Tomatoes
1737 recipes found

Langue de Boeuf aux Lentilles (Beef tongue with lentils)

Avocado Gazpacho
These days in Spain, chefs are being fanciful with their gazpachos. This has the tangy flavor of traditional gazpacho andaluz but a creamy texture.

Gazpacho With Lobster And Shrimp

Golden Gazpacho With Serrano Chilies And Scallops

Tomato Gazpacho

Clam-Flavored Gazpacho

Farrotto With Fava Beans, Tomato And Marjoram

Osso Buco With Orange-Herb Gremolata
Cross-cut veal shanks are the cut for osso buco, a braised dish. The sauce for my rendition is tomato-based, bolstered (subtly) by anchovies as well as white wine and broth. But it’s the addition of orange zest and oil-cured black olives that makes this a standout. Like most slow-cooked dishes, you can make this a few days ahead and it will only be better for the wait. The tradition is to serve the veal (you can use pork, if you prefer) with a last-minute dusting of gremolata, a mix, in this case, of basil, orange zest and garlic. Osso buco is good over rice, noodles or other grains; I like it over mashed potatoes or a smooth squash purée.

Spicy Corn Stew
Given a choice, I always prefer white corn -- the sweetest and most tender you can find. Although new hybrids make corn on the cob much hardier and longer-lasting than it used to be, I am still from the out-of-the-fields-and-into-the-pot school of corn cooking. If you don't grow your own, try to find a farmer's market that sells fresh corn picked that morning.''

Tia Rosa and Ruth Eichner's Sweet-and-Sour Carrots

Baked Ziti or Penne Rigate With Cauliflower
You can add vegetables to just about any baked macaroni dish. Cauliflower works very well in this one, inspired by another Sicilian cauliflower dish in Clifford A. Wright’s “Cucinia Paradiso.”

Tucci Ragù
This recipe, a contemplation on classic Italian cooking, is adapted from “The Tucci Cookbook,” a book of recipes from the actor and director Stanley Tucci’s food-obsessed family. It will take some time, so set aside an afternoon, say, a Sunday in the fall, when browning meat and listening for the correct simmer are exactly what you want to do. (The New York Times)

Roasted Tomatoes and Lentils With Dukkah-Crumbled Eggs
At once homey and inspired, this recipe from Diana Henry lifts stewed lentils out of the quotidian by topping them with harissa-roasted plum tomatoes, runny-centered eggs, and a pungent, Middle Eastern nut-and-spice mix called dukkah. Ms. Henry calls for making the dukkah with a mortar and pestle, which helps maintain a chunky, rustic texture. A food processor works, too, just add the nuts last so they don’t turn into paste, and don’t overdo the processing. You’re looking for coarsely rather than finely ground. You can make the dukkah, lentils and tomatoes a few days ahead. Just heat them up before serving.

Ragu Bolognese

The Bartender Sambonn (Sam) Lek's Rusty's Return

Chifferi Pilaf

Fresh Sturgeon With Spring Vegetables

Wheat Berry and Tomato Salad
Whole wheat berries lend themselves to both summer and winter dishes. Much of the flavor in this salad comes from the tangy juice of chopped tomatoes, almost like a marinade for the chewy wheat. The salad is all about texture, with crunchy celery (or cucumber) and soft feta contrasting with wheat.

Caprese Salad With Blueberry Croutons

Lamb Shank With Lima Beans In the French Style

The Frozen Tomato
Belle Meade, an incorporated town within Nashville's city limits, is the home of the ''frozen tomato,'' one of the world's great creations. The frozen tomato is essentially tomato ice cream (except, instead of cream, it's got cream cheese, cottage cheese and mayonnaise), served in a round scoop on a lettuce leaf with a dollop of more mayonnaise on top.

Hauser Broth

Mary Frank's Solar-Cooked Shrimp
