Sicilian Baked Tomatoes and Onions
Donna Klein’s The Mediterranean Vegan Kitchen is probably my favorite cookbook to turn to when I want something simple but amazing, when I have fresh produce that I want to showcase. I love tofu and seitan as much as the next vegan – don’t get me wrong – but there is something very refreshing about a vegan cookbook with not a single mention of either one: it’s all “naturally vegan” recipes from the Mediterranean. When I needed to use up two tomatoes I got at the farmers market on Saturday, I thought immediately of the baked tomato recipes from this book. There are two baked tomato recipes; I made the Sicilian. I was in a quandary because I wanted to share the recipe, but didn’t want to alter its simplicity to make it enough my own. But then I found that it’s on food.com, so I guess I’ll go ahead and post it. But not without urging you strongly to check out this cookbook. It’s really good. As the author suggests in the book, I made the baked onions at the same time. The two recipes are nearly identical, so I’ve just combined them.
Sicilian Baked Tomatoes and Onions
slightly adapted from Donna Klein’s The Mediterranean Vegan Kitchen
2 large tomatoes
2 medium yellow onions, peeled
1/2 cup unseasoned bread crumbs
1/2 tsp dried oregano
1/2 tsp smoked salt, or other flaked, kosher, or sea salt (or to taste)
1/2 tsp freshly ground black pepper (or to taste)
olive oil
Preheat the oven to 350 degrees Fahrenheit. Peel the onions.
Place onions in a pot of boiling water and simmer for 5 minutes, then drain and set aside until cool enough to touch.
Cut the tomatoes in half horizontally, and use your finger to poke all the seeds out. Drain them as well as possible.
I also cored mine.
When the onions are cool enough to touch, cut them in half.
In a small bowl, mix together bread crumbs, oregano, salt, and pepper.
Put the tomatoes and onions into a baking dish into which they just fit.
Fill the holes of the tomatoes up with the bread crumb mixture and sprinkle some more on top. Also sprinkle the onions with the bread crumb mixture.
Drizzle olive oil over the tomatoes and onions.
Bake for an hour and a half (yes, really!). Let sit for a few minutes, or allow to come to room temperature, before eating.
Donna Klein suggest serving both of them together over rice or couscous (quinoa would also be good), which I’ve done before and it’s great. Tonight, though I was also having white beans and a salad, so I just served them on their own. The beans are pressure-cooked Great Northern beans, with sauted spring onions, a lot of garlic, imitation bacon bits, and sage, and a generous addition of Bryanna’s bacon salt.
This is the sort of thing I like eating when I want to feel particularly healthy! I served it all with Italian wine, and while it was cooking read some of a funny and very enjoyable Italian book.
Josiane Said,
May 12, 2011 @ 11:04 pm
Oh, that must be *so* delicious! The tomatoes must turn into pure melt-in-your-mouth goodness, and the onions – yum! Your beans sound really good, too. A perfect meal!
Nona Said,
May 13, 2011 @ 9:02 am
That looks delicious.
OK, how did I know that you were reading that book before I even clicked the link!? I loved that book!
Jes Said,
May 13, 2011 @ 12:41 pm
Oh man, those tomatoes are going on my list to make when my garden ‘maters start producing. So delicious looking!!
Amy Said,
May 14, 2011 @ 11:10 am
This looks so good! I’ve never boiled whole onions before, interesting!
Terre Munk Said,
May 15, 2011 @ 4:15 pm
These are delicious! We had them for dinner last night and my onmi hubby really enjoyed them! They are as scrumptious tasting and they are beautiful in the pictures. Thanks for a keeper recipe.