I don’t want to complain abut the tremendous tomato season I’ve
enjoyed, especially after I’ve been cursed with some pretty meager harvests in
recent years, but I’ve been running out of things to do with this bounty. I’ve canned sauce, frozen sauce,
roasted tomatoes, made soup, tomato pies, caprese salads, panzanella., eaten plenty
of tomato sandwiches. Need I go on?
But they’re still coming!
And me, out of ideas – not to mention time and space. And I hate
to waste all this good stuff. My sister
told me about a tomato bacon jam that sounds too irresistible to pass up and I’ve
been tempted by some very interesting drink recipes but the
first thing that intrigued me as I searched for something new was this Tomato
Granita. Only three ingredients and a
bit of time and attention. Imagine!
Frozen tomato slush!
The recipe comes from a book called The Essential Mediterranean, by Nancy Harmon Jenkins, who wrote the Mediterranean Diet
Cookbook.
This book has off and on been great bedside reading because it’s not just recipes (although I can read recipes just like fiction) but great descriptions of the intimate connection of food and culture that have so colored the countries that surround the Mediterranean– how the same ingredients take on new forms and taste as they make their way around the sea.
This book has off and on been great bedside reading because it’s not just recipes (although I can read recipes just like fiction) but great descriptions of the intimate connection of food and culture that have so colored the countries that surround the Mediterranean– how the same ingredients take on new forms and taste as they make their way around the sea.
The name of this dish sounds so pretty in Italian – Granita di
Pomodoro. (Much better than tomato
slush.)
The author says that this dish "makes an elegant entremet for a dinner party . . . or a startling but delicious dessert." I had to run straight to Wikipedia to look up entremet. It just means something served between courses, what I grew up calling "palate cleanser," which was usually some kind of sherbet.
For me, the granita was just a pretty tasty treat. And it was just for me. Mr. Rosemary loves tomato sauce and will eat cooked tomatoes, but not fresh. Me? I can eat them like apples. And have.
Because it has both chili pepper and corn syrup in it, it's a mix of spicy and sweet. And the chunky cold texture of the granita somehow enhances both the spiciness and sweetness.
And when you have pretty much just tomatoes in a recipe, they have to be nearly perfect and very ripe tomatoes. The recipe specified romas -- and I had plenty -- but says any fresh red ripe tomato will do nicely. My trouble was finding a substitute for chili pepper.
Nancy Harmon Jenkins advises that you want the flavor of a chili but not the mouth burning qualities of some Mexican or Caribbean types. So I had some dried peppers I'd ground myself and used them but they weren't well-labeled so I can't tell you for sure what they were.
My bottom line? A great experiment but probably not something I'll likely make again. If I ever host a really fancy dinner party and need an entremet, however, this is the one I would make.
Tomato Granita
from The Essential Mediterranean, by Nancy Harmon Jenkins
Makes 8-10 servings as an entremet, 6 as a dessert
1 1/2 pounds very red ripe tomatoes, peeled
1 tablespoon fragrant ground chili pepper
1/4 cup light corn syrup
The day before making, halve the tomatoes and gently squeeze out the seeds and excess liquid. Coarsely chop and store, covered in the fridge overnight.
The next day, combine the tomatoes and the chili pepper in a food processor and process in brief spurts, adding the corn syrup as you do. Don't make a puree; you want a chunky mixture.
If you have an ice cream maker, follow the manufacturer's instructions for sorbets and granitas. Or turn the mixture into a stainless steel bowl, cover well, and freeze. Every 20 minutes or so, stir the mixture with a fork. Within an hour or two, you'll have the granular ice chucks typical of a granita. (I used this second method.)
Because it has both chili pepper and corn syrup in it, it's a mix of spicy and sweet. And the chunky cold texture of the granita somehow enhances both the spiciness and sweetness.
And when you have pretty much just tomatoes in a recipe, they have to be nearly perfect and very ripe tomatoes. The recipe specified romas -- and I had plenty -- but says any fresh red ripe tomato will do nicely. My trouble was finding a substitute for chili pepper.
Nancy Harmon Jenkins advises that you want the flavor of a chili but not the mouth burning qualities of some Mexican or Caribbean types. So I had some dried peppers I'd ground myself and used them but they weren't well-labeled so I can't tell you for sure what they were.
My bottom line? A great experiment but probably not something I'll likely make again. If I ever host a really fancy dinner party and need an entremet, however, this is the one I would make.
Tomato Granita
from The Essential Mediterranean, by Nancy Harmon Jenkins
Makes 8-10 servings as an entremet, 6 as a dessert
1 1/2 pounds very red ripe tomatoes, peeled
1 tablespoon fragrant ground chili pepper
1/4 cup light corn syrup
The day before making, halve the tomatoes and gently squeeze out the seeds and excess liquid. Coarsely chop and store, covered in the fridge overnight.
The next day, combine the tomatoes and the chili pepper in a food processor and process in brief spurts, adding the corn syrup as you do. Don't make a puree; you want a chunky mixture.
If you have an ice cream maker, follow the manufacturer's instructions for sorbets and granitas. Or turn the mixture into a stainless steel bowl, cover well, and freeze. Every 20 minutes or so, stir the mixture with a fork. Within an hour or two, you'll have the granular ice chucks typical of a granita. (I used this second method.)