Nigel Slater's green tomato recipes (2024)

For want of a decent windowsill I grow my tomatoes outdoors. Some in pots the width and depth of a bucket, the rest in the vegetable patch, held up with string on thick hazel poles. Tomatoes you grow for yourself are gorgeous things, rich, sweet-sharp and in every colour from sunset orange (Sungold, Auriga) to midnight black (Black Krim, Black Prince). They come in yellow and gold, pear shaped and cherry sized, as long as your finger or as fat as a grapefruit. Some dangle like bunches of grapes (Cherrybell), others intrigue us by staying emerald green even when they are drippingly ripe (Green Zebra). It's the really knobbly ones I like, those with huge folds and creases, furrows and cracks. A tomato of character.

But then there are those that just don't ripen. Those tomatoes whose prospects were good, but failed due to the sudden turn of our exceptionally long summer into a generous but nippy autumn. Look properly at them and you will see fruit that is perfect in every way except that its sweetness has yet to develop. Basically, they are edible but need a helping hand from the cook. Some heat, a little sugar, a modicum of spices maybe. Whatever they need, we can save those last fruits from a fate worst than compost.

Green tomato chutney can swing both ways, and I have eaten everything from the divine to the disgusting. Better, I think, is to make a chutney – wonderful with everything from cold ham to being stirred into a bowl of steamed rice – with a mixture of green and ripe tomatoes. The unripe fruits need longer cooking to develop their sugars, but they seem to do better with a little sweet fruit in their midst. You get a playful tangle of textures and colours and every now and again a hit of crispness. It is probably worth giving the old recipes a shake and thinking of them as a starting point rather than the be all and eat all.

If I can't ripen the last few stragglers by ripping up the entire plant and bringing it, crumbling leaves and all, into a warm and cosy place to ripen, then I will tug the unblessed ones from their vines and cook them in a thin crust of beaten egg and polenta (flour, beaten egg, fine crumbs, hot oil). The dry, yellow grain forms a crisp coating while the tomato softens. It won't colour or turn a delicious rose pink, even, but will have a sprightly note and a slight crispness to it. A pleasant change from a quiveringly ripe fruit. With a dollop of rasping garlic mayo, there are few better ways to say goodbye to another year's plants.

Chutney also makes a splendid addition to a winter stew, adding a curious warmth and subtle fruitiness than no one can ever put their finger on. But you can use the unripe tomatoes in a stew, too. Even before you have made them into chutney. At this point in the year I tuck them around pieces of chicken, zinged up with a few olives and a squeeze of lemon, and let them bake till their juices run sharp and sweet.

MIXED TOMATO CHUTNEY

Nigel Slater's green tomato recipes (1)

I tend not to make gallons of chutney or jam or marmalade, but prefer to make smaller quantities, a couple of jars at a time. It is essential to make sure your jars are spotlessly clean. I pour boiling water into mine and let them sit for a few minutes before carefully pouring them out and allowing them to dry. Others put theirs into a warm oven for 10 minutes. This will make a couple of jam jars' worth.

900g tomatoes, mixed green and red

350g onions

90g raisins

250g light muscovado sugar

1 medium sized, hot red chilli

1 tsp salt

2 tsp yellow mustard seeds

300ml white wine vinegar

Halve the tomatoes. Put the green fruit together with the peeled and roughly chopped onions, into a large stainless- steel or enamelled pan with the raisins, sugar, chilli, salt, mustard seeds and vinegar. Bring to the boil, turn down the heat and leave to simmer for an hour, giving the occasional stir to reduce the risk of the chutney sticking. After about 25 minutes cooking, add the ripe tomatoes and continue to simmer. Then spoon into sterilized jars and seal.

BAKED CHICKEN WITH TOMATOES AND OLIVES

Using up the last of the tomatoes, both the ripe and green ones, is immensely satisfying, but the green ones do need quite a bit of cooking if they are to be worth eating. Slowly baked with the juices from the chicken, they take on the sweetness of their riper cousins. For this → ← recipe I use about one-third green tomatoes to two-thirds ripe ones.

8 large chicken thighs

the juice of a lemon

2 tbsp olive oil

12 black olives

350g tomatoes

6 plump cloves of garlic

3 large sprigs of thyme

Nigel Slater's green tomato recipes (2)

Set the oven at 180C/gas mark 4. Rub the chicken pieces all over with salt and black pepper. Put them snugly in a roasting tin.

Pour the lemon juice and olive oil into a mixing bowl then add the olives, stoned and halved. Cut the tomatoes into quarters, unless they are very small when you can simply halve them. Peel the garlic, squash each clove with the flat side of a knife, but keep them whole. Add them to the tomatoes. Pull the leaves off the thyme sprigs and add to the tomatoes with a generous seasoning of black pepper and a little salt.

Colour the chicken lightly on both sides in a little oil over a moderate heat. The skin should be pale gold. Tip the tomato mixture over the top and bake for 45 minutes or until the tomatoes are soft and have produced plenty of juice and the chicken juices run clear when you pierce the flesh with a skewer.

Serve with rice, couscous or crusty bread to soak up the tomatoey-chickeny juices.

RASPBERRY, OATMEAL AND CREAM

Just room to squeeze in a pudding. The late raspberries are luscious this year, and never better than when served with toasted oatmeal and cream. I sometimes make this with blackberries, too, crushing the fruit very slightly with a fork so its juices run into the cream. Serves 4.

125g coarse oatmeal

80g light muscovado sugar

300ml double cream

150g raspberries

Put the oatmeal on a baking sheet and toast under a hot grill till golden. It burns easily, so watch it carefully – it shouldn't take more than a couple of minutes.

While the oats are still hot, add the sugar and stir well. In another, cool bowl, whisk the cream till it starts to thicken on the whisk. It should loosely holds its shape but not be thick enough to stand in peaks.

Crush the raspberries lightly with a fork. Gently fold the cream, oats and sugar into the raspberries. Don't overmix.

Pile into a serving bowl, or 4 individual glasses or dishes if you prefer, and chill for a good hour before serving.★

nigel.slater@observer.co.uk

Nigel Slater's green tomato recipes (2024)

FAQs

Can you eat green tomatoes before they turn red? ›

There is a higher presence of this Solanina toxin in green tomatoes than in ripe red tomatoes, making it harder to digest for humans. Therefore it is recommended to cook them in order to sweeten the taste, de-neutralizing the Solanina that causes the bitterness in raw green tomatoes. How can you cook green tomatoes?

Why do you only fry green tomatoes? ›

It turns out that green tomatoes hold up well to the process of being sliced, dredged and fried, and the slightly sour flavor pairs well with a crunchy, salty coating. The best tomatoes to use are firm and green throughout, with optimum slices of one-third to one-half inches wide.

How to make flavorful tomatoes? ›

Seasoning Tomatoes With Cream of Tartar

Well, if you really want to amp up the taste of your tomatoes, cream of tartar is your answer. Yes, there are other ways to make your tomatoes taste even better and increase the acidity. There is lemon, vinegar, or my personal favorite, balsamic.

Why do they fry green tomatoes and not red tomatoes? ›

Why do you fry green tomatoes and not red tomatoes? Green tomatoes are more firm and crisp than ripe red tomatoes. They will hold up better while being fried, and they won't turn into a mushy mess. A ripe tomato is very soft and will likely fall apart during the breading or frying.

Can you take green tomatoes and let them ripen? ›

If you're seeing a bit of red on those green tomatoes, picking them individually and bringing them inside may be the best chance for ripening tomatoes. Like many fruits, tomatoes continue to ripen once they've been picked.

How do you force green tomatoes to turn red? ›

Add Another Ripe Fruit

Since other fruits release ethylene gas as they ripen, exposing a green tomato to another ripening fruit will help it mature faster. "If you need a tomato to ripen more quickly, put it in a paper bag with a ripe banana," Landercasper says.

How long does it take for tomatoes to go from green to red on the vine? ›

Once the tomato is full size, it takes about 20-30 days for the full-size green tomato to turn red. This will vary a little depending on the variety you plant in your garden. When the tomato reaches its mature green size, the plant is stimulated to release ethylene which will start the ripening process.

Is it healthy to eat green tomatoes? ›

Even though they do not taste like red, ripe tomatoes, green tomatoes do have their own merits that deserve just as much attention as their red counterparts. Ripe green tomatoes are a very good source of vitamins A, C and potassium. They also contain iron, calcium, dietary fiber, magnesium, and other minerals.

What happened to Ruth's son Buddy in fried green tomatoes? ›

Ruth Jamison is the deuteragonist of the novel Fried Green Tomatoes at the Whistle Stop Cafe and the 1991 movie Fried Green Tomatoes. Ruth grew up in Whistle Stop near Birmingham, Alabama and was engaged to Buddy Threadgoode. Buddy unfortunately died in a train accident.

What happens if you eat too many fried green tomatoes? ›

Both tomatine and solanine are toxic so it is not wise to eat green tomatoes in large quantities. Solanine poisoning can cause unpleasant symptoms like fever, abdominal pain, diarrhea, vomiting, drowsiness and lethargy.

What state is known for fried green tomatoes? ›

When that hankering hits, you won't find a more creative, mouthwatering lineup of fried green tomatoes than you will in South Carolina, where the dish is prepared as if its very roots are firmly planted in the state's earliest farms, plantations and settlements.

How to make pesto Nigel Slater? ›

First, make the pesto: peel the garlic clove and pound it with a little sea salt. Add the pine kernels and continue until you have coarse paste, then introduce the basil leaves and mash everything to a thick green mixture, introducing a little of the olive oil if it becomes stiff.

What to do with cherry tomatoes that are starting to wrinkle? ›

Lean into the Wrinkles by Blistering Tomatoes

It's perfect for just this situation: It doesn't matter if they start out slightly soft and wrinkled because that's how you want them to end up anyway. And searing them with high heat concentrates and deepens the tomato's flavors!

How to make canned tomatoes out of tomatoes? ›

Stuff your sterilized jars evenly with chopped tomatoes. Add ½ tsp salt, and 1 tsp bottled lemon juice to each quart. Gently pour boiling water in the jars with the tomatoes, leaving ½ in. headspace at the top of the jars.

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