Fave. Cherry Tomato dish of the mo. Take out center and place tightly tog. in

joanie

Well-known member
a dish the size needed. Insert a wee bit of thyme into holes, dab some squished garlic here and there, drizzle with evoo, salt with a grind of kosher and splash with a bit of vodka.

Sprinkle with homemade left over baguette bread crumbs and bake.

Using up the garden flush of cherry tomatoes, so scrummy.

 
OY! It's the first day of spring.....

and it's colder outside than it's been most of the winter.
It's killing me to see that you are eating garden tomatoes when I can't even think of planting stuff outdoors for 2 more months.

 
Judy, you should feel blessed. I can't plant anything outdoors for...

3 more months!

 
That's just what I was thinking and grumbling about. It worries me that all these

birds have flown north and have no nests (if they built them in a day, they blew down in the 90 K winds). At least the ducks are happy now that there is no ice on the pool.

when will it arrive, really!!??

 
BUT...while it's almost summer here in Florida and we have delicous tomatoes, eggplant, etc...

when July and August roll around, you will be enjoying all those lovely things and here it is doomsville with nothing available that hasn't been shipped in and is all shriveled and tasteless. I always feel left out of the loop. For instance, I had a black bean and corn salad yesterday with really delicious fresh corn. In July when you have corn, I will be without. Just the way it is, I guess. Many of my herbs (arugula, cilantro) are already bolting or otherwise objecting to the heat.

 
Rec: Eggplant & Tomato Gratin with Mint, Feta & Kalamata Olives...Speaking of which, this is...

just wonderful. I had it as a main dish last week, but next time will serve it as a side for grilled lamb chops, a perfect match. It's from Fine Cooking Magazine.

Eggplant & Tomato Gratin with Mint, Feta & Kalamata Olives

I like to leave eggplant unpeeled, as the purple skins make for a pretty gratin, but since eggplant skin can get a little tough, I've included a suggestion on how to partially peel eggplant, culled from Ayla Algar's terrific cookbook, Classical Turkish Cooking (HarperCollins). For a change of pace, try this gratin in four individual dishes, rather than one large one.
Serves six to eight as a side dish; four as a main dish.

FOR THE EGGPLANT:

2 lb. eggplant

2-1/2 Tbs. olive oil

1/2 tsp. coarse salt

FOR THE ONIONS:

2 Tbs. olive oil

2 medium onions (14 oz. total), thinly sliced

2 cloves garlic, minced

TO ASSEMBLE THE GRATIN:

1-1/4 lb. ripe red tomatoes, cored and cut into 1/4-inch slices

1/4 cup plus 1 Tbs. chopped fresh mint

6 oz. (1 cup) crumbled feta cheese

1/3 cup pitted and quartered kalamata olives

Coarse salt

Freshly ground black pepper to taste

1-1/2 Tbs. olive oil

1/3 cup fresh breadcrumbs mixed thoroughly with 1 tsp. olive oil and 1/3 cup chopped toasted pine nuts

To cut and cook the eggplant -- Trim the ends from the eggplant and, using a vegetable peeler, peel off 1/2-inch strips of skin along the length of the eggplant every 1/2 inch or so. (Or leave the eggplant unpeeled, if you like.) Cut the eggplant crosswise into 3/8-inch slices and cut the widest slices in half.

Heat the oven to 450°F. Cover two baking sheets with parchment. Lightly brush the parchment with olive oil. Arrange the eggplant slices in one layer on the parchment, brush them with the remaining oil, and season with the 1/2 tsp. salt. Roast until the slices are lightly browned and somewhat shrunken, 25 min., rotating the pans once after 12 min. Let cool. Reduce the oven temperature to 375°F.

To cook the onions -- In a medium skillet, heat the olive oil over medium heat. Add the onions and sauté, stirring frequently, until limp and golden brown, about 20 min. Reduce the heat to medium-low if they're browning too quickly. Add the garlic and sauté until soft and fragrant, 1 to 2 min. Spread the onions and garlic evenly in the bottom of an oiled 2-qt. shallow gratin dish (preferably oval). Let cool.

To assemble the gratin -- Put the tomato slices on a shallow plate to drain for a few minutes and then discard the collected juices. Sprinkle 1 Tbs. of the mint over the onions. Starting at one end of the baking dish, lay a row of slightly overlapping tomato slices across the width of the dish; sprinkle with some of the mint and some of the feta. Next, lay a row of eggplant slices against the tomatoes (overlapping the first row by two-thirds). Sprinkle again with mint and feta. Repeat with alternating rows of tomato and eggplant slices, seasoning each as you go, and occasionally pushing the rows back. Tuck the quartered kalamata olives randomly between tomato and eggplant slices.

When the gratin is full, sprinkle the vegetables with about 1/2 tsp. salt and any remaining mint and feta. Season lightly with pepper, drizzle with the olive oil, and cover with the breadcrumb and pine nut mixture. Cook until well-browned all over and the juices have bubbled for a while and reduced considerably, 65 to 70 min. Let cool for at least 15 min. before serving.

Edited to add the link for the whole article on veggie gratins

http://www.taunton.com/finecooking/pages/c00017.asp

 
I feel the same Curious...and the arugula is showing signs.....

of bolting so I pulled that one up and low and behold about 6 other plants just suddenly wilted overnight...I am going to plant out more in a bed I'm just finishing and some more tomato seedlings too, hope I have luck with these and they extend the season for a bit longer.
Ar least the basil goes on all year.
Great sounding recipe, thanks for posting.

 
Curious, this recipe sounds fantastic!

I'll save it for when I do have fresh garden tomatoes.
I suppose we all have our complaints about what we can and can't do in our respective climates. All in all, I do like New England. I'm just winter-weary....*sigh*

 
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