Author: TheLeftoverLove
Roasted Tomato Paste Recipe
Roasted Tomato Paste Recipe
- 10-15 ripe tomatoes. (any less won’t be worth the work depending on family size)
- Olive oil and chopped garlic (or oil and garlic from an olive mix in your fridge). Enough to coat all the tomatoes and the pan they roast in.
- A few sprigs of your favorite (or readily available) herb.
- Coarse Salt & Pepper.
- Take out all the seeds and pulp from all the tomatoes and place them in a bowl large enough to cover them with water when done. Make sure the pieces are relatively the same size so that they roast as evenly as possible.
- Soak the tomatoes in cold water to remove the seeds and dilute the pulp. This step lends added richness and makes it easier for the tomatoes to caramelize.
- Rinse and drain and let them dry on a towel until the flesh is dryer to the touch. You can pat them dry once in a while but just don’t crush the flesh. the dryer you get them the better. Have a dehydrator? you can use that. Or feel free to put in a super low oven to speed the process. If you are not in a rush just leave them on the towel flesh side up and leave them alone.
- Once dry, toss them in the oil and garlic mixture. Don’t want garlic? Skip it. Feel free to use dried onion or nothing but either adds extra richness to the final results. Spread them on a baking sheet (with a lip please) and add enough oil to cover the pan all over. This stops them from burning and creates a gorgeous tomato oil that can be used in your next dish. It also thins the paste when blending.
- Top them with a few sprigs of your herb of choice. (If using rosemary, nestle it in the oil and tomatoes a bit. Rosemary will burn if just left on top but fleshier leaves like parsley and basil soak up the oil and don’t dry out so much.)
- Roast at 400F for 20 mins.
- Turn temp down to 350F and roast for 30 mins. (If at any time the pan drys out and tomatoes begin to burn just add more oil. Better to have too much than not enough.)
- Turn temp down again and roast at 300F for 30 mins. Starting them on high first and them bringing the temp down in intervals allows you to control the moisture loss and concentrate the flavor as the sugars in the tomatoes caramelize. It’s around now that the house begins to smell like roasted tomatoes.
- When they get to a deep red to garnet color (and the edges start to shrivel as pictured) take them out and cover with a towel to cool. If you are hungry now you can take some of the oil and tomatoes and toss into pasta or rice or lentils. I recommend chopping them up first but it’s your call.
- When the tomatoes are cool to the touch (either that day or the next) you can slide the flesh off the skins (recommended but time consuming.) I want my tomato paste to be smooth and sticky without pieces of skin. But thats just my preference. Try it both ways. But beware. The skins are tricky and the process is messy (which I personally like.) There are ways to get the skins off first but I haven’t tried them yet. I’ll let you know when I do.
- Take the flesh and herbs and oil and blend in a food processor. I have one of the mini ones (cause it was a gift and there’s only two of us).
- Check consistency. If it needs more oil add some. You can also add some “cooking” wine and blend. WARNING: Do not buy in the stuff in the pantry isle. Use real wine from your house that you just didn’t drink. Collect old wine when you think its “dead” and save it for cooking. Keep it in the fridge (red & white in separate bottles) and add to the bottles to keep them topped off.
- At this point you are pretty much done. Add whatever you may want to taste but remember that this will be used as a base for other foods in the future. It shouldn’t taste like anything other than what it is…pure roasted tomatoes.
Smokey Blue Cheese Dressing Recipe
Smokey Blue Cheese Dressing Recipe
- Smoked Blue Cheese (I like Salemville Amish Smokehause).
- Sour Cream (beware of low fat. It’ll be too thin).
- Mayo and/or Plain Greek Yogurt.
- Olive, Pickle, Peperoncini brine of your choice.
- Salt & Pepper (course ground is preferred).
- Mason Jar (or another container) to make in and store the finished dressing.
- Add to the jar any leftover dressing. Rinse and recycle the old container.
- Gently loosen a chunk of the smoked blue cheese into crumbles and add to jar. It should break pretty easily as seen to the right. Add as much or as little as you like.
- Pour in as much brine as to cover the blue cheese by about 1/4 inch.
- Close jar and shake to liquefy the oil and small bits of cheese. This will ensure that the blue cheese flavor will infuse into the dressing as a whole.
- Open and plop in sour cream. Stir.
- Next add in Mayo / Yogurt to taste and stir again.
- Salt and pepper to taste. Cover and give one more last shake.
Smokey Blue Cheese Dressing
I grew up in a very frugal household. There wasn’t a lot to go around between myself, two brothers and my mother so what was put on the table was what you got. My mom didn’t let anything go to waste. As a notorious “picky eater”, if I didn’t eat something the night before I ate it the next day.
That being said, blue cheese was not one of those foods that sat on my plate. First off, it was rare in our house unless it was in the form of Wishbone Dressing…the one with the green cap. In the 70’s even the basic mass-produced stuff was expensive and was a rare find our town’s small supermarket. If you wanted good cheese you had to look for it in a gourmet market.
Then there were the rare times my mom bought some for real blue cheese dressing for dinner with my dad. My parents were divorced when I was a year old but he visited weekly and we stayed with him often. I specifically remember one time when I spent my meager allowance (mom pitched in) on the stinkiest of blue cheese to make dressing for my dad. It was stinky, it was sticky and I LOVED it.
I’ve been hooked ever since.
For the past few years I’ve been using a smoked blue cheese for my dressing.
It’s not gooey, yet its oily and crumbly which, in my opinion, is better for dressing.
For this recipe there are multiple levels of leftovers that can be used. I use the brine from a jar of olives for all sorts of things including this blue cheese dressing. I use it in margaritas, dressings and sauces. Why pour it down the drain if you can use it to add texture, liquid and salt to your recipes?
Got peperoncini or pickle juice? You can do the same thing. Peperoncini brine adds heat and great color and the pickle juice adds dill, sweet or heat depending on what kind of pickles are in your fridge.
Me? All are in there because we love pickles.
This is an incredibly simple recipe and easily adaptable to what is or isn’t in your fridge.
Tonight, I still had leftover dressing from last week so I added it back to the finished product after I was done taking pics for this post.
Smokey Blue Cheese Dressing
Smoked Blue Cheese (I like Salemville Amish Smokehause).
Sour Cream (beware of low fat. It’ll be too thin).
Mayo and/or Plain Greek Yogurt.
Olive, Pickle, Peperoncini brine of your choice.
Salt & Pepper (course ground is preferred).
Mason Jar (or another container) to make in and store the finished dressing.
- Add to the jar any leftover dressing. Rinse and recycle the old container.
- Gently loosen a chunk of the smoked blue cheese into crumbles and add to jar. It should break pretty easily as seen to the right. Add as much or as little as you like.
- Pour in as much brine as to cover the blue cheese by about 1/4 inch.
- Close jar and shake to liquefy the oil and small bits of cheese. This will ensure that the blue cheese flavor will infuse into the dressing as a whole.
- Open and plop in sour cream. Stir.
- Next add in Mayo / Yogurt to taste and stir again.
- Salt and pepper to taste. Cover and give one more last shake.




