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Saving the Best for Last

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TIMES STAFF WRITER

Even the grandest of pleasures have a way of becoming pedestrian when they are too easily available. There’s no better example than tomatoes in September.

Just a few months ago, even the barest hint of a really ripe tomato was enough to make us faint with anticipation. Today it’s distressingly easy to pass by an entire mound of them at the farmers market and think, “Not those again.” For cooks, this is the time of year that separates the men from the boys. It’s easy enough to be a genius in June; getting the same reaction in late September takes inspiration.

A couple of weekends ago, my wife and I were visiting my daughter at college in the far northwestern corner of the state. We do this a couple of times a year and it has become a ritual that one night I cook dinner for all of her friends. (Actually, it’s one of my favorite parts of the visit. There are no more appreciative eaters than college students.)

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So Saturday we went together to the farmers market they have on the town square. While she worked her weekend job making balloon sculptures for kids, I foraged. By the end of the morning, every little girl in town had pink balloon butterfly wings and every little boy a sword and scabbard. I had kale to braise with garlic, green beans and tiny new potatoes for salad, and some spindly celery that was perfect for dressing with anchovies, garlic and olive oil.

And, yes, tomatoes. Tomatoes by the bagful--Brandywines, Beefsteaks, Early Girls ... green tomatoes, yellow tomatoes and even some that were nearly purple. I picked a half-dozen or so of the most interestingly shaped and colored ones and sliced them up for a platter salad, topped with thin pale rings of red onion. But most of them I saved to stuff.

Stuffed tomatoes are not only delicious, there is also something definitively homespun about them. They’re the culinary equivalent of an old-fashioned quilt: something beautiful you’ve stitched together out of scraps of things you just happen to have lying around.

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There are all kinds of ways to stuff tomatoes. When it’s very hot, I might make a light lunch from a salad of smoked fish and mayonnaise I’ve spooned into a hollowed-out raw tomato. This is also good made with something as everyday as canned tuna, or maybe some of that grilled chicken left over from Sunday.

Cooking the tomato concentrates its flavor, turning it from a handily shaped receptacle into the focus of the dish. Stuffings can be as simple as bread crumbs rubbed with garlic and parsley, or some cut up bits of mozzarella mixed with a couple of chopped anchovies.

Or you can get more elaborate. I’ve got a soft spot for tomatoes stuffed with rice. That’s partly because they taste so good, partly because the process is so curious. The two factors are connected.

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I use raw rice to stuff tomatoes and it cooks with only the moisture that comes from the tomato--no water added. This takes longer than cooking rice the normal way; while that’s usually done in 15 to 20 minutes, it takes nearly an hour inside the tomato. But the flavor more than makes up for the little bit of extra time and effort.

It’s important to remember that this dish needs to be warm or hot when you serve it. Chilling rice after it is cooked firms up the hard starches. This is called retrogradation, and it’s a similar process to that which stales bread (it’s also the reason you chill rice before stir-frying it--the extra-firm grains won’t break up into mush the way just-cooked ones will). If you’ve refrigerated leftover stuffed tomatoes, warm them in a 350-degree oven for 10 to 15 minutes before serving.

Season the rice however you want. Instead of prosciutto, use fresh sausage you’ve browned or even dried salami that you’ve minced. In fact, even though this recipe is improved by pork products (just like almost everything else in life), you can leave them out entirely to make a vegetarian entree. Just amp it up with chopped herbs--basil, oregano or mint--and fold a little cheese into the filling.

Follow the basic guidelines to get the amounts right. A half-cup of raw rice will stuff about four big tomatoes or six smaller ones. And do be sure to baste the tomatoes a couple of times while they’re cooking. The first two or three times I tested this recipe, the very top layer of rice dried out and was crunchy. A drizzle of oil and spooning some of the cooking liquid over the top solved that problem.

You can even use this recipe to stuff zucchini. You know, if you’re completely sick of tomatoes.

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Tomatoes Stuffed With Pine Nuts and Prosciutto

Active Work Time: 15 minutes * Total Preparation Time: 1 hour, 45 minutes

To use this stuffing with zucchini or other summer squash, replace the chopped tomato pulp with an equal measure of canned crushed tomatoes. To create the hollow, remove the seedy interior of the squash and discard it. A large squash will take 3 to 5 tablespoons of raw filling, a small one 1 1/2 to 2. The gray-green squash found in Latino markets tends to be particularly good for stuffing, but round sunburst or pattypan squashes are good too.

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Olive oil

2 onions, about 3/4 pound

1 clove garlic, minced

1 ounce prosciutto, minced

2 1/2 pounds tomatoes, about 4 large or 6 medium tomatoes

Salt

1/2 cup raw rice

1/2 cup toasted pine nuts

1/2 cup white wine

1 cup canned crushed tomatoes

1 to 1 1/2 ounces pecorino Romano, grated, about 3/4 cup

Heat the oven to 375 degrees. Choose a baking dish just large enough to hold all of the tomatoes. Smear the bottom and sides with olive oil. Thinly slice one of the onions and scatter it across the bottom of the baking dish.

Mince the remaining onion and cook it slowly with 2 tablespoons of olive oil in a large skillet until fragrant, about 5 minutes. Add the garlic and the prosciutto and cook until the onion is softened, about 5 minutes.

While the onion is cooking, slice the top half-inch off of each tomato and reserve the tops to use as lids. Using a spoon or melon-baller, scoop out the pulp of each tomato, being very careful not to break the sides. Sprinkle the insides of the tomatoes lightly with salt.

Chop the pulp and add 1/2 to 3/4 cup of it to the onions. Cook until the pulp begins to melt, about 3 minutes. Add the rice and cook another minute. Stir in the pine nuts, 1 teaspoon of salt and the white wine and remove the pan from the heat. The mixture should be soupy; you should have about 2 cups of filling.

Pour the crushed tomatoes into the baking dish and stir it to lightly coat the bottom. Place the tomatoes cut side-up in the baking dish on top of the onions and crushed tomatoes. They should sit upright; if they don’t, cut a thin slice from the bottom of each tomato so that they will.

Spoon the rice filling into the tomato shells, but don’t overfill them--the rice will swell as it cooks and can easily burst the sides of the tomatoes (indeed, big beefsteak-type tomatoes have such thin walls that collapse is almost inevitable). Large beefsteak tomatoes will hold 3 to 5 tablespoons of filling each; smaller tomatoes will hold 2 to 2 1/2 tablespoons each. Drizzle a little olive oil over each tomato and replace the tops at a jaunty angle.

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Cover the baking dish tightly with foil and bake 20 minutes. Remove the pan from the oven and spoon some of the liquid from the bottom of the pan over the rice. Replace the foil and continue baking, basting every 20 minutes or so. Cook until the rice is swollen and chewy but not chalky at the center, 40 to 60 minutes.

When the rice is cooked, remove the foil and the tomato lids and sprinkle the top of the rice with the grated cheese. Return to the oven and bake until the cheese has browned lightly, about 10 minutes.

Replace the lids and let stand 10 minutes before serving hot, or serve warm.

4 to 6 servings. Each of 6 servings: 273 calories; 349 mg sodium; 9 mg cholesterol; 14 grams fat; 3 grams saturated fat; 28 grams carbohydrates; 10 grams protein; 3.74 grams fiber.

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