Recipe for Roasted & Fresh Tomato Pie (2024)

September 16, 2016 • FOOD, RECIPE

Vivian Howard is the chef and proprietor of celebrated Kinston, NC-based restaurants Chef & The Farmer and Boiler Room Oyster Bar.

She’s releasing her new cookbook next month. Titled Deep Run Roots, the book is “a love letter to the food of my region and the people and experiences that made me the person I am,” Vivian says.

We can’t wait to devour it. In the meantime, we’ll be cooking up the recipe for Roasted & Fresh Tomato Pie she shared with us below, along with .

“As soon as the first tomato blossom turns into a tiny green orb, people start calling Chef & The Farmer to find out if tomato pie is on the menu,” writes Vivian Howard in Deep Run Roots. “In a restaurant where we sell more big hunks of meat than I’d like to admit, tomato pie outsells everything all summer. If you have access to two different colors of tomatoes, combine them here—one for the roasted portion and another for the fresh. It’s a nice visual touch.” (Image credit: Rex Miller.)

Roasted & Fresh Tomato Pie from Deep Run Roots by Vivian Howard

Makes 1 10-inch pie

Ingredients for the Filling
1 tablespoon butter
1 large yellow onion, halved and cut into julienne with the grain
2 teaspoons salt, divided
3½ pounds tomatoes cut into ½-inch dice, divided
1 teaspoon granulated sugar, divided
1 teaspoon picked thyme
2 tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil
10 turns of the pepper mill or ¼ teaspoon black pepper
⅓ cup picked basil leaves
½ cup mayonnaise
⅓ cup grated Fontina
⅓ cup grated Parmigiano-Reggiano

Ingredients for the Pie Crust
1¼ cups all-purpose flour
2½ teaspoons granulated sugar
½ teaspoon salt
6 tablespoons cold butter cut into ½-inch cubes
2 tablespoons ice-cold water
½ teaspoon white vinegar

Directions

Make the crust: Place the flour, sugar, and salt in the bowl of a mixer fitted with the paddle attachment. Mix on medium for a few seconds. Then begin adding the butter one cube at a time. Continue until the flour is speckled and crumbly. With the mixer still running, add the water and vinegar until just combined. Do not over-mix. Lay roughly a 10″x10″ square of plastic wrap on the counter in front of you and turn the dough out onto it. Wrap the dough tightly in the plastic wrap and chill in the refrigerator overnight.

Bring the crust to room temperature. Dust your counter and rolling pin lightly with flour and roll the crust slightly larger than your pie pan. Lay the crust in the pan and press gently into its edges. Cut off the edges that hang over and discard. Freeze the crust in the pie pan for at least 15 minutes or until you’re ready to blind-bake.

Preheat the oven to 400°F. Lay foil or parchment paper on top of the crust and weight that down with dried beans or rice. Blind-bake for 30 minutes.

Make the filling: Preheat your oven to 375°F. In a medium sauté pan or skillet, melt the butter and add the onions and ½ teaspoon salt. Cook the onions over medium-low heat till they are deeply caramelized. This will take about an hour. If your onions get away from you and burn a little, add ¼ cup of water to the pan, scrape up the over-browned bits, and keep going. In the end, you’ll have a scant ⅔ cup caramelized onions.

Toss half the tomatoes with ½ teaspoon salt and ½ teaspoon sugar. Set them over a colander and let them drain while you get everything else ready, at least 30 minutes.

Toss the remaining tomatoes with ½ teaspoon salt, the thyme, and the olive oil. Spread them out in a single layer on a sheet tray with as much room separating the individual pieces as possible. Slide the tray onto the middle rack of your oven and roast for 20 to 30 minutes. You’re looking for the tomatoes to dry out and brown slightly.

Once all the individual components are done, stir together the onions, the fresh tomatoes, the roasted tomatoes, the remaining salt, sugar, black pepper, and basil. In a separate, smaller bowl, stir together the mayonnaise, Fontina, and Parm.

Spoon the filling into your blind-baked crust and crown it with the topping. Bake in the middle rack of your oven for 30 minutes. You can serve this warm or at room temperature. Both have their virtues.

Read our Q&A with chef Vivian Howard right here and get her recipe for Peanut, Pepsi & Bourbon Floats right here. You can also check out Vivian’s food truck book tour schedule and pre-order Deep Run Roots here.

Comments: 1

Recipe for Roasted & Fresh Tomato Pie (2024)

FAQs

What is an original tomato pie? ›

Back at the turn of the century, there was no refrigeration so toppings were very basic. This gave birth to the tomato pie. The classic New Haven tomato pie is simple: dough, crushed Italian tomatoes, pecorino romano, and EVOO. That's it. Later, anchovies, garlic, and onions were also added.

Why are my roasted tomatoes soggy? ›

The main reason roasted tomatoes end up soggy is because they are overcrowded on the pan.

Should tomato pie be refrigerated? ›

Tomato pie is one of my favorite recipes to make up to 1 whole day ahead of time. Just be sure that you save the pie in the refrigerator and then you can serve it cold, or reheat it.

What is another name for tomato pie? ›

A 1903 article in the New-York Tribune on the food of Italian-Americans described a "pomidore pizza", or tomato pie, made solely with dough, tomatoes, and powdered red pepper. Tomato pie has been sold by Iannelli's Bakery in Philadelphia since 1910.

What is the oldest type of pie? ›

The Ancient Egyptians were the first to invent a dish close to what we know as a pie today. They had a honey filling covered in a crusty cake made from oats, wheat, rye or barley. A recipe for chicken pie was also discovered on a tablet carved prior to 2000 BC.

What city is famous for tomato pie? ›

The beauty of Philly-style tomato pie is that many of the best are baked in the same ovens as the hoagie rolls that house the city's best cheesesteaks and roast pork sandwiches, and sometimes made from the very same dough. Scenes from Sarcone's Bakery, Philadelphia.

Do roasted tomatoes taste better? ›

Roasting tomatoes is a sure way to coax out all the flavor. Oven roasted tomatoes are so much more concentrated and intense in flavor, making them useful in so many ways (like with vegan tomato basil soup and more–lots of ideas below).

Why do my roasted tomatoes taste bitter? ›

What causes bitter garden tomatoes? It might be the variety. Maybe you are growing fruit that is particularly acidic that translates as sourness to your taste buds. High acid and low sugar tomatoes tend to be very tart or sour.

Do I need to peel tomatoes before roasting? ›

Do I need to peel tomatoes before roasting? No need to peel the tomatoes before you roast them! This dramatically cuts down the time needed to make your own homemade sauce. No more cooking them over a hot stove, and then forcing them through a sieve to remove all the skins and seeds.

Can you leave pie out overnight after baking? ›

If a pie contains eggs or dairy products, it should be stored in the refrigerator and not left out at room temperature for more than two hours. Pies that do not contain dairy products, such as fruit pies can be stored, loosely covered at room temperature for up to two days.

Why is my tomato pie watery? ›

Why is my tomato pie runny? Tomato pie can get runny if the sliced tomato is too juicy. Follow the instructions above concerning juicy tomatoes. Another option is to sprinkle cornmeal on the bottom of the pie crust, which will stop it from getting soggy.

What is the shelf life of tomato pie? ›

A freshly baked home-made tomato pie should be good for about 2 to 4 days when kept in the fridge. If you've bought your tomato pie from a store, there'll often be a sell-by date on the packaging which should give you a good idea of its freshness. But after you open it, it's safer to eat within 3-5 days.

What is the old name for tomatoes? ›

The Italians called the tomato pomodoro (“golden apple”), which has given rise to speculation that the first tomatoes known to Europeans were yellow. It has been suggested that the French called it pomme d'amour (“love apple”) because it was thought to have aphrodisiacal properties.

What is the old name for pie? ›

The earliest pie-like recipes refer to coffyns (the word actually used for a basket or box), with straight sealed sides and a top; open-top pies were called traps.

Why do people like tomato pie? ›

The tomato pie won me over with its flavorful and rich sauce, its crunchy and bread-like crust, and its lack of cheese topping.

Is tomato pie a New York thing? ›

Utica tomato pie is a regional dish popular in Utica, New York, and surrounding areas. It is distinct from traditional pizza in that it typically lacks cheese or has only a minimal amount, and the sauce is spread on top of the crust rather than underneath any toppings.

What is the original pie? ›

The history of the pie has its roots in ancient Egypt and Greece. The ancient Greeks ate pie (artocreas), though it was of the savory type with meat in an open pastry shell. The Romans may have been the first to create a pie that included a top and bottom crust.

What's the difference between a pizza pie and a tomato pie? ›

A New York slice is typically made with thin pizza dough and topped with tomato sauce and mozzarella cheese. A tomato pie, however, most resembles a New York Sicilian pizza, which is rectangular with a thicker crust. What makes a tomato pie fundamentally different is its toppings.

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