Jaci can peel and deseed tomatoes
Photo by
Jaci Hicken
Jaci Hicken, our seasoned journalist and trained chef, shares her wealth of knowledge on growing, cooking and preserving homegrown produce. In this edition, Jaci is in the kitchen prepping tomatoes to cook chutney.
Tomates Concassées (or, to translate it into Aussie, Tomato Concasse) is the French way of saying a peeled, deseeded, chopped or diced tomato.
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Why would we do this?
If you don’t peel the tomatoes as you cook down the fruit to become chutney, you will get tiny rolled-up fragments of tomato skin.
These don’t break down and can get stuck in the back of your throat on consumption not making a very pleasant eating experience.
The seeds can make a sauce, in this case a chutney, bitter when they are cooked down so out they come as well.
In some cases, when you are making tomato sauce, for example, you can leave this step until you have cooked down the chopped tomatoes for a while, running them through a mouli or sieve to make a smooth sauce, leaving the skin and seeds in the equipment.
For chutney, we are not after a smooth sauce, liking it, like I like my husband, a little bit chunky.
So, the skin comes off, and the seeds are removed before the fruit is chopped into rough pieces.
For the official French way, the peeled and deseeded tomatoes would all be chopped or diced into equal-sized 5mm to 1cm pieces, but we are not doing that today as it is fancier than we need for tomato chutney.
Tomato Concasse
Or if you want, just call it peeled and deseeded tomatoes
Today, 2.5kg of store-bought truss tomatoes were prepared.
Method
Step one: Using a sharp knife, remove the core of each tomato and score the bottom with a cross
Step two: Bring a large pot of water to the boil. Gently place each tomato in the boiling water for about 1 minute.
This is all it takes for the water's heat to remove the skin. If you leave the fruit in the water for too long, it will go mushie and there will be more tomato in the boiling water than in your bowl to use later.
The 2.5kg of tomatoes didn’t all fit in the saucepan at once, so the process was completed in two batches.
Step three: Remove the tomatoes from the boiling water with a slotted spoon and place them in ice water.
This cools the tomatoes in an instant and helps the skin slide straight off.
Step four: Peel off the skin
As you go along, place all the scraps in a bowl, because, like everything here, they will be used to make tomato powder later.
Step five: Cut the tomatoes in half and, using a teaspoon, scoop out the seeds.
These, too, go in the scrap bowl.
At this point, you could cut them into a concasse, but we are going to roughly chop them next time when cooking chutney.
At the end of the process, there were 2.133 kg of peeled and deseeded tomatoes and 932g of scraps.
The weights don’t equal 2.5kg, but that is more likely the extra water picked up in the process.
I’ll see you in the kitchen next time to cook tomato chutney.
– Jaci
Tune in next time, when Jaci finally makes tomato chutney. Do you have a favourite tomato recipe that Jaci can cook? Drop her a line atjaci.hicken@mmg.com.au
Remove the core of each tomato.
Photo by
Jaci Hicken
Using a sharp knife, score the bottom of each tomato with a cross.
Photo by
Jaci Hicken
Bring a large pot of water to the boil.
Photo by
Jaci Hicken
Place the cored and scored tomatoes in the boiling water.
Photo by
Jaci Hicken
Boil for about one minute.
Photo by
Jaci Hicken
Before removing with a slotted spoon.
Photo by
Jaci Hicken
And place in ice water.
Photo by
Jaci Hicken
Peel of the skin. It should just slide off.
Photo by
Jaci Hicken
Cut the tomatoes in half and using a teaspoon, scoop out the seeds.
Photo by
Jaci Hicken
We ended up with 2133g of peeled and deseeded tomatoes.
Photo by
Jaci Hicken
We ended up with 927g of scraps. Don't worry it will get used.
Photo by
Jaci Hicken