02 September 2007

Preparing for Winter

Now that it's September and there's a coolness to the air, W. has been in full on preparation for winter. By the end of the day, he'll have been through a bushel of tomatoes (half beefsteak, half plum), and made slow roasted tomatoes, tomato puree, and a vat of pomorola sauce. It's all going in the freezer, and will be gone by the time summer is here again. This red onion was so strange and beautiful inside that I almost wanted to use it as a rubber stamp.


The roasted tomatoes get a sprinkle of dried herbs, salt, and pepper and a tiny drizzle of olive oil, and go in the oven for a couple of hours at about 225°. They dry out a little and collapse a bit. We'll then freeze them on the sheet pans, and transfer them to bags when they're fully hard.


The sauce is just tomato, red onion, garlic, basil, carrot, celery and a glug of olive oil. Nothing is sauteed; it's just all cooked down at once, and then run through the food mill. It's fine over pasta as is, or can be the base for something more complicated. I don't know how big that stock pot is, but yes, that is a lot of sauce. It wasn't cooked in that pot...it was done in three smaller batches and then combined to cool before being divided up into freezer containers.

14 comments:

Suz said...

How lovely....and how wonderful to have a taste of summer in the middle of winter.

niobe said...

Those roasted tomatoes are just beautiful, all lined up like that.

I froze tons of tomato sauce last summer, a similar collection of ingredients to your, though minus the onion. But when I opened the containers, the frost from the freezer had gotten in, so while I sure they were fine, I ended up throwing them alls away.

Her Grace said...

Ahhh, now roasting tomatoes is an excellent idea I wish I'd thought of. After I made sauce and my husband made salsa, I had about a dozen and a half tomatoes left. I froze them whole -- easy, but I'll be wishing they were something else this winter!

S said...

that onion is stunningly lovely. i don't know exactly why.

Blue Zebra said...

Wow! What a cool post! I love your onion and love your photos of the matoes!

painted maypole said...

Wow. impressive. You'll have some good eatin' in the winter!

Katie Zeller said...

Love that onion! I just sat and stared at it for a bit....of course, it is morning....
My freezer is slowly filling with courgette, green beans, freezer jams and herbs. Sadly, we had not tomatoes this year. I'll be taking the machete to the pumpkins soon... Almost done making pickles.
I love this time of year.

BipolarLawyerCook said...

I showed some friends the joys of roasted cherry tomatoes last night-- I'll be making my own to pop into the freezer under oil today.

Tabba said...

Wow. Oh, Wow.
I'm jealous.
I bow down to you.

You are doing what I know I should be doing, but am not.

Anonymous said...

That is a beautiful onion. I'm glad you captured it. (I love having a digital camera. It's so wonderful for capturing those ephemeral moments. Especially those with food.)

I've just discovered the joys of roasted tomatoes. I roasted a bunch with some garlic cloves and olive oil, and damn were they tasty.

Maewen Archer said...

I want to do that. Why am I not doing that!?

OhTheJoys said...

Too bad you're not my generous neighbor!!

Emily said...

My garden has produced more tomatoes this year than ever. It's hard for me to get motivated to do anything culinary with the extra bounty when I'm knee deep in tomatoes, as it is. The best I do is to ding-dong-ditch my neighbors and leave bags of vine ripe toms on their door step. Enjoy your breath of summer in the dregs of winter!

anne said...

What a delicious way to savor summer. Looks awesome, doesn't help that I am starved either!