch of cilantro has no flavor. I definitely always taste nuts, because they get rancid easily, and of course for the recipes in this book, I taste my tomatoes.

  As for seasoning, it’s impossible to prescribe exactly the right amount in a recipe, and more than impossible to know what you, the reader, prefer. Making the dish so that you like it, not me, is the goal . . . at least until you invite me over for dinner. My philosophy is that you should lightly season each component of a dish (the mirepoix, the braising liquid, the sauce, etc.) as it’s being created, and then dial in the seasoning for the entire dish when you are getting ready to serve it.

  Proper seasoning is sometimes overlooked in our haste to get things to the table (especially if kids or guests are milling about or the cook has been enjoying a glass of wine during cooking), but pausing and consciously tasting and adjusting seasonings is as much a part of cooking as is putting the chicken schnitzel in the skillet or adding the dressing to the salad. As you taste, think of what might make the balance of flavors better. I always want a tension between the leading flavors, some variation of salty, sweet, tangy, spicy, and umami (more about umami here). And you should know that I like my food quite salty (please read about the differences in salt brands here), I like a lot of acid in my food, and I can’t tolerate chile heat, so those are the default settings in my recipes. You should feel free to recalibrate to your own tastes.

  Storage time: If you aren’t familiar with a recipe, it’s helpful to know whether you should be reheating those leftovers the next day for lunch or whether you can wait a week and still enjoy the dish. In my recipes, I give an indication of how long a dish will keep well, but of course most fresh food doesn’t last long; use your common sense.

  Where storage times get murky is with freezing times. Once food is frozen, it’s not going to spoil in the way food left too long in the fridge will, so you don’t need to worry about food safety. However, frozen food isn’t totally inert, and the eating qualities will suffer after too much time in the freezer. I find that most dishes I freeze are excellent when thawed and eaten within 2 to 3 months, and I try to remember what’s in my freezer so I can work my way through it. That being said, I just ate a lamb tagine that had been in the freezer for a year, and it was mighty fine.

  The key is freezing your food properly, ideally at or below 0°F (–18°C). Food freezes faster in colder temperatures, and the faster it freezes, the smaller the ice crystals inside it will be. Large ice crystals can rupture the cell walls, making foods lose their juices or get soggy as they thaw. I have a very basic inexpensive freezer in my garage that works brilliantly. It’s not frost-free, which is a pain because once a year (um, maybe once every five years?), I need to defrost it. But when a freezer is self-defrosting, the temperature fluctuates, which is not good for your frozen casserole.

  And of course, you must wrap your food well so it’s protected from freezer burn, which happens when moisture that’s frozen in the food transforms into vapor, in a process called sublimation, a weird form of drying out. Freezer-burned food isn’t harmful, but the flavor and texture won’t be optimal. And we’re all about optimal flavor and texture.

  A Good Reason to Be Lazy and Not Seed Your Tomatoes

  So many recipes call for peeling and seeding tomatoes, mainly to eliminate the textural annoyance of curling bits of skin or seeds between your teeth. I rarely bother with either peeling or seeding because I’m lazy, er, focused on essentials, but here’s another reason to skip that step: the seeds and other interior parts of a tomato contain more of the key flavor compounds.

  British chef and innovator Heston Blumenthal wondered about precisely this question—to seed or not to seed—and partnered with some researchers at the University of Reading in the United Kingdom. Their studies, which involved measuring glutamic acid levels as well as conducting a tomato taste test, found that the inner parts of a tomato (the seeds and surrounding gel) contained about three times the glutamic acid of the outer flesh, and the tasting panel confirmed that the inner samples were tastier as well. At last, scientific validation for lazy cooks like me.

  Advice on Key Ingredients That Aren’t Tomatoes

  While the tomatoes are the stars of the show here, every ingredient you use contributes to the success of your dish, so I’m sharing some thoughts on a few key players that will make a big difference.

  Aleppo pepper: You’ll see this seasoning in many of my ingredient lists, and if you’re not yet familiar with this chile flake, I hope you’ll have the chance to make its acquaintance. Aleppo pepper comes originally from the region around the city of Aleppo in Syria, but the devastation of war has disrupted the supply. Now much of the crop is grown in Turkey, and some production has even begun in the United States. A few years ago, my boyfriend tracked down Aleppo pepper seeds (which are also called Halaby), and we have been growing our own plants, drying the peppers, and crushing them into a seasoning ever since.

  The appeal of Aleppo pepper to me is its mild heat level coupled with a fruity, yes, even tomatoey, flavor, reminiscent of sun-dried tomatoes . . . but with a kick. If you can’t find Aleppo pepper, you can use regular chile flakes or cayenne pepper (both of which are much hotter than Aleppo pepper), or perhaps another interesting ground chile such as piment d’Espelette from the Basque region of France.

  Butter: To the question “Should I use salted or unsalted butter?” my answer is “Yes.” Meaning I just don’t think it really matters which type you use unless the recipe calls for a large amount of butter, like more than 8 tablespoons (115 g)—or, of course, you are restricting your salt intake for a medical reason. As illustrated, the difference in the amount of salt found in 8 tablespoons unsalted butter and the equivalent amount of salted butter is not much more than 1 gram. A teaspoon of table salt weighs about 6 grams, so you can see that 1 gram either way won’t change the overall balance of your dish, especially one that will ultimately be “salted to taste.”

 

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