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Cynthia Wenslow
Pizza Princess
5746
Mon Mar 27, 2006 9:32 pm
The Third Coast
Cynthia Wenslow wrote:And here all these years I've just been eating the entire tomato, jelly, seeds and all. I had no idea it "wasn't done."
Bob Sisak wrote:Thomas Keller had a series of columns in the LA Times six years ago titled Professional Help, and one of them was all about the essence of tomatoes. He carried it further than just the use of the tomato jelly in that he pureed entire tomatoes, including the jelly. Then he put the whole mass into cheesecloth and let it drain overnight to extract the tomato water, which contained the tomato jelly. I've tried it a few times, and the result is a highly flavored almost clear liquid that gives a wonderful tomato flavor to many dishes when used instead of plain water. One of the recipes he had in the column was halibut poached in the tomato water, which was then reduced and beaten with butter to make a wonderful sauce. The dish was finished with chopped tomatoes and basil. Delicious!!
I make several different tomato based pasta sauces, and in one of them I reserve the tomato jelly after I've squeezed it out of the tomatoes. I then run it through a food mill and put the liquid back in with the tomatoes for the sauce. It always seems more highly flavored than a regular sauce, and now I know why. I've also noticed that sauces made with the Costoluto Genovese tomato are more highly flavored and I plant more of them than others to make my sauces. I also tried the Costoluto Fiorentino, but it's not quite as flavorful. All the plum varieties normally touted for sauce use - San Marzano, Roma, etc - just don't compare.
I've never understood why some chefs scoop out the seeds and juice of a tomato and discard it.
Jenise
FLDG Dishwasher
43586
Tue Mar 21, 2006 2:45 pm
The Pacific Northest Westest
robs_r wrote:I've never understood why some chefs scoop out the seeds and juice of a tomato and discard it.
Hmm, that's easy. Sometimes you just don't want the moisture from the additional liquid and sometimes you just can't use the seeds for aesthetic and texture reasons.
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