Tonight is one of those hurried nights. It’s 4:40 p.m. and I just got home from work in time to write and publish the newsletter, do all the social media, update the website and web store, and get ready for a meeting tonight that is promising to be very long. Whew! Time to type fast!
In that same vein, I’m looking for fast meals that I can whip up or prepare ahead and pull out of the fridge – meals we still want to eat despite the hot weather. Enter two great options that are great for hot weather AND perfect for tomato season! Both are perfect foils for our crusty artisan breads, too.
The first choice is gazpacho - a cool tomato soup made with fresh-from-the-garden tomatoes and other vegetables. This version comes from the south of Spain and features bread soaked in the juices from the vegetables and used to thicken the soup. Ideally, you make this soup a day ahead so it can sit in the fridge overnight and the flavors can meld. It should be served with a drizzle of EVOO and sherry vinegar, freshly ground pepper, and a side of diced vegetables for folks to garnish with as they desire.
The second is a quick and easy bruschetta served on our crostini or fresh Country French bread.
First, the gazpacho. Almost all the ingredients are available at the market. In fact, most are available in one building! Masser’s has all the vegetables at great prices. We have the breads you need both to add to the soup and to serve beside it.
As always, please visit the web store if you would like to order ahead for pickup at the bakery. https://www.sandisbreads.com/store/
Creamy Gazpacho Andaluz
(from The America’s Test Kitchen Cooking School Cookbook)
3 pounds tomatoes, cored
1 small cucumber, peeled, halved lengthwise, and seeded
1 green bell pepper, halved, stemmed, and seeded
1 small red onion, halved
2 garlic cloves, peeled and quartered
1 small serrano chile, stemmed and halved lengthwise
Kosher salt and pepper (If you don’t have kosher salt, use half the amount of table salt.)
1 slice hearty bread, crust removed, torn into 1-inch pieces (I suggest our Italian.)
½ c EVOO, plus extra for serving
2 T sherry vinegar, plus extra for serving
2 T minced fresh parsley, chives, or basil
Directions
Coarsely chop 2 pounds tomatoes, half cucumber, half bell pepper, and half onion and place in large bowl. Add garlic, chile, and 1 ½ t salt and toss to combine.
Cut remaining tomatoes, cucumber, and bell pepper into ¼-inch dice and place in medium bowl. Mince remaining onion and add to diced vegetables. Toss with ½ t salt and transfer to fine-mesh strainer set over medium bowl. Drain for 1 hour. Transfer drained diced vegetables to medium bowl and set aside, reserving exuded liquid (there should be about ¼ cup; discard extra liquid).
Add bread pieces to exuded liquid and soak 1 minute. Add soaked bread and any remaining liquid to roughly chopped vegetables and toss thoroughly to combine.
Transfer half of vegetable-bread mixture to blender and process 30 seconds. With blender running, slowly drizzle in ¼ c oil and continue to blend until completely smooth, about 2 minutes. Strain soup through fine-mesh strainer into large bowl, using back of ladle or rubber spatula to press soup through strainer. Repeat with remaining vegetable-bread mixture and ¼ c oil.
Stir vinegar, parsley, and half of diced vegetables into soup and season with salt and pepper to taste. Cover and refrigerate overnight or for at least 2 hours to chill completely and develop flavors. Serve, passing remaining diced vegetables, oil, vinegar, and pepper separately. Accompany with a loaf of Focaccia. Grill the slices for a wonderful crunchy texture and great flavor, then cube like croutons and distribute on top of soup. Or, you can try the same with Country French, Sourdough, Cheese Volcano, or Italian.
Double Tomato Bruschetta
6 plum tomatoes, seeded, ¼ inch dice (or 2 cans petite diced tomatoes, drained)
½ c sun-dried tomatoes packed in oil, drained and chopped
2 cloves garlic, minced
¼ c EVOO
2 T balsamic vinegar (Do yourself a favor and invest in a really good balsamic. It makes a huge difference in a recipe like this one. My favorite thing to do is visit https://oliooliveoil.com/ and check out the oils and balsamics. They have the best selection I’ve ever seen or tasted.)
¼ c fresh basil (You can use dried if you must, but it will lose something in the process. Basil is so easy to grow. Tuck a plant into your flower bed early in the summer and you’ll eat it fresh all season long.)
¼ t table salt (I have a salt mill that has a herb-salt blend and it’s wonderful for this.)
¼ t black pepper (As always, freshly-ground is best.)
1 loaf Country French bread, sliced thick on an angle
2 c shredded mozzarella
Directions
Preheat broiler
In a large bowl, combine tomatoes, sun-dried tomatoes, garlic, EVOO, vinegar, basil, salt, and pepper. Allow to sit for at least 10 minutes. (It’s even better if it can refrigerate for an hour or so.)
Cut the French loaf and arrange slices on baking sheet. Brush with EVOO and broil 1-2 minutes until slightly browned.
Divide tomato mixture among bread slices. Top with mozzarella.
Broil about 5 minutes or until mozzarella is melted.