Dry and pulverize tomatoes to store as a spice
Tomato flakes add some zip to hot buttered popcorn. Flakes or powder are easy to make from tomato skins. (Photos:
Kathy Morrison)
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Recipe: Try tomato flakes or powder on popcorn, veggies, salads
By Kathy Morrison
You've sliced, diced, sandwiched, roasted, cobbled, canned and crushed your tomato crop. Now, before those tomatoes fade away completely, here's your chance to powder them.
I'd never thought of doing this until earlier this summer when I was making salsa to can. The tomatoes needed to be peeled, but I was using my lovely meaty Juliet cherry tomatoes. No way was I going to dip hundreds of these in hot water and peel them. Instead, I sliced them in half, put them cut side down on pans, and popped them under the broiler. Success! The skins slid right off.
Then I looked at the big pile of skins.
The dried tomato skins are ready to be crumbled. |
Hmm, I wondered, could I turn those into tomato powder?
In this case, it was a pretty easy yes. I already had pans out that I could reuse after scraping the Juliets off them.
I spread the skins across the parchment paper on the pans and returned them to the oven, this time set at 200 degrees. I put them in there for an hour or so. Then, just to be sure they were completely dry, I turned off the oven and left them there overnight. (If you have a dehydrator, this will be even easier.)
The skins the next morning crumbled easily. I loaded them all into my food processor and whirred them to flakes. If you want powder, just keep whirring. The powder stores beautifully in a glass jar on the spice shelf.
Tomato flakes are delicious on fresh cooked green beans. |
Tomato powder
This is less of a recipe and more of a method. I used only skins, but you also could use leftover tomato pulp or even very thinly sliced tomatoes -- the drying will take longer, however.
Ingredients:
Tomato skins, enough to thinly cover at least one quarter-sheet baking pan (though as long as you're doing this, why not do several pans' worth?)
Instructions:
Heat oven to 200 degrees. Cover baking pans with parchment paper (preferred) or lightly grease them. Spread skins thinly and evenly over the pans, and put pans in the oven. Check after 1 hour to judge how much longer to keep the heat on. Skins may be already dry, especially if they were cooked as part of being removed from the tomatoes.
When everything seems dry, turn off the oven, leaving the pans inside for several hours or overnight to completely dry and cool.
Remove the tomato skins from the oven, and check that the skins crumble easily. Put them in a blender, food processor or spice blender. Whir until you have the consistency of flakes or powder you want.
(If the tomato skins are sticking to the side of the blender, they're not dry enough and need to be put back in the oven for awhile.)
Tomato flakes ready to store and use. Grind them up even more if you want powder. |
(Note on drying tomato pulp or thin slices: Use the lowest setting available on your oven, or use a dehydrator. Drying the tomatoes thoroughly may take as long as 18 hours.)
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