Ronnie's Notes
Tomatoes have had a love-me, love-me-not sort of history. Thousands of years ago the fruit grew wild in its native Peru, where no one gave it much notice. It was some time before the Aztecs, in what is now present-day Mexico, tamed the plant, and named it too: tomatl.
Generations later the conquistadors took tomato seeds back home to Spain. The fruit was greeted with enthusiasm by the Spanish (Italians too) but rejected in England and throughout much of the rest of Europe. There was talk that tomatoes were poisonous. The plants were pretty enough, so they were grown for ornamental purposes. But in gardens throughout the continent, the red ripe fruit withered on the wine.
Who could have predicted the love affair the world has with tomatoes today? It is the most popular of all fruits, ahead of bananas and apples. Yes, as a botanical matter the tomato is a fruit, although we eat it with entrees and savory foods, and even the United States Supreme Court has weighed in on the matter, declaring, for trade purposes, that the tomato is a vegetable.
A good tomato is a gift for home cooks. How fortunate we are now, during August, when local farm and garden tomatoes hang heavy on the vine, red, ripe and ready for the kitchen! Juicy ones, firm, but tender. Fragrant ones releasing their musty perfume. Thin-skinned and even ugly, but tasting of sun and summer. What a far cry from the pale anemic, cottony-texture tomatoes of cold winter months, with their too-perfectly rounded shapes and too-thick skins.
There’s so much we can do with a ripe tomato. Eat it out of hand, sprinkled with a hint of kosher salt. Chop it up with fresh basil and a bit of garlic, then spoon it onto garlic toasts, a fine Bruschetta! Slice one and serve it with fresh mozzarella cheese, drizzled with extra-virgin olive oil. All simple pleasures.
Or make a quick salsa to enhance a burger; all you need is a chopped tomato paired with scallions or some chopped sweet onion and a sprinkling of chopped fresh herbs (oregano, dill, thyme, basil, marjoram). You could add hot chile peppers if you wish.
Or, tuck some chopped tomato and crumbled feta cheese into an omelet or frittata.
Or create a salad: combine chopped tomatoes with chunks of avocado and olives and dress the ingredients with olive oil and lime juice. Or mix chopped tomatoes with diced fresh cucumber and chopped red onion to make an Israeli salad – chick peas, olives or feta cheese would make delicious additions.
None of these needs much preparation or cooking.
If you have a garden or live near a farmer’s market and see baskets of tomatoes on sale, as you’re apt to do at the end of the month, or your neighbor comes by with extras as gifts, and you find yourself almost overloaded with the fruit, there are fabulous recipes for these as well. Prepare a fresh sauce for pasta. Or a potful of ratatouille to serve with fish for dinner. You could even make your own ketchup, an especially fun-filled treat for cooking with children. Try the three recipes here. Included are instructions on how to peel tomatoes (see the recipe for Fresh Tomato Sauce).
Instructions
Heat a large pot of water.
When it comes to a boil, add the tomatoes.
Cook for .
Drain the tomatoes under cold water.
Pierce the tomato near the stem end with the tip of a sharp knife and pull back to remove the skin.
Cut the tomatoes in half crosswise and squeeze out the seeds.
Chop the tomatoes into small pieces and set aside.
Cook the bacon in a large saucepan over medium heat.
When it has crisped, remove the bacon, crumble the meat and set it aside.
Discard all but 2-3 tablespoons of bacon fat from the pan.
Add the olive oil to the pan.
Add the onion and mushrooms and cook over medium heat for or until softened.
Add the garlic and cook briefly.
Add the tomatoes, basil and salt and pepper to taste.
Cook over low-medium heat, stirring occasionally, for , or until it has reached the desired consistency.
Return the bacon crumbles to the pan and heat through for a minute or so.
Makes enough for one pound of pasta (about 3 cups)