Sundried Roma Tomatoes
As you may have seen in my other posts about my garden booty, tomatoes are all the rage around here. I have been canning, freezing, making salsa, oven roasting and generally gorging myself on tomatoes.
And with plenty of tomatoes, comes experimentation that I normally wouldn’t try. I called upon the wisdom of my beautiful mother-in-law, remembering her delicious sundried tomatoes we were introduced to on our last visit.
She shared with me her recipe (which I tweaked a little here and there because I just can’t leave well enough alone) and the results were wonderfully dried Roma tomatoes, ready to grace my pizzas, pasta dishes, crackers and more.
Here’s all that you’ll need to make your very own Sundried Roma Tomatoes:
You’ll need (2) 9 x 13 casserole dishes depending on how large the Romas are
20-25 Roma Tomatoes
1/3 Cup Extra Virgin Olive Oil
24 Garlic Cloves
Italian Seasoning
Thyme
Salt and Pepper
Put a large pot of water on to boil. Prepare an ice bath in a large bowl. Preheat the oven to 180.
Then, cut an “X” along the bottom of each Roma Tomato.
Once the water is at a full boil, drop a few tomatoes in at a time and allow them to boil for 1-2 minutes, or until the skin starts to separate from the tomatoes.
Drop the boiled tomatoes into the ice bath and let cool.
Once the tomatoes are cool to the touch, begin removing the skin by simply pulling at a corner and unwrapping your little tomato present.
PS-I keep the skins and add it to any tomato juice or seeds leftover from this recipe-which I throw into a ziplock bag and freeze. I use this concoction for stews, soups, etc.
Cut each tomato in half, lengthways and remove the seeds. (I keep the seeds for later use-see above “PS” comment.)
After de-seeding the tomatoes, place them face-down in a casserole dish. Divide the the 1/3 Cup of Extra Virgin Olive oil and pour across the tomatoes in each pan (if applicable).
Divide the 24 garlic cloves, placing 12 whole cloves in each pan. Sprinkle each pan with Italian Seasoning, Thyme, Salt and Pepper.
Roast overnight at 180 degrees for 10-12 hours, or until the tomatoes have the feel of a dried apricot.
Save the oil that remains in the pan and use for a dipping sauce.
Top toasted slices of a french baguette with the sundried roma tomaotes, feta cheese, cucumbers, black olives-or what ever your little heart desires.
These are tasty no matter how they are consumed!
- (2) 9 x 13 casserole dishes depending on how large the Romas are
- 20-25 Roma Tomatoes
- ⅓ Cup Extra Virgin Olive Oil
- 24 Garlic Cloves
- Italian Seasoning
- Thyme
- Salt and Pepper
- Put a large pot of water on to boil.
- Prepare an ice bath in a large bowl.
- Preheat the oven to 180.
- Then, cut an “X” along the bottom of each Roma Tomato.
- Once the water is at a full boil, drop a few tomatoes in at a time and allow them to boil for 1-2 minutes, or until the skin starts to separate from the tomatoes.
- Drop the boiled tomatoes into the ice bath and let cool.
- Once the tomatoes are cool to the touch, begin removing the skin by simply pulling at a corner.
- Cut each tomato in half, lengthways and remove the seeds.
- After de-seeding the tomatoes, place them face-down in a casserole dish. Divide the the ⅓ Cup of Extra Virgin Olive oil and pour across the tomatoes in each pan.
- Divide the 24 garlic cloves, placing 12 whole cloves in each pan.
- Sprinkle each pan with Italian Seasoning, Thyme, Salt and Pepper.
- Roast overnight at 180 degrees for 10-12 hours, or until the tomatoes have the feel of a dried apricot.
- Save the oil that remains in the pan and use for a dipping sauce.
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Monday: Crafts Keep Me Sane, The Better Baker, Skip to My Lou, DIY Showoff, Say Not, Sumo’s Sweet Stuff, Etcetorize, Sew Chatty, Brassy Apple, Flour Me With Love, Creating my Way, Mad in Crafts, Our Delightful Home, Sew Can Do, It’s So Very Cheri, Craft O Maniac, Polly Want a Crafter, Tuesday: Craft Edition, Inspiration Board , New Nostalgia , Lettered Life , Coastal Charm, Tip Junkie , Ladybug Blessings, Hope Studios , Todays Creative Blog, Wednesday: Someday Crafts , Day2DayJoys, Jillify It , Junk in the Trunk, We are that Family , Frugally Sustainable, Sew Much Ado, Fine Craft Guild , The Thrifty Home, My Girlish Whims , Quick, Easy, Cheap & Healthy, Trendy Treehouse, Thursday: Somewhat Simple, No Minimalist Here , A Glimpse Inside, The Mommy Club, The 36th Avenue, Cheap Chic Home, Beyond the Picket Fence, Fireflies and Jellybeans , House of Hepworths , The Shabby Chic Cottage, Friday: My Repurposed Life, It’s a HodgePodge Life, The Shabby Nest, Just Wingin’ It, One Artsy Momma, French Country Cottage, Finding Fabulous, Passionately Artistic, Petals and Picots, Simply Designing, Little Becky Homecky, My Romantic Home, Bacon Time, Simply Living, Saturday: Polkadot Pretties, Tatertots and Jello, Create and Inspire, Be Different, Act Normal, Craft Envy, Funky Junk Interiors, Petites Passion, Sunday: Under the Table, Natural Mothers, Mopping the Floor
Hey! Rebekah It’s good to see that even w/ this extreme heat we’ve been sharing, your tomatoes look great. We seem to “dispose” of mine too quickly to have enough to dry them.:) Thanks for the links! – the very first one I checked out – craft o maniac – has a sundial that will be my unexpected Tuesday garden art project.
Have a great day! Cooler weather is on it’s way – Yeah!!
Janice-
My plants are on their way out, but still producing. It’s going to be very hard when I actually have to buy tomatoes again…
I am so impressed with everything you do!
My tomatoes bombed this year again. They will not turn red! I’m going to add cow manure to the beds this fall and see if that helps. I also tried the bean freezing idea but burned 2 big pots of beans. I got busy and forgot about them…I’m going to try again but use the slow cooker.
Dayna-
I have burned a pot or two of beans, trust me. Once, I got busy weeding the flower beds and completely forgot. By the time I got back inside, the house smelled horrible and I had to scrape the beans off the pans with a butter knife! It was a mess!!!
Wow, these look great!, especially those sandwiches, yum!
Can I have some when we come????
These look delicious! What temp do you roast them at? I’ve never done this before!
~Angela~
Angela-
I’m such a dork! How could I forget the temperature. Kind’ve important, huh? I have updated my post to reflect this-but just so you know, roast at 180 degrees for 10-12 hours (overnight). Thanks for catching my flub!
I LOVE sundried tomatoes! These look fabulous!
Thanks for linking to a Round Tuit!
Hope you have a fabulous week!
Jill @ Creating my way to Success
http://www.jembellish.blogspot.com/
Perfect timing. I need to use up my tomatoes! Just to let you know I featured your wonderful project today on homework. Stop by and grab a featured button. Wishing you a wonderful weekend.
Thanks Carolyn! I love being featured. I’ll make sure and stop by!!!
Great use of those garden tomatoes, beautiful presentation. Thanks for sharing them on foodie friday.
[…] now on, starting with my recipe on Sundried Roma Tomatoes, there will be a printable recipe at the bottom of the post, perfect for your personal […]
how do you store them..coudl you seal them in a jar with the oil?..I’m dying to try this!
Definitely. You could store them in a jar with oil-that’s how the in-laws store theirs. I’m not certain on the shelf life, but I know that there’s lasted them quite awhile. I’ll ask them and get back to you!
Thank you for participating in Show Your Stuff Blog Hop, You are invited to come back:
http://juliejewels1.blogspot.com/2012/08/show-your-stuff-38.html
Absolutely delicious looking. Thank you for linking it up at our linky party athttp://www.fineCraftGuild.com
[…] is coming to an end and many of us are desperately trying to use up our harvest. Perfect timing by Potholes and Pantyhose to share her sundried tomato […]