Wednesday, August 26, 2009

Sun-Dried Bruschetta

For dinner tonight, I was originally planning on having leftover pork roast with some kind of pasta as a side. But I was feeling kind of icky and my body was telling me that it wanted vegetables, so I ended up having bruschetta with a huge mound of vegetables. To begin, I'd just like to say that I know nothing about bruschetta. So I pretty much made this up with a little guidance from Alton Brown.

Ingredients:
  • 2 slices of loaf-bread (I used leftover "OG" breadsticks slices)
  • 1 tomato
  • 1/3 cup sun-dried tomatoes
  • Olive Oil
  • Minced garlic
  • Kosher salt
  • Pepper
  • Basil
Recipe:
  1. Rub the bread with the minced garlic and set aside.
  2. Preheat the oven to 400 degrees.
  3. Dice the tomato. I realized that I'd been doing it wrong for years, and finally learned how to do it properly on youtube. In the end, it looked like this...well, before I spooned out any excess seeds from the "petals" turned it them cubes:
  4. Toss tomatoes in olive oil, salt, pepper, and basil.
  5. Line a pan with tin foil and spray with cooking spray. Arrange the tomatoes in a single layer on the pan. Here they are, ready to go!
  6. Roast in the oven for 10 minutes.
  7. Remove from the oven, stir them around, then roast for another 10 minutes.
  8. With about seven minutes left, get some water a'boilin'.
  9. Wipe excess garlic from the bread and brush the slices with olive oil. Get them nice and toasty in a pan. I had the heat too high so I kind of burned mine...once again proving that patience is a virtue...that I do not possess.
  10. With two minutes left on the tomatoes, pour the boiling water over the sun-dried tomatoes and let them sit and re-hydrate for a couple of minutes.
  11. When the timer beeps, drain the sun-dried tomatoes, pull the roasted tomatoes from the oven, and mix the two together. Spoon them over the toasty bread and enjoy!
The bread is under there...I promise. I bit into the bread before putting the tomato goodness on top (just to make sure it was edible despite the slight burned-ness), and holy crap, it tasted delicious. Maybe I was just hungry, but I literally said out loud, "Holy crap, that is good." So simple, just garlic, olive oil and bread, but so, so tasty. With my undying love for sun-dried tomatoes, I really enjoyed the topping as well. In a perfect world, I would've dressed it up even more with cheese and such, and used fresh (instead of dried) basil, but I was limited by what I had on hand. If you like tomatoes and delicious bread, I would recommend this recipe. I'm sad I used up my last tomato before I head to South Dakota, otherwise I would make it again for myself before I leave on Saturday. Yum.

1 comment:

Jennifer said...

I am curious as to how you cut tomatoes and this petal business. I think a visit to youtube is in order.