Preparation | Cooking | Start to finish |
---|---|---|
40 min. | 1 min. | 40 min. |
1 | Boil a large pan of water, and prepare a large bowl of cold water (the kitchen sink, half filled, is fine). | |
2 | Remove the small green stalk from each tomato (if there is one). | |
3 | Then with a good knife cut a cross in the top of each tomato. | |
4 | When water is boiling, put two or three tomatos in the pan. Leave them in for 20 seconds. Note: If you leave tomatoes too long in boiling water, they will start to cook, and that's not the goal. | |
5 | The skin will split, starting from the top incision. | |
6 | Remove them with a skimmer or a fork, and plunge immediately into cold water. Continue with all tomatoes. | |
7 | Other way: Joel Robuchon advised in one of his recipes to avoid plunging tomatoes in water (because it removes some of the taste), but instead to stick the fruit on a fork and turn it above a gas flame. It works well. | |
8 | Remove tomatoes from cold water, peel off the skin with a knife discard it. | |
9 | With a knife remove the green and hard core of the tomatos ("the bone"), and discard it. The tomatoes are ready to be used, in a tomato tart for example. | |
10 | If you want only tomato flesh: cut them in four. | |
11 | Then cut each quarter, from top to bottom, exactly as if you were tracing a "C" with the knife blade. | |
12 | Discard the intside of the quarter, and remove any remaining seeds. | |
13 | You should have made tomato petals, ready to be used just as they are or cut smaller, in a salad with garden herbs for example, or cooked in another recipe like the tomato preserve. |