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| Let's start a thread just for GREEN tomato recipes.
Seems like we need it every year about this time.... I'm hoping to try this one this weekend so it's NOT T&T...yet.
Deanna GREEN TOMATO BREAD FROM ANDREA++****
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Follow-Up Postings:
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| We like the dilled green tomatoes recipe in the BBB, very similar to Dilly Beans only with green tomatoes. A friend of ours also highly recommends the Green Tomato relish that is in the BBB. But to be honest we don't deal with lots of green tomatoes. Instead we just pull the plants and hang them upside down in the green house or the barn or the basement and let the tomatoes ripen. I'll take a ripe over a green anytime. ;) Dave |
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- Posted by readinglady z8 OR (My Page) on Fri, Oct 9, 09 at 12:28
| How do you get a green tomato puree? Those devils are so darned firm. Are they ground? The BBB has a pretty good green tomato mincemeat (though I prefer butter to suet). Due to the fat and density it's pc'd. Having Southern roots, I'm partial to fried green tomatoes, which can be frozen. I haven't made the mincemeat for quite a while because I really prefer Linda Amendt's fruit mincemeat, but the green tomato will make a good bar cookie filling, etc. But mainly I'm with Dave. I pick and store what green tomatoes I can and let the others go. By this point in time I'm so burned out by canning I don't really care what happens to the tomatoes that are left. Carol |
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| One of DH's favorites is Piccalilli. We use it instead of sauerkraut on brats, hot dogs, pork roasts, etc. Piccalilli 13-1/2 cups chopped vegetables (I use about 5-1/2 cups green tomatoes, 5-1/2 cups cabbage, 1-1/2 cups peppers and 1 cup onions. Change proportions or add other vegetables to suit your taste, but end up with approximately 13-1/2 cups.) |
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- Posted by oilpainter 3 (My Page) on Fri, Oct 9, 09 at 12:32
| Usually we let most of them ripen but I also make Green tomato mincemeat 14 pounds green tomatoes Chop tomatoes fine and sprinkle with salt. Let stand 1 hour, then drain off all juice. Place in a large pot and cover with water. Bring to a boil and boil for 5 minutes. Drain well again andreturn to pot. Add suet and 1/2 cup water. Simmer for 20 minutes. Add sugar and cook until it is disolved. Add remaining ingredients and boil rapidly, stirring often until mixture is thick--about 20 minutes. Seal in hot sterilized jars. You can add a little brandy or rum when you go to use it for pies or tarts or whatever. This is just as nice as store bought mincemeat. |
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- Posted by readinglady z8 OR (My Page) on Fri, Oct 9, 09 at 15:24
| You haven't indicated the source for the mincemeat recipe, but that processing time is way low for a dense product with suet and no vinegar. The BBB green tomato mincemeat, which has suet and 1/2 cup of vinegar, calls for a processing time of 90 minutes in a pressure canner. Carol |
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| I agree, Carol, my mincemeat recipe also calls for canning in a pressure cooker. Grandma used to make green tomato mincemeat with no meat or suet, but I like the Farm Journal pear mincemeat better, so I usually make that. This year late blight got everything, so there's not a green one left anyway. I usually slice a bunch, freeze on baking sheets and stick them into the freezer for fried green tomatoes, it works well as long as you don't thaw the tomatoes before frying. Annie |
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| Yes, unfortunately oilpainter has posted unsafe recipes and canning instructions on several different forums of late. Yet he/she never responds to any of the alternative suggestions or comments on them. Outdated methods from old books and unsafe recipes such as this one are just that - outdated and unsafe. Dave |
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| I'm not quite sure how they made the green tomato puree in the recipe I posted. I'm going to rough chop, cook till soft, then run through the food mill. Since it isn't a canning recipe, I don't have to worry about any safety issues, just removing most of the seeds and skins. I think I'll Google and see what I find....... Deanna |
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- Posted by oilpainter 3 (My Page) on Fri, Oct 9, 09 at 19:04
| This recipe is safe I have used it for 30 years and my mother-in-law before me and no one has ever gotten sick from it nor has it gone bad. I think I will keep my recipies to myself from now on and let you go merrily on your way thinking you know everything. I was canning before most of you were born. |
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- Posted by lantanascape z6 Idaho (My Page) on Fri, Oct 9, 09 at 19:40
| Does anyone know of a green tomato relish recipe called ChowChow? My father in law is from Oklahoma, and said they ate it with everything when he was a kid. I've never heard of it, but my curiosity is piqued. |
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| Wish I had green tomatoes to deal with. Damn that late blight!!!!!!!!! |
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- Posted by highalttransplant z 5 Western CO (My Page) on Fri, Oct 9, 09 at 20:08
| Well I was all set to try making Green Tomato Hot Dog Relish tomorrow, but when I brought the box of tomatoes in from the garage this afternoon, over half of them ripened while I wasn't looking, LOL. Now I'm thinking tomato sauce instead : ) Bonnie |
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- Posted by readinglady z8 OR (My Page) on Fri, Oct 9, 09 at 20:41
| oilpainter, with all due respect, I doubt you were canning before I was born because I'm an oldster myself. The fact that no one in your immediate circle has gotten sick (though someone may have been queasy or gotten the "trots" and not attributed it to the mincemeat) doesn't mean it's without risks. It just means that so far the odds have been in your favor. I believe it's Annie who has a not-so-good memory of a family pickled mushroom recipe they'd made and shared for years. Until the family picnic where everyone ended up at the hospital. It only takes once. Carol |
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| And you likely aren't older than me either. More likely I was canning while you were still in school. ;) But years of canning experience isn't the point, keeping current with safety guidelines is. And Grandma would be appalled to discover that we were still using techniques she used given all the information available to us that she didn't have. Safety guidelines change, research is on-going, old books get updated with safety changes, recipes get revised or eliminated all together. Even Ball/Bernardin changes their books, recipes and guidelines every couple of years to remain current. All these testing result and revised guidelines are readily available to anyone who wishes to remain current and safe in their home food processing. Those that aren't interested enough to try to learn new things risk themselves as well as others. Dave |
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- Posted by oilpainter 3 (My Page) on Fri, Oct 9, 09 at 21:34
| Well Dave you are quite the oldster then. When did you celebrate your 100th |
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- Posted by readinglady z8 OR (My Page) on Fri, Oct 9, 09 at 22:51
| I really don't want to get into pissing matches about canning creds. Oilpainter, your recipe sounds excellent. My only doubt is the processing time. And since I'm not eating what you process, really it isn't my business what you choose to do. I think healthy people can ingest a lot of things that might be less-than-optimal, but as someone who has a number of relatives with health issues and immunity problems, I feel a responsibility to be extra-careful. I want whatever I serve to be guaranteed for all who sit at my table, including those whose health is most compromised. If I go back to one of my older Kerr books, the processing time in 1958 was 25 minutes, so even then 15 was a bit short. Really, how difficult is it to increase the processing time or change the method? It won't affect the product. Mincemeat is pretty resistant to whatever you do. Do I wish sometimes that I could go back to what used to be? Yes. There are people I miss whom I'd love to see again. Once-upon-a-time I heard bears and mountain lions outside the windows. There was space and woods and horses pulling plows. Hay bales to build forts with. And, of course, wood cookstoves to can on, and kerosene lamps and pumps and outhouses, which I am more than glad to see the end of. But those times are gone. So be it. It is no disrespect to my grandmothers to change their methods. They did their best with what they knew and so do I. Carol |
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| Well, I'm just a youngster, I'm only 54, but I've been canning since I was big enough to stand on a chair and help Grandma peel tomatoes. She was canning on a woodstove then, I've graduated to gas, along with a lot of other improvements. We used an outhouse for some time too, but I wouldn't do it now just because I did it then. And yes, Carol, that was Aunt LulaBelle's pickled mushroom recipe. We'd all been eating them for years, until that one family potluck. I believe I've mentioned that nothing breaks up a family party faster than watching Aunt Esther barf in the bushes. It did take several hours until people got really sick, though. Several of us spent time in the Emergency Room that night. I wasn't sick, I didn't eat the mushrooms. Now no one else will either. Annie |
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| Lantanascape, Chow Chow is very similar to Piccalilli - just different vegetables. The Ball recipe calls for cucumbers, red pepper, cabbage, onions, green tomatoes, green beans and carrots. Spices are slightly different as well. Sounds pretty similar to the Rummage Relish recipe on NCHFP, too. You may want to ask your FIL what he remembers being in it, and go from there. |
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| I just believe that our science and ability to test things has come a long way. There are very few cases of botulism, etc. from home canning. That's documented. I just know I don't want to be one of them or the cause of one! I believe people did get sick, but they didn't used to run to the doctor and get "diagnosed" like some do today. Lots of people boiled the heck out of their home canned food before they ate it too which reduced the risk somewhat (I ate a lot of 'gray' green beans at grandma's house). Each of us has to determine our own risk factor and that's fine. However, many new canners come here looking for instructions/recipes and may not be familiar with the history and older ways. I think it's important to give them current, safe methods. Imagine making something for the first time, giving it as gifts, and finding out everyone got sick! That's not going to be much of a confidence builder!! When someone posts here that a recipe isn't safe, it simply means it is out of sync with currently tested standards. It isn't a personal attack. It doesn't mean YOU have to change anything, the choices are ultimately yours. And I certainly don't think it's about age. It was actually kind of cool when my mom called me last weekend for advice (she's 67, I'm 46....IF that matters...). Deanna...just hoping this stays a friendly, helpful place! |
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- Posted by lantanascape z6 Idaho (My Page) on Sat, Oct 10, 09 at 12:37
| Malna, thanks. He said it was a green tomato thing, but I don't think he remembers too well what else was in it... Deanna, I totally agree with your post. This is my first year canning, and I'm following the Ball Complete book recipes for the most part. I have been saving recipes from here and like to know whether they're approved, safe recipes, or untested family recipes. There are certain recipe alterations I feel comfortable with, and with other ingredients, I like the assurance of knowing a recipe has been tested safe. Thanks! |
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- Posted by readinglady z8 OR (My Page) on Sat, Oct 10, 09 at 14:03
| Botulism seems to be the theme of the week since it's come up on more than one thread. I just thought I'd point out that one source I read said that 25% of all cases of botulism are food-related and 90% of those cases come from home-canned foods. So it definitely behooves us to be careful. Clearly, green tomatoes aren't a problem, but suet certainly can be. Getting back to the topic. Deanna, I will be really interested to hear how that green tomato quick bread turns out for you. Now, here's a recipe. It's untested, but it's from Joanne Weir, and I haven't made anything of hers that's not worked out. Fried Green Tomato "Sandwiches" (good with homemade garlic mayonnaise with a dash of cayenne) 4 ounces goat cheese or other soft, rich cheese of choice In a small bowl, mash together the cheese, the herbs and the lemon zest. Season to taste with alt and pepper. Place tomatoes in a single layer on paper towels and salt lightly. Place the flour in a bowl. Place eggs and milk in a second bowl. Place cornmeal in a third bowl. Season all three with salt and pepper. With paper towels, pat the tomatoes dr. Place half the tomatoes in a single layer on a work surface. Spread cheese mixture evenly over the slices. Top with the remaining tomato slices, making sandwiches. One by one, place sandwiches in the flour. Press down lightly, turn to coat, then tap off the excess. Next dip in the egg mixture to coat completely, then dip in the cornmeal and tap off the excess. Set aside on a plate. (Tomatoes can be prepared to this point several hours ahead of time.) Preheat oven to 375. Heat olive oil in a large skillet over medium-low until rippling. Cook the sandwiches in batches, in a single layer, until golden on each side and the walls of the tomatoes are fork-tender, 10-12 minutes. Remove from the pan and drain on paper towels, then place the sandwches on a baking sheet and keep warm on the top rack until all of the sandwiches are cooked. Serve on a platter garnished with additional herb sprigs. Serves 6 Green Tomato Raita Makes about 3 cups. Good with grilled meats, spicy chicken stews or over steamed basmati rice. 2 cups plain yogurt Place yogurt in a cheesecloth-lined strainer set over a bowl. Let drain at least 2 hours or overnight. Place cucumber in a colander and salt lightly. Let sit 15 minutes. Rinse and pat dry. Place cumin seeds in a small skillet over medium-high heat and toast until fragrant. Remove from pan, cool and grind. Place all ingredients except tomato in a bowl and mix. Season to taste with salt and pepper. Let rest 1-4 hours before serving. Just before serving, stir in the tomato. I see this as one of those forgiving recipes. Once you know the method, you can vary the raita ingredients any number of ways. Finally, this recipe from Carol Costenbader. She gives directions for canning, but for obvious reasons, I'm not including those. Keeps well refrigerated and can be halved. I have considered canning this as a pickle without the eggs, flour and oil, then stirring in mayonnaise or salad dressing upon opening. That would be very doable. Green Tomato Dip Makes 4 pints 8 green tomatoes, washed and cored 1. Grind vegetables coarsely or pulse in an FP. You may also chop by hand. Sprinkle with the salt. 2. Cover and let stand at least 8-12 hours. 3. Drain vegetables and combine with 2 1/4 cups of the vinegar, sugar, celery seed, mustard and pepper. Add pickling spice tied in a bag. 4. Pour vegetables and seasonings into a nonreactive pan. Cook over low heat 30 minutes. Combine eggs, flour and the remaining vinegar in a food processor. With the motor running, add the oil by droplets in a steady stream until the mixture becomes thick and smooth. 5. Remove spice bag and stir in the egg mixture. Cook over low heat until thick, about 5-10 minutes. 6. Refrigerate. Carol |
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- Posted by readinglady z8 OR (My Page) on Sat, Oct 10, 09 at 14:24
| I totally forgot this Oregon State Extension document on Green Tomatoes. Carol |
Here is a link that might be useful: Green Tomato Recipes
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- Posted by rachelellen Zone 8 CA Central Va (My Page) on Sat, Oct 10, 09 at 15:24
| Ooh, Carol...I never would have thought of green tomatoes in raita, thanks! We eat raita all the time here, so I will definitely give it a try. I don't know how much I'm going to have left in the way of green tomatoes. The weather here is still warm enough that what is on the vines is still ripening, albeit slowly, but not warm enough for any new ones to form. I'll have to see how it goes. Maybe I'll get some from the veggie stand out on the highway just so I can try that piccalilli..it sounds like something I would like. |
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- Posted by readinglady z8 OR (My Page) on Sat, Oct 10, 09 at 19:22
| Joanne Weir has a nice little cookbook called You Say Tomato (should be available used very cheaply) that I got the first two recipes from. I hadn't thought of green tomatoes in Raita either, and I love the stuff. I'm glad Deanna asked the question; it was a good motivator to find something new. Carol |
Here is a link that might be useful: You Say Tomato by Joanne Weir
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| OH, and we mustn't forget that all tomatoes are not acidic enough to be canned as they were a couple of decades ago. I'm sure this is something that oil's grandma would've been horrified about, and probably she remembers news stories in the 50's of where folks got sick & died over a salad that contained home canned green beans. Face it, the practice of canning is a practice. The result has to be judged by us before we serve it. The consequences are far too high to not err on the side of safety. |
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| Lantana, It might depend on what part of Oklahoma he grew up in and whether it was sweet, hot, or sour or all three. You might ask him too if it was really chopped fine, or if it was more hacked up instead of chopped. I make one that is cabbage, onion, peppers (sweet & hot & all colors, maybe a carrot if my mother-in-law is here and insistant. Nothing in it is chopped fine. But it isn't exactly chunky, either. The cabbage isn't shredded, but is sliced and then chopped into maybe 2-3 inches long. I've put a link to a recipe very similar to mine. We like ours fairly hot, so I do put wax peppers, jalepenos, anaheims, or serano peppers in to heat it up a bit. I salt down all the vegetables and pour ice over them and let them set overnight before draining & rinsing and doing the canning. Mom grew up in Arkansas and Oklahoma and they made theirs really sweet and very finely chopped. Now, my dad remembered chowchow from his childhood as something quite different. One year he and Mom worked out how they thought Grandma Wimer and her daughters had done it. It was very chunky, a lot coarsly sliced cabbage and the green tomatoes were sliced fairly thick (they cut the big ones in half before slicing). I don't recall them using onion in this, but I know that two of the crocks had hot peppers in them. When they got done they had 4 big stoneware crocks full. I know they salted this down and kept it in the cool room, and that they had a weight on top of a plate and that they skimmed this and that it seemed to take quite a long time to do this. I suspect that they were following a basic rule for kraut making as their method. I know when all was said and done we had many quarts of it and it was very pretty and quite tasty. Perhaps the difference was that he grew up in central Oklahoma and his mom's family was Pennsylvania Dutch and the area he grew up in had a very large percentage of German families. |
Here is a link that might be useful: southern sweet chowchow
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- Posted by gardenweasel2009 6TN (My Page) on Sun, Oct 11, 09 at 10:31
| Annie, Are you the famous Salsa Annie? Back to green toms for fried green tomatoes, can you clarify the process a little more? Do you bread before freezing? |
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| Yes, gardenweasel, I'm THAT Annie. LOL My claim to fame.... I just wash the tomatoes, slice them, put them on a baking sheet and freeze them, then package them in ziplock bags in serving sized packages. When I want fried green tomatoes I take them out of the freezer, blot them a little with a towel, dip them in the egg wash, then the breading. Back into egg wash and another dip in the breading, and into the frying pan. Do not thaw them or they get too soft to deal with easily. Use any mixture of crumbs or flour/cornmeal or whatever you like for YOUR green tomatoes. I dip them twice because I like really crunchy green tomatoes... Annie |
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- Posted by gardenweasel2009 6TN (My Page) on Sun, Oct 11, 09 at 12:36
| Thanks Annie and that salsa is the only recipe I use, love the double dip suggestion, yum |
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| lantanascape, here is my grandmothers chow-chow recipe. I've had and made it for many years, it is sweet. 4 c green tomatoes [about 16 tennis ball size] |
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- Posted by kathy_in_washington Zone 8 Sequim,WA (My Page) on Sun, Oct 11, 09 at 19:07
| ccecilm, I'd like to verify something about this recipe. Do you measure the 4 cups of each vegetable AFTER it's been chopped/cut up? I would guess so, but just want to make certain. Thanks, |
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- Posted by lantanascape z6 Idaho (My Page) on Mon, Oct 12, 09 at 2:18
| ccecilm, thank you for the recipe, I will have to put up a batch before their next visit. Kathy, I read that recipe as measuring after chopping the veggies. I do have one question though - do you know the processing times for this? I'm assuming it would be about the same as salsa - 15 minutes BWB for pints? |
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| kathy_in_washington, Yes, the measurements are AFTER chopping. lantanascape, |
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| Green Tomato Bread Results!! I made the bread last night. Of course, I am completely unable to follow a recipe without "tweaking" something so here are my changes: I liked the bread. Similiar to zucchini bread in that you don't see/taste the veggies. Good use of green tomatoes in my book, but not "OMG! Awesome!" over the top. I have the veggies chopped for the green tomato hot dog relish posted by bela67 (from Ball) last week. They had to sit in the fridge overnight and boy, was I glad. Kind of "whooped" last night after pulling out the last of the garden, clean up and baking the bread as well as dinner! Deanna |
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- Posted by sfarrell1007 Z5/4 (My Page) on Tue, Oct 13, 09 at 2:32
| I made green tomato mincemeat this year, (18 quarts) and it turned out GREAT! This recipe has NO meat or suet in it, just some butter to give it a little oooph.... I used my food processor to chop the tomatoes and the apples...cored the apples, and peeled about 3/4 of them, left some apples with peel on, I didn't worry about skinning or seeding the green tomatoes. The lemons and oranges, I cut into pieces, squeezed out the seeds, and put the whole fruit, skin and all in the food processor, and whomped those babies up to a quite fine chop. If you don't like brandy, you can substitute Rum (dark or spiced rum is particularly nice), or grape juice. My recipe is as follows. 7 cups finely chopped green tomatoes Mix all ingredients except butter in a large heavy kettle. Bring to a boil, then reduce heat, so mixture boils gently, without spattering. Stirring often to prevent sticking, cook for a couple of hours, or till the liquid is absorbed, and mixture is quite thick. Taste for seasonings, adding more vinegar or sugar if needed... sometimes it depends on the type of tomatoes you use. Cut butter into pieces, and stir into mixture till melted. Pack into quart jars,and pressure cook at 10 lbs for about 30 minutes. |
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- Posted by kathy_in_washington Zone 8 Sequim,WA (My Page) on Tue, Oct 13, 09 at 3:55
| Sfarrell, this looks like a wonderful recipe. Would you please let us know approximately how many quarts this particular recipe makes? Now ... if I can just find a way to acquire green tomatoes. We don't have a vegetable garden, but I have friends who do and they might share. When I had a garden I would make Green Tomato relish and mincemeat, too. Back then I used recipes from my 1963 Farm Journal Freezing and Canning Cookbook, which I still use as a reference. (And, yes, I realize many of the processes are no longer acceptable ... so I adjust them.) Thanks, |
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| kathy, I have that same book! It's where I got the recipe for tomato butter. Yes, it's outdated, but many of the recipes can be adjusted for time and technique and still be safe. Annie |
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| For those of you who want some of the OLD green tomato recipes, check out the sites on the net for Amish recipes. I know I've seen recipes for Chow Chow but don't have the time to look for them right now...later. |
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| I've been harvesting and canning for a few years now with lots of help from all you "experts." I have two recipes that are just tremedous that I thought I'd share. One is for Green Tomato Bread which is similar to the one posted, but the BEST I have ever tasted. I have made a number of different Green Tomato Relishes, but have found this one to be the best ever! Enjoy. Green Tomato Bread 8 to 10 Medium Green Tomatoes Peel and core green tomatoes. (I don't bother peeling, and it works just fine.) Process green tomatoes in a blender until smooth and creamy. You should have 2 cups pulp. Set raisins in boiling water and set aside to cool. In a large mixing bowl cream shortening and sugar until fluffy. Add eggs, 2 cups tomato pulp, the plumped rasins and the soaking water. Beat well. In another bowl, combine flour, baking soda, salt, baking powder, cinnamon, cloves and nuts. Add one cup at a time to tomato mixture, stirring well after each addition. Divide batter into two 9 x 5 inch greased loaf pans and bake in a 350 degree oven for one hour and 10 minutes, or until toothpick inserted in center comes out clean. Green Tomato Hot Dog Relish 1 quart chopped green tomatoes Combine tomatoes, onion and pepper in a large bowl. Sprinkle salt over vegetables, mix in and let stand 1 hour. Drain vegetables. Combine drained vegetables, sugar mustard, and celery salt in a large pot. Tie cloves in cheesecloth and add to mixture. Stir in vinegar, bring to a boil and simmer for 20 minutes. Take out spice bag. Pack hot relish into hot, sterilized jars. Leave 1/4 inch headspace. Process half pints for 10 minutes in hot water bath. Hope you enjoy! |
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| I forgot to include the yield in the Relish recipe. It makes 5 half-pints. |
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| I found the Chow Chow recipe...it was in my Fannie Farmer Cookbook. 2 1/2 lbs. green tomatoes Cut tomatoes, cucumbers, peppers, cauliflower & celery into small pieces. Combine with onions & green beans. Cover w/3 qts. boiling water & salt & let stand for 1 hr. Drain. Rinse well with cold water & drain again. Mix the remaining ingredients in a large pot & heat to boiling. Add the vegetables & cook until tender, stirring frequently. Spoon into hot sterilized jars, fill w/cooking liquid leaving 1/8" headspace and seal. If you wish, process in boiling-water bath for 10 min. I have never tried this recipe...to much stuff & too much work for me. Besides, I remember having it as a kid & it just didn't do anything for me! |
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| I just made a great Green Tomato Jam with lemon and pineapple that is terrific. I think I'll use it in Lindalou's Cereal Bars. And I tried the wonderful recipe for wine-soaked dried green cherry tomatoes with Italian herbs . Can't wait to use some on my frozen eggplant parmesan. |
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- Posted by kathy_in_washington Zone 8 Sequim,WA (My Page) on Fri, Oct 16, 09 at 18:50
| OK, LyndaPaz, if you're going to tell us about a Great Green Tomato Jam with Lemon and Pineapple, you need to share the recipe! I'll be checking here to see it, and will bug you if I don't. ha ha Thanks, |
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| Happy to share. Not sure of the source. I found it in Mom's recipe cards. Not an "approved" recipe, but I don't think it is risky since it is a jam and uses pineapple and lemon. I have made and enjoyed it for the past 3 years. But take note. Green Tomato Jam 3 lbs. finely cut green tomatoes Stir half the sugar into the green tomatoes and lemon and leave overnight. The next morning add the rest of the sugar together with gingerroot and crushed pineapple and stir. Boil for 1.5 hrs. Pour into sterilized jars and BWB for 10 minutes. Hope you like it, Kathy, as much as I do. Lynda |
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- Posted by readinglady z8 OR (My Page) on Fri, Oct 16, 09 at 20:20
| I think that recipe appeared in Country Woman magazine 10 or so years back, but I expect it's much older than that. Well, guess what I found? a 42-page PDF cookbook of green tomato recipes. I expect some of them will reflect a certain desperation, but it should still be worth looking through or saving to your computer for next year. Carol |
Here is a link that might be useful: Green Tomato Recipes
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| Never had green tomato bread. I would try some, but I gave my green tomatoes to my neighbor. After all, she was gone out of state to get her elderly parents set up in an assisted living home. I figured after all she did for her folks she at least deserved to be able to make some green tomato salsa. She was looking forward to it all summer long. I would rather her have the salsa than me have the bread. Sounds like an interesting recipe, though. All I have left is a big bowl of green pimentos. Think they will get stuffed with Spanish rice for my dh. The teeny ones can get diced and frozen. I see no real difference between them and reg. green peppers at this point. That will be fun to hear about the green tomato jam in the cereal bars, too ! And, you all know how I feel about suet, butter, oil, and flour, etc. in canning ! |
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| Made the Cereal Bars with Green Tomato Jam. Out of this world! The gingerroot really adds just the right amount of zing to them. I think that's what everyone loves about the Green Tomato Bread. It has more cloves than you would expect, but makes it really interesting. Last Thanksgiving the loaf went so fast and everyone was asking for more, so this year I'm going to use most of my frozen green tomatoes in this bread and give it for holiday gifts. |
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Here is a link that might be useful: fried green tomato blog post
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| Bumping this thread, looking for an answer or recipe.... I am looking to replicate a sliced green tomato pickle I used to buy at a farmer's market in FL. They were very crisp and slightly translucent. From what I have been reading, it seems that sliced toms run the risk of being soft. I also read that lime is a way to keep pickles of different sorts crisp. So far, I have not found a recipe for pickled green tomatoes that uses lime here or at the GA or OR sites. Martha Stewart has a recipe that calls for lime but I do worry about safety since becoming a regular on this board. Maybe I should provide a link and have someone here look it over. |
Here is a link that might be useful: Martha says....
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| Linda Lou Or Dave, I wondered if you would look at the piccalilli recipe posted by malna and the Green tomato hot dog relish posted by lyndapaz and tell me if these are safe to use. I know that some recipes are posted that are safe and some are not I just want to make sure about these two. Also on the Piccalilli am I correct in reading I can use any vegetables as long as I use 13 1/2 cups total? Thanks |
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| Do you use the small immature green tomatoes or only the ones that are starting to lighten? |
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| that have been harvested before the last frost....Here are a bunch of good ideas, recipes and good discussions regarding what to do with them. Since I have a bushel of them, this helps me to figure out what else I can do with them. |
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| OK. An old thread revisited. But the subject will repeat itself every season. WHAT TO DO WITH THEM? it is up to you: But I think real hard green tomatoes have an excellent use and that is PICKLING. I am amazed that a lot of people go to a great expense and pickle things like beans but never think about pickling green tomatoes. You can throw a few pieces of red bell peppers, carrots in the to to give it a good visual appeal as well. |
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| Any comments on the Farmgirl Relish? I don't know if it's enough acid (1C of vinegar) for over 2 lb of low-acid ingredients, and I worry about pureeing it. Though if it's enough acid then finely chopping the ingredients (even pulsing in a food processor before cooking, instead of pureeing in the pot) should work. I think the Tomatillo Green Salsa from NCHFP might be a better choice, personally I'd cut down on the onions a little, and I don't have fresh cilantro to make the other one anyway. What about subbing apple for some of the onion to make it more like the Farmgirl relish? Her relish got such rave reviews I'd like to try it. |
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| Any opinions on the safety of the Green Tomato Hot Dog Relish that I posted years ago? Several people have asked about its safety. The recipe was from Recipezar, I think. I have made it for years. Started making it long before I understood about approved and safe recipes. It is our absolute favorite thing that we can. I sure hope I can continue to make it. If it's not safe as described, is there anything that can be done without changing it too much to make it safe to can? |
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| Isn't there a safe to can green tomato salsa. I seem to recall making one on here a few years ago. |
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| NCHFP has a Tomatillo Salsa I referred to above, says you can sub green tomatoes (slightly different taste though). |
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| Any comments on the Farmgirl Relish? I don't know if it's enough acid (1C of vinegar) for over 2 lb of low-acid ingredients, and I worry about pureeing it.. Farmgirl Susan's No Sugar Green Tomato Relish 2 lb. green tomatoes, cored and chopped Combine the tomatoes, onions, peppers, apples, garlic, vinegar, and salt in a large, nonreactive pot and bring to a boil. Reduce the heat and simmer, uncovered, stirring occasionally, until thickened, about an hour. Stir in the jalapenos, cilantro, and cumin and simmer for 5 more minutes. Carefully purée the mixture using a stick immersion blender (I can't say enough good things about my KitchenAid hand blender; it's one of the best things I've bought for the kitchen) or in a traditional counter top blender, in batches if necessary, until still somewhat chunky. Don't over mix; you don't want it smooth. If canning, return the puréed relish to a boil, then ladle the hot mixture into hot jars, leaving 1/4-inch head space. Process 15 minutes in a waterbath canner. Store in a cool, dark place. Probably enough added acid. Green tomatoes are acidic and It has the apples too. It is more of a chutney recipe than a relish. But I agree that it probably shouldn't be pureed either way. --------------- Isn't there a safe to can green tomato salsa. I seem to recall making one on here a few years ago. Yes there are several including http://nchfp.uga.edu/how/can_salsa/tomatillo_green_salsa.html which calls for tomatillos but can be made with green tomatoes. You can actually make any approved salsa recipe with green tomatoes as long as you compensate for their lack of juice. It tends to be overly dry and so overly dense. Plan to add water, apple juice, white grape juice or tomato juice to get the proper sloppy texture for safe canning. ------------ Any opinions on the safety of the Green Tomato Hot Dog Relish that I posted years ago? Can't say with out seeing the recipe itself. Recipezar doesn't exist any longer and Google pulls up lots of recipes for Green Tomato Hot Dog Relish. Dave |
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| Sorry, Dave. It was posted above. I thought you would see it. Here it is. Green Tomato Hot Dog Relish 1 quart chopped green tomatoes Combine tomatoes, onion and pepper in a large bowl. Sprinkle salt over vegetables, mix in and let stand 1 hour. Drain vegetables. Combine drained vegetables, sugar mustard, and celery salt in a large pot. Tie cloves in cheesecloth and add to mixture. Stir in vinegar, bring to a boil and simmer for 20 minutes. Take out spice bag. Pack hot relish into hot, sterilized jars. Leave 1/4 inch headspace. Process half pints for 10 minutes in hot water bath. |
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| If 1C of vinegar was enough for 1 lb of onion, 3/4lb bell peppers, 4 jalapenos and 6 cloves of garlic in the Farmgirl relish, I'm sure it's enough for 1 onion and 1 bell pepper. |
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| Thanks. I love this recipe. It's the best relish ever! |
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| I don't have any red bell peppers - and mine are smaller than the grocery store's. I do have some yellow and orange - think they'll work? I have to buy some organic lemons too, I have probably 50 lbs of green tomatoes I'd like to do something besides pickles with (DH didn't even want me to pick any more today)! |
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| NCHFP has similar recipe - makes about 3x as much as yours. They call for dissolving the salt in water and boiling veggies in it 5 minutes, then draining. Another 5 minutes to cook with vinegar, sugar, mustard (and spices if you want), cornstarch (can be omitted - but then I can see you might want to cook longer to thicken the mixture). Sterilized jars 5 minutes with 1/2" HS (though you can always BWB 10 minutes instead of sterilizing jars). Can be done in pints. |
Here is a link that might be useful: NCHFP Green Tomato Relish
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| The original recipe called for green bell peppers. I used red because I love the way it looks in the jars. I think yellow and orange would also be pretty. We just got in from picking everything in the garden. We have gone longer this year without a frost warning, and even though it was getting cold, they said there was no frost warning up until 5:00 PM this evening, and then all of a sudden weather.com was issuing a FREEZE warning for our area. Picked about 50 lbs. of green tomatoes. More than half should ripen without a problem. The rest will make pickles, and relish. I always freeze some for frying, and some for that great green tomato bread recipe. I hope you try the relish recipe and enjoy it as much as we do. |
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| I forgot to mention that the other reason it turns out so nice is that we use the "Vidalia Chop Wizard" to chop all the veggires. They come out so uniform and look just like the store bought relishes. |
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| Down to the last of the green tomatoes... made up some End of the Garden Relish, which is a refrigerator relish. Ended up with a gallon and a half; which will store well till next year... good thing the family likes this stuff. Will probably end up doing another couple batches of Roasted Salsa Verde with rest of them. |
This post was edited by canfan on Thu, Oct 24, 13 at 10:56
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