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Bruschetta with Tomato and Basil Recipe

Filed under Appetizer, Quick, Seasonal Favorites: Summer, Vegetarian

Bruschetta with Tomato and Basil

Ah, the bounty of summer. Italian bruschetta (pronounced "brusketta") is a wonderful way to capture the flavors of ripe summer tomatoes, fresh garden basil, and garlic. I had this the other night at my friend Suzanne's house where her friend Dee explained how to make it (thanks Dee!). I customized the recipe to my own taste (isn't that almost always the case?) and used plum tomatoes and chopped them by hand, rather than in a food processor. My family enjoyed this batch for lunch, along with some cottage cheese.

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Bruschetta with Tomato and Basil Recipe

Ingredients

  • 6 or 7 ripe plum tomatoes (about 1 1/2 lbs)
  • 2 cloves garlic, minced
  • 1 Tbsp extra virgin olive oil
  • 1 teaspoon balsamic vinegar
  • 6-8 fresh basil leaves, chopped.
  • Salt and freshly ground black pepper to taste
  • 1 baguette French bread or similar Italian bread
  • 1/4 cup olive oil

Method

1 Prepare the tomatoes first. Parboil the tomatoes for one minute in boiling water that has just been removed from the burner. Drain. Using a sharp small knife, remove the skins of the tomatoes. (If the tomatoes are too hot, you can protect your finger tips by rubbing them with an ice cube between tomatoes.) Once the tomatoes are peeled, cut them in halves or quarters and remove the seeds and juice from their centers. Also cut out and discard the stem area. Why use plum tomatoes instead of regular tomatoes? The skins are much thicker and there are fewer seeds and less juice.

2 Make sure there is a top rack in place in your oven. Turn on the oven to 450°F to preheat.

3 While the oven is heating, chop up the tomatoes finely. Put tomatoes, garlic, 1 Tbsp extra virgin olive oil, vinegar in a bowl and mix. Add the chopped basil. Add salt and pepper to taste.

4 Slice the baguette on a diagonal about 1/2 inch thick slices. Coat one side of each slice with olive oil using a pastry brush. Place on a cooking sheet, olive oil side down. You will want to toast them in the top rack in your oven, so you may need to do these in batches depending on the size of your oven. Once the oven has reached 450°F, place a tray of bread slices in the oven on the top rack. Toast for 5-6 minutes, until the bread just begins to turn golden brown.

Alternatively, you can toast the bread without coating it in olive oil first. Toast on a griddle for 1 minute on each side. Take a sharp knife and score each slice 3 times. Rub some garlic in the slices and drizzle half a teaspoon of olive oil on each slice. This is the more traditional method of making bruschetta.

5 Align the bread on a serving platter, olive oil side up. Either place the tomato topping in a bowl separately with a spoon for people to serve themselves over the bread, or place some topping on each slice of bread and serve. If you top each slice with the tomatoes, do it right before serving or the bread may get soggy.

Makes 24 small slices. Serves 6-10 as an appetizer. Or 3-4 for lunch (delicious served with cottage cheese on the side.)

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Posted by Elise on Aug 7, 2005 and indexed Basil, Bruschetta, Tomato

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Comments

I have heard of putting cheese on top and letting it melt in the oven. Do you have any recommendations on what type of cheese?

Posted by: Jeremy [TypeKey Profile Page] on August 8, 2005 9:30 AM

This is one of my favorite summer meals.

Posted by: Cindy on August 8, 2005 7:27 PM

Jeremy - I never melt it, but I often add a bit of good fresh mozzarella to my bruchetta. I also add a few olives to my recipe.

Posted by: Amanda on August 8, 2005 9:05 PM

Thanks for posting this. I saw it on your blog and then, some days later, when I was asked what I'd be bringing to a potluck, I pictured the red tomatoes on bread and said, "that.. that crostini tomato stuff on bread. No, what's it called? It's... it's... bruschetta!" It's for tomorrow, still an in-the-future thing.

Posted by: Susan Kitchens on August 20, 2005 2:37 PM

I use shredded mozzarella on my bread croutons (with olive oil and fresh garlic) to make it a complete meal. This lets the tomato mixture stay cold which is best.

Posted by: Annonymous on December 31, 2005 11:43 AM

I love bruschetta!!! But when I make it I usually use sun dried tomatoes and feta cheese.

Posted by: Chelsea on August 15, 2006 2:45 PM

Put feta cheese crumbles on top - not melted... AMAZING!

Posted by: Lauren on August 19, 2006 10:02 AM

Try cheve. It's awesome, too. Very creamy and rich which is "cut" by acid in the tomatoes.

Posted by: Robin on August 26, 2006 2:03 PM

Its' almost Christmas and I needed a good appetizer for a party. I love bruschetta, but the hot house tomatoes lack flavor and the texture is poor. I subsituted good quality canned italian plum tomatoes and this recipe worked great.

Posted by: E. Boomer on November 30, 2006 9:57 AM

You should also add a teaspoon of capers. If you think bruschetta is good without, I think you'll find it amazing with.

Posted by: m.cortese on December 15, 2006 8:31 AM

Tried this recipe about a week ago with a few small alterations - AMAZING! I'm making it again today!

Posted by: A S on January 17, 2007 11:59 AM

This recipe is absolutely delicious and so easy to make. I used canned petite diced tomatoes and let them drain in a strainer before adding the ingredients. I really think the trick is the olive oil toasted into the bread.

Posted by: Beth, Michigan on March 4, 2007 3:04 PM

An intereting twist my partner discovered one day, was to serve the tomoto mixture on top of store brought garlic bread. (we didnt have any fresh bread, just garlic bread - it ended up better than expected)

Posted by: Jo on May 31, 2007 1:00 AM

I make this all the time. I brush with oil and toast both sides of the bread, and then rub a clove of raw garlic on it. So I don't put garlic in the tomato mixture. Then I mix homemade pesto, red wine vinegar, red onion, and tomatoes.
I just chop a raw tomato, whole. Why would you want to skin and seed it?

Posted by: beyonduplication on June 1, 2007 9:49 AM

I just made this for my wife as a light dinner and it was amazing! I used fresh cinnamon basil from my garden and substituted whole wheat bread for the Italian and grape tomatoes for plum (all substitutes used for what was on hand rather than creative flair...).

I had no intention of eating this, as I hate tomatoes. My wife made me try it, and I'm glad I did! This is a great snack or meal.

Posted by: manofredearth on June 5, 2007 5:04 PM

I just wanted to note that regarding Bruschetta receipes, I have found that also adding a little fresh grated Parmesan to the topping when served gives an added dimension to the flavor. This is just personal, I tried Romano and others as well, even cheddar, but for me Parmesan works best.

Posted by: Barry on June 10, 2007 8:36 AM

I love this recipe with heirloom tomatoes, no parboiling. And I also add fresh oregano and a few shreds or good parmesan cheese.

You can also make a sweeter version
TBSP of sugar and pinch of cinnamon with plain tomatoes atop toasted brie on bread. It is unbelievably good!

~Curlychef

Posted by: Shannon on September 19, 2007 12:06 PM

I made this tonight to have with fettucini. I didn't have fresh basil leaves so I used crushed dried basil leaves (I know... bad, bad). I personally think the teaspoon of balsamic vinegar is too much. Next time I'll use a little less because the vinegar was the strongest tasting ingredient and it was a bit sour. Thanks for the recipe!

Posted by: Martina on March 13, 2008 5:26 PM

We recently found an Italian restaurant with the world's best bruschetta and I started searching for a recipe to make my own. This recipe tastes EXACTLY like they make it, if you add an extra clove of garlic and double the oil and vinegar measurements.

They also add a cube of mozzarella cheese (the kind you buy whole, packed in liquid), so I added the cheese and this was an incredible dish.

Posted by: Lisa on March 22, 2008 6:56 AM

I made some as a side dish at supper & my wife thought that it was better than what we ate at Olive Garden.All that I can say is-Great stuff. Thank you

Posted by: Joseph on April 12, 2008 5:50 PM

This was so good!
Every year I, with my sisters help cook dinner for our mom for mothers day. This recipe was delicious!

Posted by: Kaitlyn Slovek on May 13, 2008 8:57 AM

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