LUCY BURDETTE: this is my favorite time of the year for produce – the big tomatoes, peppers, okra, peaches, cantaloupe, cucumbers! And do not let me forget corn on the cob.
Once again, lots of critters have ravaged John’s garden, but they don’t seem to care much for tomatoes. So we have a bumper crop! What to do? Time to make a tomato pie. In the past, I’ve made this one with a cornmeal crust, which was quite delicious.
But I saw another recipe on Once Upon a Chef that I wanted to try. This one involves roasting tomatoes and onions, and then baking with cheese and a cheese mayonnaise topping. A bit labor-intensive, but she assured future cooks that it was quite OK to purchase a crust from the freezer department in your grocery store. Usually I make my own, but with the end of my book in sight, I thought I’d try it. SPOILER ALERT: It was rich and delicious!
Ingredients
1 nine-inch frozen (or homemade) pie crust (not deep-dish)
2 lbs tomatoes, cored, seeded, and cut into ¾-inch pieces
1 large yellow onion, thinly sliced
2 tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil
1 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper
¾ teaspoon sugar
½ teaspoon dried thyme
2 tablespoons chopped fresh basil, or more to taste
½ cup mayonnaise
1 cup shredded fontina cheese
⅓ cup grated Pecorino Romano
Preheat the oven to 375
Combine the sliced onions and chopped tomatoes on a parchment covered cookie sheet. Add the olive oil, pepper, thyme, sugar. Mix that all together and spread the vegetables out into one layer. Roast until beginning to brown, about 45 minutes.
Let the pie crust thaw 10 minutes and then prick all over with a fork so it doesn’t puff up. Remove the vegetables from the oven and bake the pie crust until beginning to color, 10-12 minutes.
Sprinkle 1/2 cup of fontina to cover the bottom of the crust. Mix the basil into the tomatoes and spread the vegetables over the cheese.
Mix the mayonnaise with the remaining cheeses and dollop this on top. Spread into a thin layer. Bake the pie until bubbly and golden, 25-30 minutes. Serve with a simple green salad. You can eat this hot out of the oven, or at room temperature.
Here’s a bonus recipe for tomato pie via Michael Ruhlman via Ann Hood, who borrows and shines Laurie Colwin’s recipe. (Remember her? Amazing food and fiction writer who died way, way way too young.)
Are you mad for garden-grown tomatoes as I am? What’s your favorite way to eat them?
Lucy Burdette writes the Key West food critic mystery series including USA Today bestselling A POISONOUS PALATE and A CLUE IN THE CRUMBS. Join the mailing list here so you don't miss news about the Key West series and Lucy!
Yum! I have all of it in house except fontina cheese. Do you think cheddar would work?
ReplyDeleteYes absolutely cheddar would work! I would try that next time.
DeleteThank you for the Tomato Pie recipe, which sounds beyond yummy.
ReplyDeleteThis year's garden didn't produce as much as usual. Our early season was too wet and then it turned extremely dry making the garden produce less. It made us really enjoy what we did get. My favorite way to eat tomatoes is still fried green tomatoes or just right off the vine with a sprinkling of salt.
2clowns at arkansas dot net
I need to fry some green tomatoes!
DeleteThis looks so good!!!!! Can’t wait to try it!
ReplyDeletethanks, hope yours turns out well!
DeleteThis sounds delicious! I make a tomato pie also, lots of cheese and tomatoes, so yummy!
ReplyDeletewhat else goes into yours?
DeleteLucy, when I say tomato pie, I mean pizza. Yours sounds amazing, and we’ll be enjoying it at the Pompano house soon!
ReplyDeleteYou speak Italian:)
DeleteYour tomato pie looks utterly delicious, Roberta/Lucy! I used to adore fresh from the vine tomatoes, back before I developed a nightshade allergy and had to give them up. I still make dishes with tomatoes once in a while for my family, but then have to prepare something different for myself. Sigh... I really do miss tomatoes.
ReplyDeletethat's a brutal allergy Kim, so sorry!
DeleteThank you for both tomato pie recipes, and the link to Ann Hood's essay. A friend has been sharing her tomatoes, as mine are still green, and pie sounds like a nice change from my usual chopped-with-a-little-vinaigrette simple salad.
ReplyDeleteI was just thinking I would roast more tomatoes and use them in a quesadilla. Stay tuned!
DeleteWhat a wonderful recipe, Roberta/Lucy!!! I love fresh tomatoes, but this year we planted several varieties, and have had maybe 5 tomatoes.Native critters have decimated our crop, even after I installed a chicken wire fence, and put heavy rocks around it. Finally I just gave up...a "volunteer" cherry tomato plant has been our source of tomatoes this year, as it thrives along our garden fence, and another in our oregano bed. I would love this recipe, and am going to have to buy tomatoes from a farmstand. Thank you for another ciulinary wonder! JOY! Luis at ole dot travel
ReplyDeleteThe critters are so greedy! I'm glad you have one plant anyway. Enjoy the pie!
DeleteI just made a tomato pie this Tuesday, but yours looks divine! Next up on my "to make" agenda!
ReplyDeleteI'd love to hear what you put in yours!
DeleteI used dried oregano, mozzarella and Romano, and chopped ham. I like how your tomatoes were chopped. Mine were thinly sliced so it made a messier cut to serve!
DeleteIt's hard to imagine Tomatoes and pie together. But yet, they're two things that I like. And tomato pie sounds good.
ReplyDeleteYes think more of pizza than pie!
DeleteRecently made Molly's Upside Down Tomato Tart and we loved it. This looks like a tasty alternative for next week. Thanks!
ReplyDeleteI forgot about Molly's tart--I'll have to try that next.
DeleteOh, my gosh! This looks amazing.
ReplyDeletethanks! the photos still make my mouth water:)
DeleteOh my! That looks wonderfully decadent!
ReplyDeletethanks Libby!
DeleteYum sounds delicious.
ReplyDeletethanks Deborah!
DeleteThat sounds wonderful, Lucy. Like Edith, I have everything here but fontina. But I do have Gruyere. Tonight's dinner! Can't wait, thank you.
ReplyDeleteCan't wait to hear how it turns out! We'll have a wave of tomato pies across the country:)
DeleteIt was fantastic!! My husband was skeptical, but he had seconds. And so did I. Roasting the vegetables first elevates this dish sublimely.
Delete