January 15, 2016

PRESERVED ROAST TOMATOES (forgotten cakes and bakes of 2015)

preserved roast tomatoes

We did phenomenally well for tomatoes last year.  We planted a few tomato plants at the top of the garden in May, watered them a couple of times then more or less ignored them for the rest of the summer.  We harvested our first tomato on 1st July and they just kept on coming. 

preserved roast tomatoes2

Keeping up with the supply of tomatoes and thinking of ways of using them proved to be a challenge.  It seemed wrong to waste any so I made and froze tomato sauce, tomato soup and just plain chopped tomatoes. 

Round at a friend’s house for apéros one evening she served her own herby roast tomatoes in olive oil, simply squashed onto a thin slice of baguette.  They were delicious.  This made me think I should have a go at something similar myself.

preserved roast tomatoes3

preserved roast tomatoes4

I used this recipe on the BBC Good Food website as a guide, but it’s so easy that a recipe is hardly necessary.

preserved roast tomatoes5

preserved roast tomatoes6

Once the roasted tomatoes were cool, I packed them tightly into Le Parfait jars, pouring olive oil on the layers to make sure there were no air gaps.  Writing this five months after they were first bottled, I can confirm that they have kept perfectly well in the fridge for several months, although the oil does solidify and it’s a good idea to use up the contents in a few days once the jar is open. 

The tomatoes have many uses, in salads, soups, casseroles and so on, but are delicious just squashed onto a slice of fresh or toasted baguette.

Ingredients

freshly picked cherry or medium sized tomatoes

fresh or dried herbs, eg thyme and basil

a handful of garlic cloves

olive oil

balsamic vinegar

salt and pepper

Method

Preheat the oven to 160°C / 140° fan.

Cut each larger tomato in half and lay cut side up on baking trays.  The cherry tomatoes can be left whole.  Tuck in a few cloves of garlic and sprigs of thyme or basil leaves, or sprinkle lightly with dried herbs.  Drizzle liberally with balsamic and olive oil and season with salt and pepper.

Bake in the oven for an hour, then turn off the oven and leave the trays in until the tomatoes are cool.

Pack into jars in tight layers, covering with oil to avoid any air bubbles.  Fill the jars right to the top, leaving a layer of oil on the top.  Keep in the fridge.  Keeps for up to six months but use within a week or so once the jar is opened.

5 comments:

  1. Slow roasted tomatoes are great, and a really good trick to make late season or cheap supermarket not quite ripe toms taste great, as well as a way of using up a glut at the height of the season. I would drop the temperature a bit and double or triple the time in the oven btw. A pinch of sugar can be a good idea too if the tomatoes are not fully ripe.

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    1. Susan, I will remember that tip about the sugar, thanks.

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  2. They look delicious, and a great way to make the bland supermarket tomatoes taste better, as Susan said.

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  3. Delish - I could eat vast amounts of these little treats. I love a taste of summer like this. I've a friend in the south of France who always has far too many tomatoes to eat at the end of the season and I've tried to persuade him to preserve some in a similar way to this but he makes LOTS of tomato sauce and fills the freezer with it. I believe he bought a second freezer last autumn and that's not a good sign.

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    Replies
    1. Phil, there's only so much tomato sauce a person can use I think. These won't keep as long as anything frozen but they are worth doing.

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