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cornbread with labneh and slow roasted tomatoes

November 5, 2017 by Kathryn Pauline 2 Comments

These next three posts are dedicated entirely to Thanksgiving, but this one in particular, this cornbread with labneh and slow roasted tomatoes, is the thing I’m most looking forward to this Thanksgiving. And sure, a dish primarily made up of fresh tomatoes isn’t necessarily the most seasonal choice for November, but slow-roasted tomatoes have a deeply wintery flavor, because slow roasting is a way of preserving summer produce.

Some ingredients (certainly tomatoes!) are very strongly tied to their season of harvest, but even the most seasonally-entrenched ingredients can completely transform to suit the palate of another time of year. I’ve been meaning to do more posts about traditional Middle Eastern preservation techniques, and this one isn’t exactly traditional (as far as I know), but it takes advantage of the same concept: a tomato in August won’t taste the same as a tomato in December, but when treated in a certain way, this can be a wonderful thing.

If you’re discovering this post sometime in the summer, you should definitely stock up for the fall and winter: just slow roast them, place them in a single layer on a parchment-lined baking sheet, freeze them solid, and then place them in a ziplock bag. They’ll stay delicious and keep their flavor and shape the whole winter long, especially if you roast them until they’re no longer oozing tomato juice, and then store them properly in the freezer (see the recipe for more specific instructions). My friends Erin and Alvin, who taught me how to slow roasted tomatoes, always have a freezer packed to the brim with their home grown tomatoes, all winter long.

But if you’re more of a grasshopper than an ant in your wintertime preparation, and you’re caught in November with no preserved tomatoes stowed away (or maybe this is the first time you’ve been inspired to make them!), slow roasting can also be a really nice way of coaxing delicious flavors out of sad, out-of-season tomatoes, and you’re going to be very happy with the alchemical results. There’s always next year to aspire to a perfectly stocked, sustainable winter freezer and pantry (I’m still working on it).

I can hardly believe that I need to convince you how delicious this is, so I’ll just tell you a little bit about how I came up with it, which was through the same dumb luck I occasionally stumble upon when I visit a salad or fro yo bar offering unlimited toppings. I succumb to the same stupid method every single time: throw out everything I’ve learned from hundreds of skimmings of the Flavor Bible, and just get all my favorites, all together, no matter whether they actually go together. That means that sometimes you might end up with a caper, watermelon, and alfalfa sprout salad, but sometimes you’ll find that your three favorite things are your favorites for a reason: they mesh like old friends from another life, brought together by your totally capricious decision to place them there.

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cornbread with labneh and slow roasted tomatoes

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  • Prep Time: 25 minutes
  • Total Time: 5 hours

Ingredients

For the slow roasted tomatoes:
2 pounds of tomatoes (4 or 5 large tomatoes)
1/2 tablespoon olive oil
1/4 teaspoon salt

For the cornbread:
Butter for greasing the skillet
1 1/2 cups cornmeal
1 1/2 cups all purpose flour
1 tablespoon baking powder
1/2 teaspoon baking soda
1 teaspoon salt
2 room temperature eggs
1 stick unsalted butter, melted
2 cups room temperature buttermilk
1/3 cup sugar

To serve:
1 1/2 cups labneh (you can substitute goat cheese or plain full-fat Greek yogurt here, which both work really well)

Instructions

  1. Slow roast the tomatoes: Pre-heat the oven to 325° F.
  2. Do not remove the stems or hull the tomatoes. Simply slice the tomatoes in half, cutting from one side to the other, rather than cutting from stem to end (but if you’re using roma tomatoes, cut from stem to end instead). Try to make your cut as level and horizontal as possible.
  3. Coat the tomatoes in the oil and sprinkle with salt, and then place the tomatoes cut-side-up on a roasting pan (optionally, using a silicone mat will help you remove them later).
  4. Slow-roast the tomatoes in the oven, checking every 30 minutes to make sure they are not burning. ** If the tomatoes seem to be browning very quickly early on, turn the heat down to 300° F and be prepared to cook them longer. The tomatoes are done once they have have shrunk significantly, browned nicely, and no longer ooze juice. This will take between 2 to 4 hours, depending on the tomatoes’ size and sugar content, and can be done up to 3 days ahead of time, and kept in the refrigerator.
  5. Once the tomatoes are done, remove the stems and use kitchen shears to snip away any burnt bits.
  6. Make the cornbread: Preheat the oven to 375° F and generously butter a 10″ cast iron skillet, or a similar sized baking dish. Feel free to make (and the butter) a parchment round if you want to eliminate any chance of sticking.
  7. In a medium or large mixing bowl, whisk together the cornmeal, flour, baking powder, baking soda, and salt, and set aside.
  8. In a smaller mixing bowl, whisk together the eggs and butter until they’re completely blended. Add half of the buttermilk, stir until combined, add the rest of the buttermilk, and stir again until combined. Add the sugar and stir until it dissolves.
  9. Pour the wet ingredients over the dry ingredients, and stir together until it just comes together. Don’t over-mix the batter, and stop as soon as it comes together.
  10. Bake for about 35 to 40 minutes, or until a toothpick inserted in the center comes out without batter sticking to it.
  11. Allow to cool for at least 1 hour, and then slice into pieces.
  12. Serve: Stir the labneh, and then plop a dollop on each piece of cornbread, and top with one or two slow roasted tomatoes (divide the tomatoes equally among the pieces). Serve immediately after topping (but note that the leftovers are pretty delicious too).

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Filed Under: appetizers, bread, breakfast, dinner, every recipe, lunch, side dishes, vegetarian Tagged With: buttermilk, cornmeal, labneh, summer, tomato

flower-water fruit salad

October 29, 2017 by Kathryn Pauline Leave a Comment

Sometimes I come up with ideas for blog posts based on things I cook in real life, and sometimes I come up with ideas a bit more deliberately, and less directly inspired by my everyday life. For instance, I developed this recipe after noticing that I hadn’t yet written a fruit salad post, not because I just had to have some fruit salad, or because I needed to figure out what to bring to a potluck. But even when I’ve come up with something totally unmotivated by getting dinner on the table, my husband and I always eat everything I cook for the blog, even the disasters (and there are plenty, but don’t worry, they never end up here).

But this particular fruit salad was no disaster—on the contrary, it was one of my favorite things I’ve made lately. But still, as I stared down this beautiful bowl of pomelo, pomegranate, and apple, I realized that there was a problem, which could only arise from creating recipes in a vacuum. Exactly when and where is the right time and place to enjoy a fruit salad? (At risk of sounding like a 1980s standup comic…) what’s the deal with fruit salad anyway? Is it salad? Is it dessert? There’s just something sort of insubstantial about it, something detached, something that makes it even more unnecessary than dessert. But on the other hand, maybe it is so unimportant, even more superfluous than cake and pie, that fruit salad might just be the ultimate luxury food.

This fruit salad certainly tastes luxurious. And, because I know that most people who read food blogs actually cook for real life (or at least I hope you’re not just cooking for your Instagram feed!), I’ve put some thought into when this fruit salad might come in handy. So here is my list of fruit salad appropriate events:

  1. a weeknight dessert, especially if you’re trying to cut back on processed sugar
  2. part of a lovely homemade brunch for company and honored guests
  3. part of a spontaneous brunch for you, your roommates, your significant other, your kids, your parents, and/or whoever you share a roof with and call family
  4. a host gift, for someone who’s invited you over for dinner (let them know that they can serve it after dinner or eat it the next morning for breakfast)
  5. a potluck where you know everyone else is going to bring practical dinnery things, and you can just kind of let the host figure out when to serve it
  6. breakfast in bed!
  7. snacktime

This recipe is full of fall and winter produce, and it’s easy to adapt. Just make sure you choose fruits that are fragrant and zesty. The pomelo can easily be replaced with grapefruit, and the granny smith can be swapped for your favorite apple. The orange blossom or rosewater isn’t an absolutely necessity, but then again, neither is fruit salad, and the subtle floral scent makes it even more of a special treat. Just don’t overdo it, or you’ll cross over into potpourri territory.

more cold weather fruit salads

Pakistan Eats’ fruit chaat
Lady and Pups’ pomelo and Thai herb salad
Just One Cookbook’s apple salad
Smitten Kitchen’s winter fruit salad

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flower-water fruit salad

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  • Prep Time: 15 minutes
  • Total Time: 15 minutes
  • Yield: 6 servings

Ingredients

1 pomelo (or substitute grapefruit)
1 cup of pomegranate seeds (from about 1/2 of a large pomegranate, or 1 small one)
1 granny smith apple
2 tablespoons lemon juice
2 teaspoons honey *
1/4 to 1/2 teaspoon orange blossom water, or a few drops to 1/8 teaspoon rosewater **
1 pinch salt

Instructions

  1. Score the pomelo’s outer rind and then peel it away. Pull the pomelo in half, and then separate the segments. Remove the skin surrounding each segment, trying to keep everything as intact as possible (for now). Or, if you’re using a grapefruit, supreme it.
  2. Slice the apple into small wedges and immediately toss them in a bowl with the lemon juice (this will keep them from browning). Remove the apple pieces, reserving the remaining juice.
  3. Combine the lemon juice, honey, orange blossom water, and pinch of salt.
  4. Set aside 2 tablespoons of pomegranate seeds for garnish, and then pour the dressing over the remaining pomegranate, pomelo, and apple, and fold together very carefully with a rubber spatula. Some of the pomelo will break up into smaller pieces, which is totally fine (just try not to break it up too much).
  5. Garnish with the pomegranate seeds you set aside, and serve.

Notes

* Feel free to substitute agave or another neutral-flavored syrup to make this vegan.

** I prefer 1/2 teaspoon orange blossom water, but you can use 1/4 teaspoon if you prefer. I strongly recommend against using more than 1/8 teaspoon rosewater, because it can be extremely overpowering in large quantities. You want just a little to add fragrance, but not so much that it tastes like perfume.

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Filed Under: breakfast, dairy free, every recipe, gluten free, salads, sweets, vegan, vegetarian Tagged With: apples, fall, grapefruit, middle eastern, orange blossom water, pomegranate, rosewater, winter

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