As we so often do when Lon and Lis come over, the guys split off and Lis and I do the same. We always chat together for awhile first and all of us enjoy each other's company tremendously but Lis and I need our alone-together time to discuss the things we need to discuss amongst ourselves and I think the men do too. And let's just face it- the things Lis and I discuss might make the men uncomfortable and the things they discuss would probably make us look at each other and roll our eyes. Sorry if I'm being sexist. I'm also being honest.
So while Lis and I were on the back porch chatting away, the fellas decided to do a walk about the yard and while they were out there, they checked the fig tree which I haven't done in weeks because I never get any mature figs and lo and behold- they found and picked quite a few! I was flabbergasted! That's more figs than I've gotten in the past four years combined.
Happy me. And there are still some yet to ripen so that is tremendous. I have no idea why the critters have left the fruit alone this year. Could it have been the presence of Hawk?
Who knows?
Not me.
So our supper turned out to be one of the most Florida of all possible Florida meals and I am not going to lie- it was damn good. I worked really hard at the tomato pie. Every year I have go through about twenty online recipes to remind myself of what I think works and what doesn't and what I should try and what I shouldn't. In other words, no two of my tomato pies have been alike. I did not grow up eating tomato pies. I'd never even heard of one until maybe fifteen or so years ago. And the first one I made was in Asheville when Lis and I went to Asheville to visit Jessie and Vergil when they were living there. We went to a farmer's market and got THE MOST BEAUTIFUL heirloom tomatoes you've ever seen, or at least I'd ever seen, and I have no idea where I'd heard about tomato pie but I decided to make one and we still haven't quit talking about that or the world's most beautiful and gigantic heirloom tomato which was the star of that show. I find it strange that people talk about how tomato pie is some big southern tradition and say that their recipe was passed down from their grandmother because I just don't think anyone used to make them.
Maybe Paula Deen invented them.
Over the years I have learned that it is of utmost importance to blind bake the pie crust and I've also come to realize that draining the sliced tomatoes on paper towels or dishtowels and then perhaps roasting them for a little while in a casual manner on a baking sheet on parchment paper adds up to a pie that is not soggy.
And that's what I did yesterday.
You make a goop of mayonnaise, grated cheese, and an egg to go between the layers of the tomatoes (or, some recipes just call for you to put that all on the top) and I added basil, chopped semi-roasted onions, and chopped green onions to that mixture.
What kind of cheese?
Whatever makes you happy. The pioneer woman uses blue cheese and although I am one of blue cheese's biggest fans I'm thinking that's not what I want in my tomato pie. I used a sharp cheddar and a little parmesan in yesterday's pie.
You layer all of that into the mostly pre-baked pie crust and bake it at about 375 degrees until all the cheesy mayonnaisy stuff is not jiggly and then it's done.
You can add garlic or oregano or whatever you want. And the best suggestion I can make is that you are going to need far more tomato slices than you think you will.
So we had that and some pan-fried red snapper filets, courtesy of Glen, and I made stone-ground grits which resemble the grits you get in grocery stores or at restaurants about as much as homemade sourdough resembles Merita white bread, not to insult either more processed grits or Merita white bread (which makes excellent catfish bait when you squish some up to make a little dough ball to put on your hook) and I cut up some of our cucumbers and made a salad with those and sliced red onions and sesame seeds and vinegars and, oh, you know, some other stuff.
I'll be honest- I was somewhat anxious about how I would deal with these foods. I've been eating pretty plain and down to the ground for the last two months and I wasn't sure how I'd react when something like tomato pie was set in front of me. But it was fine. I made a plate of everything on the table and ate until I felt satisfied and that was that.
I am still finding this unbelievable.
And of course, the main thing was being with Lis and Lon and being able to enjoy their company, laugh with them, be serious with them, to simply be so grateful for their presence in our house, their presence in our lives.
And astoundingly, neither Lis nor I cried.
Today has been a fine day. I decided to go out and see if there were any figs left for me to pick and I got a few. Maurice helped.
Then I came in and decided to make fig preserves.
Here's the ancient recipe I've always used.
So I did it by instinct and used a cup less sugar and I think I overcooked them which only means that the preserves are more like some brown sugar candy than preserves but I have a feeling they'll be fine on a biscuit.
Hoo-boy.
That man.
We have to wait till August for Heirloom tomatoes, but its worth the wait. First time I tasted a fig it was an epiphany. All I ever had was the cookie. Now when I can find them, they were $2 each! A little dear for my budget. They are known for their laxative effect. I am content with kiwi and cucumber. Lovely post, Mary.
ReplyDeleteWell we have the cucumbers but not the kiwi.
DeleteI'm surprised this fig tree hasn't died. I never give it much attention.
I learned that laying slices of tomatoes on the end crusts of sliced bread drains them as well. I tried the paper towel trick but spent too much time trying to peel soggy paper towel off soggy tomato slices.
ReplyDeleteSounds like a wonderful interlude with Lis and Lon and fig preserves to boot. Win win.
And a functioning washing machine. What a weekend!!
You'd have to have fifty loaves of bread to have enough end crusts to drain all the tomatoes you need for a tomato pie, though. Or, okay, maybe just forty. Depends on how big your tomatoes are. I find that dish towels do work, you just have to realize you're going to have to wash them
DeleteAnd now I have the washing machine in which to do that!
It doesn't have to be end crusts, just any old bread will do.
DeleteI had never heard of Tomato Pie either until I read your Blog about one you Posted about some time ago. I've yet to eat/try one since I'm no Suzy Homemaker or Baker, so would leave that to the Culinary Jedis who would make it so that it was edible and appreciated for what it should turn out like. *Smiles* My Parents had a huge Fig Tree, it was Magnificent and gave us good Harvests, glad yours finally produced a Bounty and Thanks for that Ancient Recipe which looks delicious.
ReplyDeleteThat fig recipe was written in the days when it was pretty much assumed that whoever was reading it knew how to cook.
DeleteWhat a fine time you had with your friends! The tomato pie recipe sounds doable. Thank you. Figs are a mystery to me-I've only ever eaten Fig Newtons. You have got to be so relieved about your washing machine. What a pain when they don't function. Maurice is so perfect and such a good helper.
ReplyDeleteWe did have a very fine time with our friends. It was the sweetest.
DeleteI am very, very relieved about my washing machine.
Maurice is really the best helper I have. Also the only one, generally.
Tomato Pie -- what next! I've never heard of it before.
ReplyDeleteWell, it's a thing. And if it's done right, a thing of beauty.
DeleteWoo-Hoo! The washer is back in action. That's certainly cause for celebration! I think a tomato pie would be the honorary guest at that celebration. I've never heard of a tomato pie before, but it sure sounds good. Figs! Wow. I never knew figs grew in Florida. I don't know where I thought they came from...Egypt? LOL!
ReplyDeleteSo glad Liz and Lon were able to visit. Is Liz 'the Elizabeth' that made the CD on your site? I did give a listen, and it was lovely. I think I'm gonna have to buy that one.
Stay cool! Hotter than a match in Ohio the last 2 days.
Paranormal John
People have been growing figs in Florida for a very long time. It's sort of a traditional thing here.
DeleteYes, that is the Lis who has the album. But it's Lis with an "s". It's unique, like her. Her singing is so beautiful. And she sure can play a lot of instruments. Ditto for Lon.
Trying to stay cool. You do too, okay?
I know I will probably never atempt to make a tomato pie but I would love to try one sometime if I got the chance.
ReplyDeleteIf you used a store bought pie crust it might not be such a bother to make. And no one would be able to tell the difference.
DeleteTrue, maybe I will try to make one later. Right now I am recovering from shoulder surgery with my arm in a sling for 8 weeks so not atempting anything much righ now.
DeleteI've never had tomato pie. I think I would like it but most of my immediate family, nope to tomatoes. I would have to choose my audience carefully.
ReplyDeleteI do love fig preserves, yum. Yay on the washer, probably the second most important thing, after AC. Well, third I guess, a refrigerator has to come before the washer. Long time friends are the best, a shared history is mighty fine.
I think that people who don't like tomatoes are rare. I've only met a few of them. But maybe not.
DeleteYou're classification for household appliances is spot-on. Stoves are pretty important too but the AC definitely comes in first.
I'm with Leslie - I'm curious as hell to try a tomato pie. But not so much that I will be producing one.
ReplyDeleteWell, that is all right. I wouldn't exactly call it a bucket list necessity.
DeleteYour tomato pie is a thing of beauty and I know it tasted equally as good. I had wondered if you would make one this summer since you're on the eating-right regimen...so the visit from Lon and Lis was a good time to whip one up so they could help eat all that deliciousness. I'm back on zepbound and trying to eat well also, so I haven't decided if I'll make one or not. Sure would like to though. I have always used the Simply Recipes tomato pie recipe which sounds very similar to yours. The only difference is I caramelize my onions and add a small bit of bacon. SO damn good! Like you, I was born and raised in the deep south and have never heard of tomato pie until 7or 8 years ago, surely no more than 10 years. But I'm glad to have found it.
ReplyDeleteThose fig preserves make my mouth water... my Mama used to make the Best with those thinly sliced lemons. OMG! I need to get off your site and quit thinking about all this yummy food. And now my neighbor has just brought over some still-warm-peach-pecan muffins...dammit ...it's no wonder we're always thinking about food. As soon as these bitches cool they are going in the freezer!
Sounds like a pretty perfect day...fabulous food, visiting with your soul-mate friends and a stellar man that knows how to fix shit. Couldn't ask for more!
Angie D
I roasted my onions for awhile in the oven for this pie. They were good like that. I know that some people do put bacon in their tomato pies. I'm sure that's truly delicious. Like a BLT in pie form.
DeleteI am so grateful that the Zepbound is so at making rich foods so much less appealing to me. It is just the weirdest thing.
I am a very lucky woman.
Sounds like a great day, an ordinary day filled with happy things. And Mr. Moon did not get his head smashed, so that was the cherry on top, wasn't it?
ReplyDeleteDebby, I know you know what I mean about men doing things that could easily kill them which they just brush off with seemingly no concern.
DeleteStubborn men do not get any less stubborn with age in my experience. Only more so.
Cooked mayonnaise doesn't sound good to me so I'd be more likely to try a bechamel sauce with the extra sharp cheeses added, but the tomato pie does sound wonderful. I buy fig jam and like it on toast, one of my daughters has a fig tree and makes jam which doesn't last long, they all eat it. I love standing near her tree on a hot sunny day and just breathing in that sweet scent.
ReplyDeleteWell, when you think about it, mayonnaise is nothing but eggs and oil which are very commonly used in baking. It's a very nice binder for the cheese and onions.
DeleteI've never noticed the scent of a fig tree!
I imagine that your daughter's jam goes fast.
I love all things mayo -- cooked, uncooked, etc. Your tomato pie looks and sounds like perfection, and I think I'm going to try some derivation of yours. In the past, I've made a tomato tart in a tart pan with a simple tart crust. First, you caramelize a bunch of sliced onions forever until they're just brown and sweet and delicious. They go in the bottom, and then on top of that you put a bunch of grated gruyere cheese and then the sliced tomatoes, round and round and then lots of salt and thyme sprigs and pepper and bake for however long it take to brown and bubble.
ReplyDeleteThat sounds so delicious. As I said, I don't think tomato pies have been around long enough for there to be any "traditional" way to make them. Free rein those pies!
DeleteYes, that man! I knew he would do it. And all those figs! I’d be in heaven. I had to look up “blind baking” the pie crust. (I think anything I bake would look and taste like I baked it blind.) Anyway, I knew about baking a pie crust empty but I never knew it was called blind baking. The things I learn here!
ReplyDeleteI have no idea why we call it blind baking. You have to line the crust with foil or parchment paper (far superior in my opinion) and then fill the whole thing with pie weights, which you can actually buy, or dry beans, which is what I use. I had a dedicated bag of them in the cabinet! I keep them just for that purpose. I do this faithfully because after once thinking that I could totally prebake a pie shell without putting anything in it to support it, just pricking it with a fork, I learned there's a reason for the process.
DeleteYou really did not need to know that, did you?
I need to know everything you have to tell me.
DeleteMy husband has been nurturing a fig bush for a few years now.....it is finally in the soil, near a wall, and apparently has 22 figs on it....he counted them!!
ReplyDeleteObvs likes the spot it is in. Not sure what I will do with all those figs if/when they ripen though.....I am not into making preserves!
Hmmm...
DeleteI imagine there are lots of things you can do with figs. I know how wonderful it is to nurture a plant for a very long time and then to have it thrive.
Fresh, ripe figs are, as Carol says above, an epiphany
DeleteFor years one of the vendors at the Tailgate Market here in Black Mountain would have ripe fresh figs for a week or so...and I'd buy them early in the day before she sold out. That was a thrilling fruit. So glad you've got a bounty in order to make preserves. I've also been given some once by an industrious cooking friend. Gold.
ReplyDeleteThere's just something about that combination of figs and lemon that is hard to beat. I don't think I've ever been to the Tailgate Market in Black Mountain. I'll ask Jessie about it. They probably mostly eat out of Vergil's mother's garden. She is a master gardener and I'm not kidding.
DeleteYour meal with Liz and Lon sounds wonderful. Breaking bread with good friends is the best and the Tomato pie and Snapper made a lovely meal to share.
ReplyDeleteYay! Glen works his miracles again. A repair guy would have likely said buy new due to cost of parts and labor and that would happen only after you paid him $100 to walk in the door.
You are right about out meal together being wonderful. I love those people so much.
DeleteAnd yes, Glen is not only a jack of all trades, he is master of quite a few!
I have never eaten tomato pie. In fact I had never even heard of tomato pie until I started coming here. And of course the men and women split off. We are concerned with far different things. And I'm jealous of your figs. I have a little fig tree that has frozen to the ground every winter since I planted it and never gotten a single fig off it. It will make some small hard green things that never ripen. Back when Frank of the Bountiful Garden was still alive he would let me come get figs off his three trees.
ReplyDeleteWell, like I said, I think this shit about tomato pie being a southern tradition is exactly that- bullshit.
DeleteLet me ask you a question- do y'all grow sand pears in your area of Texas? Every summer I vow to buy a couple and plant them but then I forget. They are a gritty fruit, almost like a cross between an apple and a pear and make the absolute best pies and also preserves.
Sounds like a happy weekend with good food, good friends and a good husband who can fix things!
ReplyDeleteHe is so good at fixing things. I bet he wishes he could fix his wife sometimes.
DeleteYay for the washing machine! And for the friend time, and for the fig preserves and the tomato pie. Success all around.
ReplyDeleteMy grandmother used to have a fig tree in her yard in Maryland, and she made preserves from them a couple of years in a row. She had so many preserves she couldn't possibly eat them all. We threw away a lot of them when she died in 1989 -- they'd been canned in 1974!
Success all around, indeed!
DeleteNow you've got me wondering if fifteen year old home-canned preserves would kill you if you ate them.
I once won a work cooking competition with a Tomato Pie, which is not at all traditional in my neck of the woods. The theme was fruit so I was being quite cute - I found a few on the internet and then ad libbed the rest. I don't recall what tomatoes were used - I think that I had a glut that year (oh to have a tomato glut again) and the trick I was advised by one was to put a handful of whatever cheese into my blind baked case and give it another few minutes in the oven before layering up my tomatoes and onion - and definitely don't be shy about the tomatoes.
ReplyDeleteThat's a good idea about the cheese. Another step to decrease the soggy factor.
DeleteYep. Like I said- you use far more tomatoes than you'd think possible.
You made me hungry... saliva fills my mouth!! I'd never heard of tomato pie before and will give it a try... Our summertime thing is "hootercogs" - my m-i-l's version of corn fritters..
ReplyDeleteHOOTERCOGS! Oh my god. I love that name. What part of the south do you live in?
DeleteNot the South... my m-i-l's family was from Central NYS ever since the post Revolutionary War era... money for farm came from govt. for serving in the war
Deletegoofed... I am not anonymous!
ReplyDeletenever made a tomato pie but have been taking mental notes and getting tips from the ones you make! Fig preserves...indeed...*cook rapidly until clear*? I made fig preserves once about 25 years ago....it either takes forever on low simmer.....or, as I learned the hard way ....*rapidly* means.....a rapid turn to sticky goo if you cook TOO hot and quickly. Mine was like glue....but again...went great on warm toast! My fig tree died, so...no more tests for me! Also glad your washer back in business! Dryers no big deal....always clothesline...but washers? Pain in the butt when they malfunction!
ReplyDeleteSusan M
I swear to you- if you look up "fig preserves recipe" on the internet, you will find the biggest number of serious variations of making a food I've ever heard of. And they only have three ingredients in them!
DeleteTomato pie is a Trenton specialty. We were given it as newcomers to the region. But now it seems to have been overtaken by pizza.
ReplyDelete