JoelF wrote:Picked the garden today, leaving only the smallest tomatoes and tomatillos. Made pesto, planning on roasting the tomatillos tomorrow. I have way more green tomatoes than I can fry, and I don't like pickled green tomatoes (any other suggestions?).
I've still got freakin' flowers on those plants. Sigh.
Ha!! Could've been my post too
Suggestions: Green tomato chutney, green tomato jam, more roasted salsa (I love the green tomatoes roasted even more than tomatillos). And though you don't like green tomatoes pickled by themselves, have you ever pickled them, then made relish? It's pretty tasty.
I made batches of both roasted salsa verde (broiled tomatoes, tomatillos and several varieties of green chilis) and a stewed (tomatillos, garlic and onion pureed with cilantro and more raw green chilis); pesto from various greens (arugula, baby leeks, walnuts, garlic and parm) frozen in cubes, cleaned and bagged my celery, sunchokes, cilantro, coriander seeds, baby leeks, all the rest of the peppers, eggplant and garlic chives. And, yes, I still have tons of blossoms on everything but that's life! Thinking everything else will be ok for a few more days.
Finally, rewarded all of my industriousness with my new favorite casserole--adapted from a F&W recipe from Sept.'s issue I think--anyway, it is day old bread on the bottom, then layered with juicy tomatoes, a mix of sauteed kale, chard and onion, gruyere cheese, then another layer of same, topped with more bread smashed down, a cup or so of broth (I used chicken but could easily use veggie), baked covered for 40 minutes on 400, then add another cup of gruyere/parm mix to the top and broil. Can't beat it for a harvest meal!
Looking forward to April
"Knowledge is knowing a tomato is a fruit; wisdom is not putting it in a fruit salad." Miles Kington