July 11, 2005

Pomodori Ripieni


Having a couple of days off... I cook!
My husband loves stuffed tomatoes!
His Aunt Vivetta had a restaurant in Cecina, near the sea,in Tuscany, where he spent his summers and she always prepared trays of stuffed vegetables, some with meat and bechamel, some with rice and others with a potato filling.

Here is the traditional rice filled tomato, baked with seasoned raw rice, and served cold!

Pomodori Ripieni- Stuffed Tomatoes

6 small round salad tomatoes
1/2 cup uncooked rice
1 clove garlic, minced
2tbs chopped basil
Salt
2 tbs Parmesan cheese, grated
Olive oil



Cut the top third off the tomatoes.
Scoop out and save the seeds and pulp, chopped, in a small bowl.
Add the raw rice, chopped basil and garlic and parmesan and season with salt.

Moisten with olive oil.

Fill tomatoes 2/3 full with the rice mixture and place in a baking dish,
add 1/2 cup of water and bake for 30-40 minutes at 350 until the rice is cooked.

Serve at room temp.

9 comments:

  1. I make them with almost exactly the same ingredients, but in a slightly different way. My recipe is from a Greek book (Aaaah, Greece!) and it requires the rice to be half-cooked first risotto-style. So, you toast the rice in a little oil (should I say extravirgin olive?) with a little onion, than you add the tomato liquid and some vegetable stock or warm water and let cook for about 10 minutes. Finally you add the herbs (Greeks also use anetho, when I can't grab any I just use whatever I have handy: basil, majoram, fresh oregano...) and let the rice cool down a bit. Than you add it to the tomatoes with a little oil (see above) and a spoonful of vegetable stock or water. IMHO this way it's easier to gauge the rice cooking time and it also turns out more uniformously cooked than by adding it raw. And the tomatoes are not overdone by the time the rice is done. I haven't made them in years! SIGH! I need a kitchen to myself!

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  2. I agree,precooking the rice is easier!

    you risk getting crunchy rice...

    but love it,also love packing ti with herbs as you suggest!

    FYI aneto is dill for the english speakers!

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  3. Ok, dill. Will try to remembre that. Yet, I usually go by the Greek name, just out of love for Geeece and Greek food ^___^

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  4. the Greek |_|*|_|*|_|*|_|*|_| food... Sorry, lack of calories is making me silly. I need my lunch!

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  5. I also adore Greece, lived there in the late 70's for about 4 months...
    August for me is when I do greek as I adore Dolmades, and can steal the grape leaves from the neighbors vineyard.

    Whip up some Tzatziki... and I am happy.
    one of my favorite greek desserts is Galaktobouriko, which I learned hanging out in a MILK SHOP in the Plaka.

    Was one of those little places everyone hung out at to eat yogurt, his fabulous cold rice pudding and the Galaktobouriko.

    Need a Athens fix,it has been over 25 years ago!!

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  6. For me it's been just kinda six years ago.. Maybe seven since the last visit to Athens. I need it all the same. Unfortunately right now I can't leave italy (actually I should not leave Milano) due to my grandad's conditions 8-( If things go very wrong and he dies, I may go to Athens for New Year's. I have never been there in winter.

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  7. Judith9:11 AM

    Diva, Diva, Diva... you are wonderful! I found a knife shop in Firenze where they sharpen knives and sell them and I cannot refind them to buy the interesting Japanese steel knife-- not stainless-- I want. Do you know the shop I mean? Tiny and run by a dad and son...

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  8. Judith, the fabulous knife shop is on via della Spada, just off of Via Tornabuoni.
    Tiny, but has it all!
    Long way to come from Umbria ..call next time!

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  9. gosh, this dish looks fantastic -- and healthy too! includes all my favorite ingredients!

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