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Thread: Pappa al Pomodoro

  1. #1
    lesley's Avatar
    lesley is offline Sous Chef
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    Default Pappa al Pomodoro

    Happy New Year everyone!
    It's been a busy time for us over the last month, not just cooking, but looking after the elderly. This is one of the soups we serve up in December & January. Although it's really a summer soup, tomatoes are always available in the supermarkets. It's cheap & easy to make, & great for using up any stale bread. I first had this soup in Tuscany & thought it looked like a bowl of stodge! But it's tastes delicious & goes down very well, especially for people living on their own, as it reheats perfectly the next day or you can freeze.



    Serves 4
    Prep Time 10 minutes
    Cooking Time 55 minutes
    Ingredients
    500g Ripe plum tomatoes(cut in half length ways)
    1 x 400g tin tomatoes
    20 Basil leaves (roughly chopped)
    2 Cloves garlic (thinly sliced)
    3 tbsp Extra virgin olive oil
    250g stale bread (I used Ciabatta)
    400ml water



    Method

    Put 2 tbsp of Extra virgin olive oil into a roasting dish, stir in half the basil and all the garlic
    Lay the cut tomatoes in the roasting dish, skin side up and brush the skins with the extra virgin olive oil mixture
    Season with salt and freshly ground black pepper
    Place on the middle shelf of a pre-heated oven 200deg;C/400deg;F gas mark 6 for 30 minutes
    Transfer the tomatoes to a large heavy saucepan, add the tin of tomatoes and water
    Use a fork to break up the tomatoes
    Bring to a boil, turn the heat down and simmer for 15 minutes
    Break the bread up into roughly 1"/25mm squares and add to the saucepan
    Gently stir in the remaining basil
    Simmer for a further 10 minutes
    Serve



    Equipment

    Roasting dish
    Large heavy saucepan
    Shopping List

    500g Ripe plum tomatoes
    1 x 400g tin tomatoes
    20 Basil leaves
    2 Cloves garlic
    Extra virgin olive oil
    250g stale bread

  2. #2
    Cook Chatty Cathy is offline Master Chef
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    Default

    This sounds wonderful Lesley!!! Thanks for sharing the recipe!

  3. #3
    lesley's Avatar
    lesley is offline Sous Chef
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    Default

    You're welcome..

  4. #4
    cookie's Avatar
    cookie is offline Master Chef
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    Default

    Happy new year! Your dish looks delicious, I love tomatoes Cookie

  5. #5
    The Ironic Chef is offline Master Chef
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    Default Bread Lasagna , No Pasta

    I make a dish using the stale bread slices and actually making a lasagna replacing the pasta with the bread. This is one of my wifes favorites. I use lots of mozzarella cheese.

    Is there a name for this dish? I always thought that it was a Pomodoro

  6. #6
    Mama Mangia's Avatar
    Mama Mangia is offline Master Chef
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    Default

    Pomodoro is an Italian term for tomato.
    Lasagna when not made with noodles/pasta, can be made with eggplant, zucchini (squash), and there is such a thing as lasagna bread.

  7. #7
    jpshaw's Avatar
    jpshaw is offline Master Chef
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    OK, for us that don't get out very much, who's going to translate "g" into oz?

  8. #8
    The Ironic Chef is offline Master Chef
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  9. #9
    Dilbert is offline Chef de Cuisine
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    >>OK, for us that don't get out very much, who's going to translate "g" into oz?

    the number is 30.

    it's not exact to the nth decimal place, but

    30 ml = one fluid ounce
    or
    30 grams = one avoirdupois ounce (ie weight)

    is close enough to work in horseshoes.

  10. #10
    jpshaw's Avatar
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    Thanks IC and Dilbert. Those will help me when our English friends post a recipe. I do have a postal meter I use for cooking that will change from Lb and oz to oz only plus grams. It can convert only the weight on the scale though. I find it very useful in cooking since it will zero out a container, meaning if it is on and you put a bowl of cooking oil it will weigh the bowl and the oil. However if you will turn it off, then place the empty bowl on it before turning it on it will zero out the bowl and measure only the ingredient you pour into the bowl. Only goes to 3 Lbs but that has been fine for cooking.

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