Cortez's wolfpeaches were probably a bit like the cherry tomatoes I pick every day -- small in size but tasting exactly like what they are -- little drops of sunlight and rain perfectly ripened on the vine. I've been using them to make salsa, pasta, and most recently panzanella (Tuscan bread salad). It's probably one of my favorite things. It was a big hit at our weekly dinner party and I promised I'd share the recipe, so here it is:
2 C cherry tomatoes, halved (or regular tomatoes, diced)
1 large cucumber, sliced (I used two cute little ones from my garden)
2 day-old baguettes, cut into bite-sized pieces. Or, you can use fresh baguettes, cubed and toasted in the oven at 400 degrees until slightly crisp.
1 small red onion, sliced thin
1 C basil leaves, chopped
1/4 C grated parmesan
Dressing:
Balsamic Vinegar
Olive oil
Sugar
Salt & Pepper
Toss all the salad ingredients together with the dressing until well-mixed. Serve at room temperature.
One of my mistakes that annoys me most is that I didn't grow a good, high-yielding, standard-sized tomato. I love the flavor and instant gratification of my cherry tomatoes, but their scope of use is pretty narrow. The same qualities that make them so delicious for eating fresh make them unsuitable for sauce or preserves - being composed mostly of juice and seeds, there wouldn't be much left of them after skinning, coring, and boiling them down. The romas I'm growing are great for sauce, but not much else. They are so dry and mealy the idea of trying to eat one fresh is actually pretty gross. And, Brandywine tomatoes are unmatched for flavor, but they are low-yielding, difficult to pick, and split if left too long on the vine. Purple Russian was pretty useless all-around, though the few that I did get to eat were tasty, juicy, and had a very interesting purple/forest green color that I've never seen in another tomato.
- "Crack Resistant" is a very good quality to look for, lest you be stuck with five 1-pound tomatoes that are rapidly splitting and oozing all over your hands as you're trying to pluck them from the vine. On the plus side, many surprise spaghetti dinners have started this way.
- Earliness is a nice thing in our short-season climate, but when you get a picture-perfect summer like we had, slow-maturing tomatoes are supposed to be of better quality.
- Heirlooms are great, but there's a good reason hybrids exist: they mature faster, produce more uniform fruits, have greater disease resistance, etc. etc.
- You probably don't need more than one cherry tomato plant in a small garden.
So that's my two cents. Oh, and after an entire summer cooking with tomatoes I've decided my favorite way to eat them is still like this: cut tomatoes and some good mozzarella into quarter-inch slices. Layer with fresh basil leaves on a pretty plate and sprinkle with sea salt and fresh pepper. Enjoy these marvels of selective breeding and think of that brave 16th century dude who dared to eat the first wolf peach!
No comments:
Post a Comment