It is now that time of the year when those local, fresh and brilliant red ripe tomatoes are all over the farmers markets or if you're lucky, your grocery store. The overall flavor for tonight's dinner recipe, Tomato Bread Pudding, is very dependent on getting the best tomatoes you can get your hands on as there are very few ingredients.
There are no eggs or cream in this savory bread pudding as the moisture comes strictly from the coarsely pureed tomatoes. There is a little bit of prep that needs to be done to the tomatoes before you can pulse them in the food processor. First, the skins need to be removed - the easiest way to do this is to cut a small X in the bottom and then place them in boiling water for 30 seconds to 1 minute. Immediately drop them in icy water and you will be able to quickly slip the skins right off. Next, the tomatoes need to be halved, cored and seeded - it may seem excessive, but you don't want too much liquid or the end results may be too soggy. Once the tomatoes have been prepped, they are chopped in the food processor with seasonings and a handful of fresh sweet-scented basil leaves.
For the bread, we used a sourdough baguette - once cut into cubes, it is drenched in melted butter and tossed with the chunky fresh tomatoes and basil. The bread pudding bakes until the top layer is golden and crisp, but the bottom layer is still moist. A generous shower of Parmesan cheese coats the crusty top and is left to finish baking until the cheese has melted into and through the cracks and crevices left from the chunky pieces of bread. Jeff tends to sigh when I say I'm making a bread pudding as he has issues with that mushy texture that some get - however, he eagerly devoured his plate as the bread retained its integrity and was not too soft. With no other flavors muddling the taste, this dish was so fresh and clean tasting. Once we placed our plates in the sink and sighed that we didn't double the recipe for leftovers, we decided we must hit up the farmers market tomorrow morning to see if we can finagle a few more of those lovely tomatoes.
*Don't forget - if you have to store your tomatoes, it is best to keep them outside of the refrigerator for best flavor!
Such an unusual bread pudding -- I almost always think of bread pudding as sweet, not savory. Very appealing recipe -- I'll bookmark!
ReplyDeleteNeat Recipe Joe! I am a tomato fan and always looking for new ways to use fresh ones. I will have to give this a try. Thanks for the ideas.
ReplyDeleteLydia - Me too, but taking it savory can offer lots of options!
ReplyDeleteJohn - Jeff is not too keen on raw tomatoes, but he loves them any way cooked!
Oops, I totally missed the part about skinning the tomatos first. And I drizzled olive oil instead of melted butter over the bread.
ReplyDeleteBut this recipe turned out delicious! Thanks guys, keep em coming please! :)
Shabina - Glad to hear it still came out well without removing the skins! Thanks for the feedback.
ReplyDeletei just tried this dish and it was DELICIOUS!!! I actually made it a tad different. I don't have a food processor (i know, naughty me) and so I just tossed in the tomatos chopped (skin and all). I also just baked up a loaf of garlic bread and cut it up and put that in. It was soooo good. It already had lots of butter but also the garlic added a yummy bite. Thanks so much for your blog. I check it allll the time and use many of your recipes. So far I've liked them ALL! I just bookmarked like 8 more recipes to try for next week. :)
ReplyDeleteHeather - Fantastic! I love the sound of the changes you made!
ReplyDelete