One summer, when
I was visiting home between college semesters, my mom and I planted some tomato
seeds. Several good tomato plants grew
up and gave us a decent harvest, but one indolent plant never really
produced. The following summer, however,
that same plant finally hit its stride, and oh what a plant it was. It gave literally hundreds of tomatoes –
enough to make sandwiches and salads and salsas – we could have even had a mini
version of La Tomatina in our backyard. But,
instead, I tamely made some tomato preserves with the excess.
I found this
recipe on Food52.com at the height of our tomato heyday. An intriguing
combination of tomatoes, onion, sugar, vinegar, cumin, and coriander leads to a
preserve that is reminiscent of a chutney – sweet, but tangy and subtly
spiced. It’s really delicious on cheese
crackers and sandwiches (think BLT), and it’s a fun alternative to the
traditional uses for tomato when you’ve eaten all the marinara sauce and salsa
you can handle.
Tomato
Preserves
From food52.com1¾ lbs tomatoes, chopped
½ an onion,
chopped (about ¾ cup)
¼ cup brown
sugar, lightly packed
¾ cup granulated
sugar
½ teaspoon salt
¼ teaspoon
ground coriander
1/8 teaspoon
ground cumin
2 Tablespoons
apple cider vinegar
juice of ½ lemon
Stir everything
together in a pot, and bring to a boil.
Reduce heat to low, and simmer, stirring occasionally, until the mixture
reaches a jam-like consistency. It will
take about 3-4 hours, depending on the juiciness of the tomatoes. Yield: 1 good-sized jar of preserves (between
1.5-2 cups). Keeps for about 2
weeks in the refrigerator, or longer in the freezer.