Thirsty Thursday – Tomato Water Martini

This tomato water cocktail recipe is adapted from one by award-winning chef Michael Chiarello; I love his cookbooks and, of course, recipes. In his restaurant, he noticed a clear, fragrant liquid would collect on top of the large buckets of tomatoes his cooks had chopped. He discovered this sweet tomato water made a wonderful and refreshing “martini,” garnished with a cherry tomato and mozzarella skewer.

It goes without saying that this great summer treat can be made even more “festive” with the addition of some iced vodka.

Makes about 6 Tomato Water Cocktails (will vary depending on water content of tomatoes)

 
                                                                   

Ingredients:

  • 3 pounds ripe red tomatoes, cored, quartered
  • 2 tsp kosher salt
  • cheesecloth as needed
  • 12 cherry tomatoes
  • 6 small mozzarella balls (called bocconcini), or regular fresh mozzarella cut into cubes
  • 6 fresh basil leaves

Preparation…

To make the tomato water:

Toss the salt with the tomatoes. Using a food processor, working in batches, process the tomatoes, pulsing on and off, to create a very course puree. Do not over-chop, as you don’t want a smooth sauce-like product.

Place a large strainer over a non-reactive deep pot or container, and line with several layers of cheesecloth. Pour tomato puree into center of the lined strainer and gather up the edges of the cheesecloth to form a bundle. Tie off the end with kitchen string. Attach the bundle to a long wooden spoon and hang it over the container to drip.

Let the bundle hang in refrigerator for 12 hours. Discard the sack (or use it for a sauce) and transfer the tomato water to a smaller container. The tomato water will keep refrigerated for 3 days.

To make the cocktails:

Freeze 6 martini glasses. Make the garnish by skewering 2 cherry tomatoes with a piece of mozzarella in between each tomato. Rub the rim and inside of each glass with a crushed basil leaf to scent each drink. Place one tomato and mozzarella skewer into each glass. Pour in chilled tomato water and serve immediately.

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Long Island Iced Tea…yes please!

WARNING!!   Ohhhh so good but ohhhhh, so very strong.  These go down easily..drink with caution!

                                             

  • 1 (1.5 fluid ounce) jigger vodka
  • 1 (1.5 fluid ounce) jigger gin
  • 1 (1.5 fluid ounce) jigger rum
  • 1 (1.5 fluid ounce) jigger triple sec liqueur
  • 1 teaspoon tequila
  • 2 teaspoons orange juice
  • 2 fluid ounces cola-flavored carbonated beverage
  • 1 wedge lemon
In a cocktail mixer full of ice, combine vodka, gin, rum, triple sec and tequila. Add orange juice and cola. Shake vigorously until frothy. Strain into a Collins glass filled with ice, and garnish with wedge of lemon.
                          

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Chickpea Soup with Porcini Mushrooms

This hearty vegetarian soup gets superb flavor and texture from the long cooking chickpeas and dried and fresh mushrooms; one of my favorites from Lidia Bastianich.  The secret to the great taste is the paste (pestata) of aromatic vegetables and herbs, ground in the food processor. Before adding it to the soup however, you give the pestata even more flavor by browning it in a skillet-which makes it, in culinary Italian, a soffrito

                                                

Served with grilled bread, this soup makes a whole meal. Adding rice or small pasta to the soup pot during the final 10 minutes of cooking is another way to enhance it. For a non-vegetarian version, drop some good Italian sausages into soup for the last 20 minutes of cooking. Slice them right into the soup or serve the sausages separately as a second course.

chickpea_soup_with_porcini_mushrooms

 

1 pound dried chickpeas
½ cup dried porcini, cut in 1/2-inch pieces
1 small onion, coarsely chopped (about 1/2 cup)
2 celery stalks with leaves, coarsely chopped (about 1 cup)
2 garlic cloves, peeled
¼ cup fresh Italian parsley
2 tablespoons oregano leaves, or fresh marjoram leaves
2 tablespoons fresh rosemary needles, stripped from the branch
6 tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil
2 tablespoons Coarse sea salt, kosher salt, or to taste
½ teaspoon coarsely ground black pepper
1½ cups canned Italian plum tomatoes, preferably San Marzano, crushed by hand
2 pounds mixed fresh mushrooms, (such as porcini, or cremini), cleaned and sliced
Freshly grated Grana Padano, Parmigiano-Reggiano, for serving

                                                      
Rinse the chickpeas and put them in a bowl with enough cold water to cover by at least 4 inches. Let soak for 12 to 24 hours in a cool place.

Drain and rinse the beans, put them in the soup pot with 5 quarts of fresh cold water and bring to the boil over high heat. Drop in the porcini pieces, partially cover the pot, and adjust the heat to maintain steady but gentle bubbling while you prepare the pestata.

Put the onion, garlic, celery and all the herb sprigs in the work bowl of the food processor. Process to chop everything to small bits, scrape down the bowl, and process again into a finely minced paste.

Pour the olive oil into the skillet and set over medium-high heat. Scrape and stir in all of the pestata and cook for 2 or 3 minutes, stirring frequently, until it starts to color and stick to the pan. Add the crushed tomatoes.

Scrape the paste into the boiling soup. Slosh a cup or two of the soup liquid into the skillet to deglaze, scraping up any browned bits stuck to the bottom; pour this into the soup too. Now let the soup perk along steadily for about an hour, uncovered, to develop flavor and reduce slightly.

Dump in all the sliced mushrooms and another teaspoon salt, stir well, and let the soup bubble and reduce for another hour or until the chickpeas are tender and the broth has thickened slightly with a velvety sheen. Taste and adjust the seasoning. Serve right away or let it cool and use later.

Ladle portions of hot soup into warm bowls, sprinkle freshly grated grana over and give each portion a flourish of excellent olive oil.

                               
                           Pass more cheese at the table.

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