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ARISTIPPOS

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Much is about the liveliness of life
Articles Posted: 32  Links Seeded: 48
Member Since: 7/2009  Last Seen: 6/22/2011

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Dry your own coffee tomatoes

Fri Mar 18, 2011 11:22 AM EDT
home-garden, recipes, coffee, tomatoes, drying-do-it-yourself
By Aristippos

Dried Tomatoes

Dried Tomatoes

Tomato Varieties at the Viktualien Market, Munich / jul2009

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Many things in life are like nature - complex in its simplicity and simple in its complexity. Ever thought of the simplicity one perceives when looking at some roses in a garden and poppies in a field? They look so simple - Simply beautiful! The very flowers are the result of complex biological developments, the metamorphosis of seeds acting and reacting to soil, temperature, water and air. Ever thought of the blood in your veins? As soon as your skin receives a small cut, the simplest thing happens: blood flows. Just as it is simple that blood pours out, it is complex that it flows at all.

The naked and simple eye is seldom able to understand complexities, but understanding these in nature is not of existential importance. This is usually the responsibility and joy of scientists. It is however our duty to pay acknowledgment to things beyond our simple perceptions. And it is up to every individual to use at least the one small chamber available to each wisely. The mouth, our palate gives us perhaps the best personal possibility to assimilate complexity, no matter how pure, manipulated or mistreated the state of any fruit might be.

How complex can simplicity be? The following dehydration recipe might let you experience the answer.

  • five (or even ten) ripe tomatoes
  • four or five mid-size sage leaves (fresh)
  • mint leaves from one twig (fresh)
  • one tablespoon of brewed coffee or espresso (I prefer espresso)
  • 50 ml olive oil
  • pinch of salt
  • pinch of sugar

Cut the tomatoes in quarters and place them on a tray like small ships. Mix/shake all remaining ingredients very well and pour the mixture over the tomatoes. Leave them in the oven for three hours at 100°. Once dried, these tomatoes ought to give you a somewhat simplicity/complexity experience. But feel free to take it one step further by dehydrating a few of the tomato quarters without olive oil, thus tasting two simple complexities in the end.

A tomato - from the Solanum lycopersicum linnaeus plant - comes and gets eaten as simple as nature is able to give fruits, and like many others, its origin is South America. There might be well over 8,000 varieties, including Abraham Licoln, Black Krim, Floridity, Vanessa, Plum, Cherry, Campari, Snowberry, Sweet Million, Cedrico, Tigerella, Shirley, Giant Delicious, Garden Pearl, Red Alert... I have been visiting several food markets throughout Europe, photographing various of the ingredients I use when composing with coffee, and found a few of them in the Borough Market in London, Viktualien Markt in Munich, Kollwitzmarkt in Berlin or Naschmarkt in Vienna.

The idea to dry tomatoes on my own was inspired by seeing how simple Raymond Blanc does it. Now I know, how dried tomatoes could taste.

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Published to:

  • Aristippos's Column, All of Newsvine
  • Groups: Coffee in General, Culinaria Italiana, Foodies!
  • Regions: none
  • Public Discussion (10)
Marshall James

I love garden tomatoes. will hold on to this recipe until the season allows.

thanks!!!

  • 1 vote
Reply#1 - Fri Mar 18, 2011 12:05 PM EDT
Aristippos

A pleasure!

Perhaps a few hints come this way from some tomato experts, as to which might be the best tomato varieties to dry.

  • 1 vote
Reply#2 - Fri Mar 18, 2011 12:38 PM EDT
lauhal

I clipped this ti the Foodies group. :) I have to say that your pictures make me long for fresh tomatoes...you know, the ones that have taste! I hate the red spheres of tasteless pulp we get in the winter. The coffee and minsound intriguing! I never would have thought of those ingredients. Wow. Can't wait to try your recipe. Thanks!

  • 2 votes
Reply#3 - Sat Mar 19, 2011 12:13 AM EDT
HollyKl

This is a great idea. I'm going to try this soon. Thanks!

    Reply#4 - Sat Mar 19, 2011 4:37 AM EDT
    Aristippos

    Well, I am very glad to see how many readers react positively to tomatoes and tho this recipe! Would be a wonderful thing if I get some to be daring enough and learn to love coffee as a spice.

    But I also notice that I seem to be lucky... somehow I have been taking it for granted with the tomatoes here in England's supermarkets. I am truly getting good quality tomatoes at the moment - no idea why... Strangely enough it is also the first place where since months I find asparagus on the shelves. Unheard of!

    • 1 vote
    Reply#5 - Sat Mar 19, 2011 6:19 AM EDT
    HollyKl

    Oh, I do use coffee in cooking as well. I have a recipe for Black Bean Espresso Chili that I make fairly frequently.

      #5.1 - Sat Mar 19, 2011 6:40 AM EDT
      HollyKl

      As luck would have it, the chili recipe is one that Mark Bittman has posted online. If anyone is interested, it can be found here.

        #5.2 - Sat Mar 19, 2011 7:07 AM EDT
        Marshall James

        interesting.

          #5.3 - Sat Mar 19, 2011 11:03 AM EDT
          Reply
          Aristippos

          Thank you for the link. The "Minimalist" makes fantastic work.

          • 1 vote
          Reply#6 - Sat Mar 19, 2011 7:16 AM EDT
          HollyKl

          You're welcome! And yes, he does.

            #6.1 - Sat Mar 19, 2011 8:45 AM EDT
            Reply
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