Fresh Heirloom Tomato Salad Recipe, Basil QUICK, EASY | White On Rice (2024)

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by Todd + Diane

Heirloom tomato salads are the best way to enjoy Summers bounty!
Fresh Heirloom Tomato Salad Recipe, Basil QUICK, EASY | White On Rice (1)

Heirloom Tomato Salad : Hello Summer!

This consistently cool weather had us apprehensive, particularly as heirloom tomato gardeners. With almost 20 heirloom tomatoes plants that we’ve been nurturing over the last few months, all we were hoping for was some hot sun to get these plants to bolt out with tomatoes. Unfortunately there hasn’t been much of the sun! May and June gloom kept our tomatoes from ripening as intended and as impatient gardeners, the weather left us staring at green tomatoes for the last few months.

We could either pickle the green tomatoes like we often do, or just wait patiently and be as tolerant as we could to allow them to ripen. Trust us, it can get excruciatingly painful to stare at green tomatoes for months when you’re craving sweet red ones.

When patches of late afternoon sun would peak out, the tomatoes were soaking up every bit of nurturing warmth. Finally, after, what seems like a decade, some of the heirloom tomatoes started to ripen to their true, sweet colors. Occasionally one or two would ripen up and we’d eat those in one sitting.

snow white heirloom cherry tomatoes

But what we were anxiously waiting for was an actual harvest full of tomatoes, meaning at least 10 tomatoes. Five for each of us. That’s a fair split and substantial meal.

With this first substantial batch of ripe heirloom tomatoes, there was only one way to enjoy them. A simple, seasonally appropriate preparation of sliced garden heirloom tomatoes with a drizzle of olive oil and balsamic vinegar is perfection on a plate. Add a dusting of good sea salt, fresh cracked black pepper and aromatically sweet fresh basil. Now finally, that is perfection on a plate.

left: sweet 100 cherry. right: green zebra

Sometimes heirloom tomatoes get too much thought when it comes to preparation. Canning, stewing or drying a batch of gorgeous heirloom tomatoes is great if you have an abundance of them. But for us, to really appreciate the delicacy and treasure of an heirloom tomato is to eat it as it was meant to be: raw and fresh.

Just the heirloom tomato sliced on a place with simple accompaniments is all it takes to eat seasonally simple and to celebrate the arrival of Summer.

Less is more, especially when it comes to a good heirloom.

“jewel” enchantment heirlooms

Neves Azorean Red & Black Krim & Green Zebra

above: sun gold cherry

Pinot heirloom

enough tomatoes for a full meal!

Fresh Heirloom Tomato Salad Recipe, Basil QUICK, EASY | White On Rice (11)

Heirloom Tomato Salad Recipe

This recipe is so simple, it doesn't really even need a write up!

5 from 1 vote

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Ingredients

  • fresh , sweet heirloom tomatoes
  • olive oil
  • balsamic vinegar
  • sea or kosher salt
  • fresh cracked black pepper
  • crumbled goat cheese, feta or grated parmesan , optional
  • fresh basil

Instructions

  • Slice tomatoes and drizzle with olive oil, balsamic vinegar, salt and pepper or optional cheese.

  • Slice or tear fresh basil leaves on top. Enjoy!

Course: Salad, Side Dish

Cuisine: Garden Recipes, Vegetarian

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Fresh Heirloom Tomato Salad Recipe, Basil QUICK, EASY | White On Rice (12)

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50 comments on “Seasonally simple garden Heirloom Tomato Salad”

  1. Roberta July 2, 2011 @ 1:41 am Reply

    Hi!
    I’ve got he same anxious attitude towards my green tomatoes!:-)
    Hopefully they will ripen in the next weeks and I will finally be rewarded for my patience…
    I do agree with you ‘less is more’!

    p.s. Stunning photos, love your work!

  2. Christine June 28, 2011 @ 2:36 pm Reply

    Wonderful photos! I’m having serious tomato sadness here because I didn’t plant any this year. Other things in life cropped up. Your pics have me revved to hit at least one farmers market this week. I can just taste them now.

  3. Scott @ Tomatomania June 28, 2011 @ 9:48 am Reply

    PS I’m growing 95 varieties in our R& D field in Ojai this year. Mostly weird stuff that we’ve never seen and need to know about. If a photo extravaganza mid-season sounds fun I can provide fruit. Or come up here and join us in August, as a few of us will be doing that one weekend during harvest. (Check out last year’s photos in the gallery section of our website!)

  4. Scott @ Tomatomania June 28, 2011 @ 9:45 am Reply

    Todd, Diane, OK, those pics are outrageous. Again, outrageous.

    If you’d ever be interested in a gallery showing would love to tie that in with one of my springtime tomato seedling events. Maybe at Cornerstone Sonoma next April? Don’t know if you ever do anything like that but I and several other “Tomatomaniacs” have been ooohing and ahhhing at your shots for a while and we’d love to have you join us.

    Contact me at the e-mail above if that’s of interest…and keep up the amazing work.

  5. Shaina June 28, 2011 @ 9:36 am Reply

    I, too, have been waiting for the weather to warm so my heirloom tomatoes would take off. After an early 102-degree day, though, we dropped right back down into the 60s for weeks. The promise of sunshine this week has me excited, as I have several green tomatoes hanging on vines just waiting.

    Your heirlooms look like they were well worth the wait. Hopefully I’ll be saying the same soon.

  6. sally cameron June 27, 2011 @ 3:46 pm Reply

    Beautiful, beautiful! Wish I had room to grow them. So many wonderful varieties to enjoy. I’ll have to depend on farmers markets…or stopping by your house to beg for some! Will work for tomatoes.

  7. Steve-Anna June 27, 2011 @ 11:59 am Reply

    I’ve been craving tomatoes, especially heirlooms, this summer. What a gorgeous post!! I wish I could come visit and help you harvest. Maybe I could send some of our plentiful Arizona sun your way?
    xoxox

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Fresh Heirloom Tomato Salad Recipe, Basil QUICK, EASY | White On Rice (2024)
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