Phoebe Lapine

Phoebe Lapine
Location
New York,
Birthday
November 09
Bio
I am a New York based food writer, and co-founder of Big Girls Small Kitchen, a food website for twenty-something cooks looking for user-friendly, affordable ways to navigate their kitchens. My upcoming cookbook, Cara & Phoebe's Quarter-Life Kitchen, will be published by Harper Collins in May 2011. The book will chronicle our sophomore year in the "real world," featuring the recipes and tales behind cocktail parties, at-home diner dates, lonely lunches, and all manner of kitchen disasters.

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Salon.com
Editor’s Pick
AUGUST 4, 2010 9:59AM

Baked Tomatoes With Thyme

Rate: 3 Flag

 

Bakes Tomatoes with Thyme

 

For more images, visit Big Girls, Small Kitchen.

My dad grew up in Ohio. But I’m not sure this actually had too much impact on his mother’s cuisine. The supermarkets were the same on the East Coast, and even after moving to Connecticut, my grandmother sourced over half of every meal from a can. Sometimes around the Thanksgiving table, while eating my mother’s haricots verts with spiced nuts, my dad and his siblings would reminisce about my grandmother’s vegetables, which emerged from the can, cooked, only to be boiled to the point of disintegration.

My aunts and uncles found creative ways of joining the clean plate club without bringing vegetables to their lips. Most involved hiding the unwanted food in their underpants, then immediately discarding it in a garbage can or toilet far away from the kitchen. My grandmother must have wondered why the interior of my aunt’s bras and my uncle’s button-downs were often stained canned-bean green.

When Father’s Day approached this year, my mom and I were at a loss. Nothing was getting us excited. Then it came to her. “How about some retro favorites--tuna casserole and baked tomatoes” my mom suggested.

I usually don't bake tomatoes in the summer because a) the oven makes my apartment unbearably hot and b) the tomatoes are usually so red and juicy that I want to pick one right up and bite into it like an apple. In the winter, a trip to the oven is an excellent way to amplify a tomato's flavor when it is pale in complexion and lacking in taste. But in the summer, it can feel downright foolish.

But for dad, I did it anyway.

These baked tomatoes may be a little a-la-Ohio retro, but they certainly don't borrow anything from the supermarket can tradition. The fresh breadcrumbs are laced with garlic and herbs, and after the baking process, when you bite into one, its texture is like that of a fresh red sauce. They taste great at room temperature as an elegant appetizer, or if you're in need of more green vegetables, like my dad, as a topping for a mixed green salad.

--Phoebe Lapine of Big Girls, Small Kitchen

**Recipe**

Baked Tomatoes

Baked Tomatoes with Whole Wheat Bread Crumbs and Thyme
Makes 2-4 servings

Ingredients
3/4 pound (about 3) beefsteak or other large firm tomato, cut into 1/2-inch slices
1 tablespoons balsamic vinegar
1 cup fresh whole wheat bread crumbs*
2 garlic cloves, minced
1/2 tablespoon fresh thyme leaves, plus more stalks for garnish
1 tablespoon chopped fresh parsley (optional)

* Remove crusts from 3 slices of sandwich bread and pulse in the food processor.

Preheat the oven to 350 degrees.

Brush a cast iron skillet or casserole dish with olive oil. Arrange the tomatoes in one layer. Drizzle with balsamic vinegar, and season with salt and pepper.

In a small bowl, combine the breadcrumbs, garlic, and herbs. Add a pinch of salt, and 1 tablespoon of olive oil. Toss to combine with a fork.

Spoon the crumb mixture over each tomato. Drizzle some additional olive oil over the top. Bake in the oven for 20 minutes, until the tomatoes are bubbling, then turn the heat up to Broil, and bake for 3-5 more minutes, until the crumbs are nicely browned. Remove from the oven, and garnish with the additional thyme stalks. Serve immediately, or at room temperature.

 

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Comments

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Oooh, this looks so delicious I bet we see it on the cover! _r
I love baked tomatoes, and these looks especially lovely!
So simple and yummy. I could just bite into a photo.
I don't like using the oven in summer either for the same reasons. Who needs the extra heat? But your recipe and photos look so good, I'll keep them for winter. Thank you for sharing. Rated.
Wait! Wait! Phoebe! What about the recipe for tuna casserole? I want to make this whole meal! Please?