Tomato Basil Crostini
Lynley Jones
A few classic ingredients come together, and BOOM - it's summer, and you're living the good life.
Ingredients
3 medium tomatoes, diced to about 1/4 inch (about 2 cups diced)
2 medium cloves garlic, minced; plus one large clove of garlic, left whole
About a half a cup of olive oil (you won't use all of it)
1 Tablespoon chopped parsley
1 teaspoon Balsamic vinegar
Salt to taste
1 French baguette
Basil leaves
A hunk of Parmigiano-Reggiano cheese
Instructions
1. Combine the tomatoes, minced garlic, 1 Tablespoon of olive oil, the parsley and the vinegar in a bowl. Stir in a couple of pinches of salt. Allow the mixture to sit while you prepare the crostini.
2. Preheat the oven to 400 degrees. Slice the baguette diagonally into about 15-20 rounds about 1/2-inch thick each. You may not use the whole baguette, depending on how long it was to start with.
3. Lay the rounds in one layer on a rimmed baking sheet and slide them into the oven on the middle rack for about 5 minutes, until they are lightly toasted. Flip them over to the other side and continue toasting them until they are lightly toasted on the second side, about 3 more minutes. While the slices are toasting, pour about 4 Tablespoons of olive oil into a small dish and locate a pastry brush, so you will be ready when the crostini comes out of the oven.
4. Remove the crostini from the oven and quickly brush them each with olive oil while they’re still hot, before they have a chance to dry out and become hard.
5. Peel the remaining clove of garlic and rub it onto each of the crostini, then arrange the crostini on a serving platter and lay one basil leaf on each one.
6. Taste the tomato mixture and add a bit more salt if needed (it should taste deliciously tomato-ey, but not salty). When the tomatoes are just right, carefully spoon a mound of tomatoes onto each crostini.
7. Use a vegetable peeler to shave long pieces of the cheese onto the crostini, and serve.
Notes:
This dish is a crowd-pleaser. But before it even gets there, it's a you-pleaser. This is a good thing if you are making a platter of crostini to enjoy for your own lunch. But if you are making these for a party, you may lose a few to the "I better taste this one more time" thing. But hey, it's your party!
When you dice up all those delicious tomatoes, you're going to have a choice to make. Will you leave all that flavorful juicy pulp in the dish, or strain it out? Leaving it in will mean you've got a whole lotta juice in the bottom of your bowl of tomato bliss. I usually use a slotted spoon to scoop the chunky tomato pieces out of the bowl leave the flavorful liquid behind. Then, you could toss this liquid with some salad greens or something, and you've got a whole 'nuther dish of summer to feast on.
There's nothing like a perfectly ripe, perfectly in-season tomato, a plump little package of summer sunshine. Here’s how to choose a good one, what to do with them while they’re here (and why local tomatoes are so good).