Recipes with Julie Van Rosendaal: How to make the most of your tomatoes - Action News
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Recipes with Julie Van Rosendaal: How to make the most of your tomatoes

Its tomato season, and whether you grow them or not, you might find yourself with a surplus. Here are some ideas for how you can use them.

Try a vegetable curry, a tomato galette or some tomato-y baked beans

A freestyle galette is easy, and it's a great way to use tomatoes at their peak. (Julie Van Rosendaal)

It's tomato season, and whether you grow them or not, you might find yourself with a surplus (if they're still green, you can speed up the ripening by storing them close to a few bananas, which gives off more ethylene gas than most fruit).

What to do with them all, especially those that are quickly going squishy?

We spoke about a few ways you can use tomatoes on the Calgary Eyeopener this week.

If you don't have time to cook them right away, toss them directly into the freezer, whole. This also makes them easier to peel, as the fruit swells and splits its skin, so you can peel it away with your fingers.

Many stews and braises call for a small amount of tomato (often a spoonful of tomato paste) for sweetness and acidity, and often you can just throw a whole tomato or two into the pot, straight from the freezer, to break down and do its thing.

If you're not into making vast quantities of salsa or tomato sauce, you can roast them by the sheet (roasted tomatoes are great in sandwiches or on pizza, they won't get soggy). But one of my favourite things to do is melt them on the stovetop, or in the oven if it happens to be on.

You can mix tomatoes with a number of tasty ingredients, such as fresh basil, balsamic vinegar, crushed olives or goat cheese. (Julie Van Rosendaal)

To do this, roughly chop as many tomatoes as you want to cook (don't bother peeling them). Put them into a skillet with a drizzle of oil (butter is delicious, too) and sprinkle them generously with salt.

Cook over medium-high heat until they start to break down. They'll look like they're melting.

Add some garlicor chilies or spices. Cook them for as long as you like they condense and intensify in flavour.

Melted tomatoes freeze well, keep in the fridge for awhile and can be tossed with pasta or used to start a quick curry.

And, of course, there are so many dishes around the world in which eggs are simmered intomatoes: shakshuka, piprade, eggs in purgatory. Youmake nests in the tomato mixture and crack eggs right intothe skillet to poach.

Add some crumbled feta or goat cheese, if you like. Tomatoes are delicious with either. Or serve melted tomatoes with a whole burrataor some warmed fontina or brie.

Other tasty additions: fresh basil, a splash of balsamic vinegar or something briny, like crushed olives or a spoonful of capers.

A Big Veggie Curry

A big pot of vegetable curry is a great way to use up leftover vegetables in the fridge. (Julie Van Rosendaal)

I freestyle big curries all the timeusing whatever is in the fridge. I never measure when I make this curry. You don't need to either.

You cook by sight and feel, using whatever veggies need to be used, and tomatoes in any form:fresh, frozen, canned, jarred,even salsa is great.

Ingredients

  • vegetable oil or ghee, for cooking
  • mustard seed
  • cumin seed
  • chopped onion
  • chopped jalapeo
  • crushed garlic
  • salt
  • turmeric
  • ground cumin
  • coriander (optional)
  • chopped cilantro (optional)
  • tomatoes in any form: fresh, frozen, canned, jarred,even salsaor cooked veggies (I like roasting things like cauliflower floretsfor flavour)
  • cooked or canned (drained) lentils or chickpeas (optional)
  • a handful of baby spinach or torn chard or kale (optional)
  • sour cream, yogurt, whipping cream or coconut milk

Set a large skillet over medium-high heat, add a drizzle of oil (or ghee) and warm some mustard seed and cumin seed for just a minute, until they start to turn fragrant and perhaps pop a bit.

Add some onion (if you like!), jalapeo and garlic and cook for a few minutes, sprinkling with salt, until soft.

Add a spoonful of turmeric and a shake of cumin and coriander, and some chopped cilantro stems if you like.

Cook for another minute or two, then add your tomatoes and cook them down until very soft and concentrated (you may need to add more oil or ghee).

Stir in any veggies and pulses you like, and cook to either heat through or cook the veggies, if they need it.

Add more water if you need to, so you can keep cooking it without it getting too thick (cover if you don't want excess moisture to evaporate).

Tearin some greens, if you like, and stir just until they wilt into the warm mixture.

Stir in or swirl in some sour cream, yogurt, cream or coconut milk, if you like.

Tomato Galette

A tomato galette just before it gets crisped up in the oven. (Julie Van Rosendaal)

A freestyle galette is easyand a great way to use tomatoes at their peak. There are so many ways to make it with some pesto or other flavourful condiment (even thick dips, like spinach andartichoke!) spread over the crust, or a layer of paper-thin lemonsor caramelized onions.

You can add cheese crumbled or grated in any quantity, or herbs from your garden.

If you like, top your galette with crispy capers: pat a spoonful of capers dry and fry in a small skillet with enough oil to barely cover them, until they turn crisp and open up a bit.

Top with the capers just before serving, and drizzle the tart with a bit of the caper-y oil too, if you like.

Ingredients:

  • pkg puff pastry, thawed

Filling:

  • pesto, olive tapenade or garlicky olive oil (optional)
  • enough tomatoes, of all colours and sizes, to slice and cover your tart
  • sliced brie, crumbled soft goat cheese or Boursin, gratedparmesan or really any other cheese(s) you like
  • salt and freshly ground pepper
  • a small handful of fresh herbs or a few chopped chives (optional)
  • 1 egg, lightly beaten, or milk or cream, for brushing (optional)

Preheat the oven to 375 F. On a lightly floured surface (or on a silpat baking mat, if you have one) roll the thawed pastry out thin, about 1/8-inch thick. It can be a circle, oval, square,whatever. Transfer to a baking sheet.

Poke the bottom a bunch of times with a fork to prevent it from puffing up in the oven.

If you like, spread a thin layer of pesto or tapenade over the bottom, or brush it with garlicky oil (put some olive oil into a ramekin and crush in a garlic clove), or crumble over some soft cheese.

Slice the tomatoes about -inch thick and lay them in a single layer, overlapping slightly, leaving about an inch of pastry around the edge.

Fill in the gaps with cheese or small cherry or grape tomatoes, whole or halved.

Grate over some firmer cheese (like parmesan) if you like, and drizzle with a bit more olive oil (or the garlicky oil).

Fold the edge of the pastry over and, if you like, brush with a little beaten egg, milk or cream.

Bake for 15-20 minutes, or until deep golden.

Serves: 4.

Tomato-y Baked Beans

You can soak the beans for this dish beforehand to jump-start the hydration process, but if you don't, starting from dry will add only about 15 minutes to your cooking time. (Julie Van Rosendaal)

Braised beans are the new baked beans. Simmered until tender, then given a tomato-y boost (acid can prevent dry beans from softening, so tomato sauce is added after they're cooked) and if you like, broiled with a cheesy lid.

There are plenty of ways you can go aboutthis: stir some cooked, chunky pasta or gnocchi into the beans before topping with cheese and baking, or simmer a few sausages in the cooked beans add them along with the tomato sauce, or roast or grill them and tuck them in after for a sort of streamlined cassoulet.

Ingredients

  • 1 cup dry butter beans (also known as baby lima beans) or navy beans
  • 1 garlic clove, peeled
  • 1 sprig rosemary or thyme
  • 1-2 bay leaves
  • pinch red chili flakes
  • salt, to taste
  • olive oil
  • 1 cup chopped tomatoes, tomato sauce or pure
  • grated or torn mozzarella or parmesan or other melty cheese (optional)

If you want to, soak the beans in plenty of water for a few hours, or overnight this will jump start the hydration process, but is unnecessary starting from dry will only add about 15 minutes to your cooking time, and you may in fact find your beans hold their shape a bit betterand won't split.

If you've soaked them, pour off their soaking liquid and put the dry or soaked beans into a medium pot or Dutch oven with about fourcups of water.

Add the garlic, rosemary, bay leaves, chili flakes and a big pinch of salt, add a drizzle of olive oil and cook over medium heat for about 1hours, or until the beans are tender.

Add more water (or stock, if you have some) as necessary if it reduces too much as the beans cook.

When the beans are tender, add some tomato paste or pure and cook until the liquid reduces and thickens.

Remove the rosemary and bay leaves, adjust the salt if needed and serve with crusty bread.

If you like, grate some mozzarella and/or parmesan (or other melty cheese) overtop and run it under the broiler until golden.

Serves: 4