Category Archives: tomatoes
Spiced Meatballs and Tomato Crostini {CtBF}
This week’s recipe for Cook the Book Fridays is Spiced Meatballs with Sriracha Sauce. The meatballs are made from a highly-spiced mixture supposedly similar to merguez sausage. I don’t think I’ve ever had merguez so can’t compare. When I described the recipe to my sister Jane, she said “It sounds like it uses everything in the pantry!”
It didn’t need everything in the pantry, but the ingredient list is long indeed. Coriander seeds, fennel seeds, cumin seeds, paprika, cinnamon, allspice, and sumac from the pantry plus garlic, cilantro, and Sriracha. All these seasonings are mixed together with ground meat. I opted to use ground lamb. We had a beef-heavy week, and my palette longed for something different.
This recipe is intended as an appetizer, but I decided to turn it into a meal. For carefree cooking, I ended up baking the meatballs while I prepared the rest of the menu. The North African meatballs with the two sauces were delicious with couscous and sautéed greens on the side. All the different flavors came through. The meatballs were moist and complex with a bit of a kick, but not too spicy.
I thought the Sriracha sauce might be too spicy for Howard so I also made the Yogurt-Tahini Sauce. I don’t know whether this is true at all grocery stores, but when I tried to buy a small (individual) sized tub of plain yogurt, I discovered that the yogurt section at my local store is at least 90% Greek yogurt. Any available tubs of the thinner “regular” (non-Greek) yogurt I was trying to buy were fruit-flavored. No worries: Greek yogurt works just fine. And, much to my surprise, Howard preferred the Sriracha sauce while I was on Team Yogurt-Tahini Sauce.
I was away the week of our last CtBF post. Howard and I spent a fun-filled week in Québec. We enjoyed wandering in both Montreal and Quebec City. The food we ate everywhere, highbrow and low, was amazing. In Quebec City, we ate at Restauarant Toast! whose tagline is the name of my blog, in French!
I didn’t get a chance to make the Cherry Tomato Crostini with Herbed Cheese until after our return. I’m sorry that I procrastinated. I loved every part of the crostini, separately and together.
For the herbed cheese, I already had Greek yogurt (cow’s milk) so I didn’t bother to seek out goat’s milk yogurt. And I skipped the straining step since the Greek yogurt has already been strained. The yogurt is flavored with garlic and assorted fresh herbs which is a delicious spread, not only on the crostinis, but also alone on crackers.
The cherry tomato topping was also fabulous. My cherry tomato has been slow to ripen, but I found a colorful assortment at a local farm. The sweetness of the cherry tomatoes concentrated during roasting and melded with the fragrant herb sprigs for a meltingly wonderful mélange.
Toasted rustic bread (I used ciabatta) is the base for a layer of herby cheese crowned with roasted cherry tomatoes. It’s summer on toast.
I liked the topping so much that I have plans this weekend to make another batch for a savory tart. Can’t wait.
Click these links, if you’d like to read about others’ experiences with spiced meatballs or tomato crostini. To make them yourself (which I highly recommend), you can find the meatball recipe on page 74 and the crostini recipe on page 110 of David Lebovitz’s My Paris Kitchen.
Cottage Cooking Club: October 2015
After taking a hiatus for September, I’m back in the game for the Cottage Cooking Club, an on-line group working their way through Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall’s River Cottage Veg. October is a month of transition. The weather makes a definite shift from summer to fall, and the harvest in my backyard garden and at local farms winds down. From the choices our group leader, Andrea, The Kitchen Lioness, selected for this month, I chose to make the most of the end-of-season tomatoes before wishing them farewell until next summer.
First up was the Tomato, Basil, and Mozzarella Tart. Anyone who follows my cooking knows that tarts are one of my favorite kinds of food to make. This recipe starts with puff pastry which is my nemesis. Well, store-bought puff pastry causes me trouble. Homemade rough puff pastry is much easier for me to deal when I have time to make it, which I didn’t this month. Instead, I used my favorite pastry crust recipe as the base for my tart.
First, I sprinkled some slivered garlic on top of the partially-baked crust. Then, I covered it with halved cherry tomatoes fresh out of my garden, and scattered chunks of burrata on top. When the tart came out of the oven, I added the final touch: slivered basil leaves (the last of my garden crop). This tart screamed of all the best flavors of summer. Howard said it tasted like a pizza margherita, on pie crust. We also decided that I should have fully baked the crust before adding the toppings because the tomatoes’ juices make it a little bit soggy. This is a tart that I will revisit earlier in the season next year because I can’t wait to make it again.
The other recipe I made was the Oven-Dried Tomatoes. I had admired these when other CCC members made them last summer. I bought a big basket of the last tomatoes from Wilson Farm and slow roasted as many tomatoes as fit on one large pan. A friend had just given me a big bunch of thyme to dry, so I scattered a few on top of the tomatoes along with some broken bay leaves, olive oil, and salt and pepper. The recipe suggested they roast for 4 to 5 hours to be moistly dry. I opted not to remove the seeds, so for me, with all the extra moisture attached to the seeds and their gel, it took closer to 7 hours to get them to the right level of moist dryness. The long slow roast concentrated the tomato flavor, and they tasted (and smelled) amazing. Not having a plan on how to use them, I tossed them in more olive oil and put them in the fridge while I decided.
After much thought, I decided to use my oven-dried tomatoes in a pan of baked ziti. Typically, cooked ziti is tossed with a marinara or other tomato sauce and them layered with mozzarella cheese before baking. Because I was using tomatoes instead of sauce, I took a slightly different approach. I tossed cooked ziti with a mixture of ricotta and pesto, then layered the noodles with coarsely chopped oven-dried tomatoes and a blend of mozzarella and Parmesan. We loved it!
With this pair of tomato recipes behind me, I’m feeling ready to let the summer go and move on to winter squash, Brussels sprouts, cauliflower and broccoli. I’m glad to be back with the Cottage Cooking Club, and I’m excited for Andrea to reveal her delicious choices for enjoying autumn’s vegetables as we move into November.
Baked Ziti with Ricotta
Serves 8
1 lb ziti
1 lb ricotta cheese
½ cup pesto (purchased or made from your favorite recipe)
1 recipe of Hugh’s Oven-Dried Tomatoes (made from about 2½ lbs tomatoes)
½ lb mozzarella cheese, shredded
½ cup freshly grated Parmesan cheese
Preheat the oven to 400F.
Boil a large pot of water, add about 1 Tbsp salt, and cook the pasta to just shy of al dente (about 9 minutes), then drain.
While the pasta is cooking, prepare the other ingredients:
- Whisk together the ricotta and pesto until well blended.
- Coarsely chop the tomatoes.
- Combine the mozzarella and Parmesan.
Stir the ricotta mixture into the drained pasta to coat evenly.
In a large baking pan, layer half the pasta, half the tomatoes, and half the mozzarella/Parmesan. Repeat for a second layer.
Bake for 30 minutes, until everything is bubbly.











