I really have never noticed any difference in tomato texture when peeling this way. The tomato is in the water for under 10 seconds. And immediately cooled in plain water until I’m ready to use it.
(Will someone point me to the “Nigel method” that is so time and energy consuming? Thanks.)
It was time consuming especially although it is not difficult if you have a method.
I processed. my tomatoes by coring, placing an x on the bottom, lowered into boiling water for a minute or less, then ice bath and skin just peel off. However, I feel that texture is fine without peeling and less watery . The extra work made my kitchen floor dirtier. Had to steam clean them today.
Anyway, I invited my new neighbors over for early dinner, used the tomato, the charred sweet pepper, also Also added bursting cherry tomatoes stir fried with EVOO , garlic and herbs, , caramelized onion and shishito peppers stir fried until they blistered, assembled on a puff pastry shell which I prebaked with 4 kinds of cheese and a quarter cup of mayonnaise on top. It was a hit!!! I am sorry I forgot to take picture as I had just met them for th e first time and did not want to explain why I am taking pictures. Also offered red wine but they declined.
meatn3
(equal opportunity eater in the NC Triangle)
717
That is the method I’ve always used for peeling tomatoes.I don’t recall feeling it was that time consuming. I didn’t feel it made the tomatoes watery - they drained in a fine mesh collander once removed from the ice bath & prior to peeling them.
I think the skin of the tomatoes available was tougher in the past. Todays tomatoes have tender enough skin that I seldom feel the need to peel them. Oddly enough, I find tough skin on cherry tomatoes much more often than on other varieties. There is no way I would skin a quantity of chery tomatoes!
Harters
(John Hartley - a culinary patriot eating & cooking in Northwest England)
719
Smoked haddock from the local smokehouse is going into kedgeree.
It’s originally an Anglo-Indian dish which found its way on to the middle/upper class British breakfast table in the 19th century. Now, of course, firmly a dinner dish.
Two dozen meatballs from a mix of ground chuck 80/20, sweet and hot sausage (taken out of their casings) fortified with Italian bread crumbs, eggs, garlic, onion powder, s&p. It was then roasted in the oven @375 degrees for 30 minutes and then into the pot of fresh cut up tomatoes (from my neighbor’s garden).
Sauce with lots of chopped garlic, red and yellow onion, fresh basil, oregano, turmeric, red pepper flakes S&P, rinds saved from my chunk of Parmigiano.
The meatballs are now cooking in the sauce and will probably be WFD tonight.
I really do like roasting the meatballs in the oven first, and you can see from the picture most of the bad fat is cooked off and captured, eliminating it from the sauce.
that is a large quantity to process. True, my home grown tomatoes skin are very thin but I find that if I drop them in ice bath, the skinning has to be almost immediately as if I wait , they are more difficult to slip off. It was really messy as I found the tiles wet and had to steam them . I will not go thru that process again.
I love tomato pie. Another idea is to coat the bottom of the crust with a strong French mustard. If you like mustard, it adds a really nice taste.
2 Likes
Harters
(John Hartley - a culinary patriot eating & cooking in Northwest England)
725
I often use a little turmeric as a sub for saffron when I’m looking more for colour than flavour. In Spain, you can buy little sachets of powdered corn that does the same colouring job at a fraction of the price. Must get some more next trip.
I am not much a mustard , have 2 jars, a grey poupon and a Maile’s grain mustard. They are only there if guest wants it. I found the technique of lacing cheese and laying over the crust, baking it for a few minutes helps with a soggy crust. The puff pastry sheet that I used yesterday turned out great. I precooked the puff pastry sheets at 400 deg with some pie crust marble for 20 minutes, took it out, laid some cheese and back to oven for 5 minutes, let it cool and assembled my tomatoes etc. The crust was not soggy at all!