Tomato
Roasted Vegetable and Prosciutto Lasagna with Alfredo Sauce
A bagged lettuce mix with "Mediterranean" greens would go nicely here when tossed with red wine vinaigrette and served with ciabatta bread. End with pears and a plate of bittersweet chocolate-nut toffee.
Herbed Whole-Oat Salad
The oats in this salad are a distant cousin of the familiar breakfast staple oatmeal. As whole grain, oats have a wonderful, slightly chewy texture and nutty flavor.
Clams with Fennel and Pernod
Fresh fennel, fennel seeds and the anise-flavored liqueur Pernod are combined here.
Guacamole with Lime and Roasted Chilies
Serve with jicama sticks, radish slices, peeled cooked shrimp, and corn tortilla chips.
Salsicce al Pomodoro
The aroma of sausage simmering in tomatoes expresses Naples as well as any long-cooked ragù. Indeed, the ensuing sauce is often called ragù di salsicce. In this recipe, you produce just enough sauce for a first course of pasta — either spaghetti or ziti is perfect — with a beautiful bonus of meat for the second course. To make the most of the sauce, set aside only a spoonful to top each portion of sausage, then add the cooked pasta to the sauce, turning the pasta in the sauce until it is evenly dressed and has soaked up some of the sauce's savor.
By Arthur Schwartz
Red Snapper à la Niçoise
Poisson à la Niçoise
Typical Niçois ingredients—including tomatoes, fennel, anchovies and olives—flavor this dish from Auberge des Arts. At the restaurant it's made with red mullet (rouget), which is a local fish. We've substituted red snapper.
Chicken Muffuletta Salad
This salad — named after the famous New Orleans sandwich — would also be good on oversize rolls. Suitable sides include onion rings and carrot sticks with blue cheese dip. End with praline ice cream cones.
Chicken Breasts with Scallions, Shiitake Mushrooms, and Tomatoes
Can be prepared in 45 minutes or less.
Fabio's Tomato Aspic
Fabio Picchi, owner and chef of the restaurant Cibrèo in Florence, cooks like a Florentine granny with a spicy palate. He takes full advantage of seasonal abundance from the Sant' Ambrogio market next to his restaurant. Fabio's recipes are wonderful but imprecise, quantities are vague, and I've got to pay strict attention so he doesn't skip an ingredient or a step. His refreshing summery tomato aspic is simple and uses traditional ingredients in a novel way, creating a spicy tomato sauce with a wiggle, barely jelled, more fun than a formal aspic. Bright red, speckled with herbs, zapped with chili and garlic, Fabio's appetizer is a far cry from the ladies-lunch image of conventional, transparent consommé aspics. Even my gelatin-hating husband and son love this dish. Double the extra virgin for more authentic Tuscan flavor.
By Faith Willinger
Summer Garden Gazpacho
This recipe can be prepared in 45 minutes or less.
Round out this satisfying soup with a composed platter of marinated beets, red onions, sliced hard-boiled eggs, pickled vegetables and a wedge of imported Parmesan. Try a purchased berry tart for a pretty dessert.
"Tomato Time" Tart
Prick the pastry with a fork so that it doesn't puff up during baking. This tart works as an entree or, cut into smaller pieces, as hors d'oeuvres.
Tomato Tatins
Like the tarte Tatin, that famous French upside-down apple dessert created by the Tatin sisters, these savory stacks have a crispy top crust that ultimately becomes the bottom-perfect for sopping up the unctuous tomato juices and pesto.
This recipe can be prepared in 45 minutes or less.
Fusilli All'amatriciana
Full-flavored and hearty, this classic pasta dish with bacon and tomato sauce is always a hit. Top it with plenty of grated Parmesan cheese.
By Gina Schild