Contact Us

Use the form on the right to contact us.

You can edit the text in this area, and change where the contact form on the right submits to, by entering edit mode using the modes on the bottom right. 

         

123 Street Avenue, City Town, 99999

(123) 555-6789

email@address.com

 

You can set your address, phone number, email and site description in the settings tab.
Link to read me page with more information.

Roast cherry tomatoes for intense flavor

All Recipes

Roast cherry tomatoes for intense flavor

Pallas Erdrich

5gard0511.1.jpg

We expect a lot of our garden tomatoes. Too much, I think. I grew up in New Jersey, home of the robust, red “Jersey Tom,” so I can say with some authority that Minnesota tomatoes are, well, OK. Given this year’s cooler temperatures, they aren’t getting the heat and humidity that tomatoes require to cultivate the fruit’s deeply rich flavor.

It’s the smaller, less ambitious cherry tomatoes that have earned my summer love. Reliable and productive, the cherry varieties have ripened beautifully this year, to be firm and snappy sweet-tart. They’re flourishing in pots right outside my kitchen door, which makes them easy to move to be assured of plenty of sun. Not so incidentally, when ripe, they are within easy reach.

The cherry tomato varieties I am growing are the Sun Gold, Gardeners Delight and Yellow Pear, along with those blackish-brown small tomatoes that are a mini-version of Russian Blacks. These all make quick snacks for dips and are perfect for tossing into salads, pastas and sautés. There’s no need to skin or seed these tomatoes. In fact, much of the flavor resides in the gel that surrounds the seeds. The skins, though firm, are not worth the time and mess it takes to remove them.

Tomato flavor intensifies with the heat of the oven. While cherry tomatoes are fabulous fresh, their flavors are even brighter when roasted, as all the sweet-sharpness comes to the fore. When I have a big batch, I roast them all at once to top pizza and burgers later.

The best advice I ever received regarding fresh tomatoes (and many other things, for that matter) was from Mrs. Delliapiazza, who grew Jersey Toms in her garden and stored them in a big basket on her wooden cutting board.

“Never, ever put a tomato in the refrigerator,” she said. “Or basil, for that matter. They’re like me. They hate the cold.”

Mette Nielsen

Mette Nielsen

Roasted Cherry Tomato Salad

Serves 4.

Note: This recipe is perfect for when you have too many cherry tomatoes. If you have a bumper crop, roast up a double amount and store in a glass jar, covered, in the refrigerator. Serve them on sandwiches, on top of grilled steak or chicken, and to top pizza. Cherry tomatoes roast beautifully; their skins wrinkle and shrink while the pulp collapses, releasing the tomato juices that mix with the oil for a fabulous dressing. From Beth Dooley.

• 3 c. mixed cherry tomatoes

• 1 shallot minced

• 2 tbsp. extra-virgin olive oil

• Coarse salt

• 1/2 lb. fresh mozzarella, cut into 1/4-in. pieces, optional

• 2 tbsp. balsamic vinegar

• 1/4 c. sliced fresh basil

• Salt and pepper to taste

Directions

Preheat the oven to 400 degrees. Toss the tomatoes and shallot with the olive oil and sprinkle with 2 pinches of the coarse salt.

Spread the tomatoes on a baking sheet and roast until wrinkled and starting to char, about 40 minutes, shaking the pan periodically so the tomatoes cook evenly.

Remove the tomatoes from the oven and while they’re still hot, gently transfer to a bowl. Add the mozzarella, if using, and gently toss in the balsamic vinegar and basil. Season with salt and pepper to taste.

Nutrition information per serving:

Calories 256 Fat 21 g Sodium 240 mg Saturated fat 9 g

Carbohydrates 8 g Calcium 223 mg

Protein 13 g Cholesterol 40 mg Dietary fiber 2 g

Diabetic exchanges per serving: 1 vegetable, 1½ high-fat meat, 2 fat.

originally published by The Star Tribune