French Fridays with Dorie: Slow-Roasted Tomatoes
This week’s recipe for French Fridays with Dorie has the most benign name: Slow-Roasted Tomatoes. Sounds innocuous, right? It’s peak tomato season, so it sounds like an excellent choice to try this week. The name, though, slow-roasted tomatoes, makes it sound like nothing special. So misleading…
This recipe is dead simple to make. The only “difficulty” is planning ahead for the three hours they spend slow roasting. You start with a pint of cherry tomatoes. Because it’s early August, I picked up a pint of freshly picked cherry tomatoes at the farmers market. You cut them in half, sprinkle with salt and pepper, and daub them each with some extra virgin olive oil. Sprigs of fresh herbs and some smashed garlic cloves join the tomatoes on the pan and in the oven it goes – for three hours. Within the first half hour, whiffs of herby goodness started to escape from the oven. It only got better after that. At the end of three hours, the plump tomato halves had shriveled into moist unassuming dollops. I tasted one right out of the oven. The sweet concentrated tomato flavor was amazing. I think it can be described best as Tomato Candy!Dorie suggests these can be served as a condiment. I used mine in an orzo salad where I usually use sun-dried tomatoes. The slow-roasted tomato morsels give it a different twist – a much brighter summery flavor.
Needless to say, I loved this recipe. It’s a winner in every way. Though cherry tomato season is fleeting, I can imagine that the ever-present grape tomatoes, available year-round, will be transformed by this treatment. That means, I can slow roast tomatoes all year long!
You can find recipe for this and other delicious dishes in Dorie Greenspan’s Around My French Table. I make a new recipe from the book each week along with a wonderful group of intrepid bloggers from French Fridays with Dorie. You can check the LYL (Leave Your Link) post for Slow-Roasted Tomatoes on the FFwD site to see what they thought about this week’s recipe.
Here’s my recipe for orzo salad. I recommend chopping the red onion first and soaking it in cold water in the fridge while you prepare everything else. Drain right before adding to the bowl. It cuts the sharpness of the raw onion. (A little tip I learned from Dorie!)
Orzo Salad
½ lb orzo
½ cup finely chopped red onion
½ cup olives, pitted and coarsely chopped (I used Picholine, use whatever you like. I’ve also made this with Nicoise and Kalamata)
½ cup slow-roasted tomatoes
1½ Tbsp drained capers
2 Tbsp olive oil
2 Tbsp balsamic vinegar
Salt & pepper to taste
Cook the orzo according the package directions. Drain and rinse with cold water.
Combine orzo, onion, olives, tomatoes, and capers in a large bowl. Whisk together oil and vinegar. Stir dressing into pasta salad and season with salt and pepper to taste. It might not need any salt because of the olives and capers.
Berry Bonanza
One of the advantages of traveling up and down the East Coast in summer is the ability to chase the fleeting berry season. We had plenty of strawberries, raspberries, and blueberries in July.
It started early in the month when we visited my sister Jane in Maryland. Strawberry season was long over at her house, but we got an early taste of black raspberries which were at peak there. They had buckets and buckets in the fridge. One day for lunch, we made a version of the FFwD recipe for Mozzarella, Tomato, and Berry Salad, substituting black raspberries for the strawberries, and drizzling with some raspberry balsamic vinegar we came across at Lebherz Oil and Vinegar Emporium. Then for the family dinner celebrating my niece Maggie’s 10th birthday, I made this Brown-Butter Raspberry Tart with the black raspberries. It was like a sugar cookie studded with fruit in a pastry crust. Yum!
The following weekend, back in New England, we caught the final weekend of U-Pick strawberries at Chipman Farm in Maine. We picked 17 pounds in the morning and spent the afternoon making three batches of strawberry freezer jam (21 containers). Until next summer, we’ll enjoy strawberry jam stirred into yogurt for breakfast. I also made a no-bake strawberry pie: a graham cracker crust with crushed strawberries cooked with cornstarch and sugar to make a gorgeous glossy jewel-toned filling and some fresh berries stirred in.
Two weeks later, again up in Maine, we made an expedition to Goss Berry Farm to pick raspberries. This is one of Howard’s favorite outings every summer. They have the most organized berry fields we’ve ever seen. It’s a joy to pick there. The blueberries were just starting to be ready, so we decided to pick a couple quarts of blueberries to go with the raspberries. Another round of freezer jam, 21 containers of raspberry and 5 of blueberry, to alternate with the strawberries for yogurt.
Now, the blueberries are peaking. We have one giant bush next to our dock at the lake. They’re not the big plump cultivated berries like we picked at Goss Farm, but they’re not the tiny wild low-bush blueberries either. We’ve already picked a couple quarts, and they’re not over yet. I love July! I wish the season lasted longer.
Strawberry Pie
Graham Cracker Crust, baked (see below)
1 quart strawberries
¾ cup sugar
1 Tbsp lemon juice
¼ cup cornstarch
¼ tsp salt
2 Tbsp cold water
Hull & wash berries, leaving the best ones whole. Mash about half the berries. Make a paste from the cornstarch, salt, and water. In a medium saucepan, combine mashed berries, sugar, and lemon juice. Stir in cornstarch paste. Cook over medium heat until thick, smooth, and transparent, stirring constantly. Cool a bit, then, stir in whole berries, saving 8 or so for garnish. Pour into baked pie shell and chill. Garnish with reserved berries. Serve with whipped cream or ice cream, if desired. (I prefer it plain.)
You can also make this in a 9-inch pie pan. You can also use a prebaked pastry crust, but I like the graham crackers.
Graham Cracker Crust
1¼ cups graham cracker crumbs (about 9 crackers)
2 Tbsp sugar
1/3 cup butter, melted
Preheat oven to 350F. Combine crumbs, sugar and butter in a small bowl and mix well. Press mixture evenly over the bottom and sides of a 9-inch springform pan. Bake in the center of the oven for 8 minutes. Cool completely on a rack.





