I am thrilled that I created this. D wanted baked tomatoes because he loves them. I did not want to buy two types of tomatoes (I was buying cherry tomatoes for a dish later in the week) so I decided to bake tomatoes but inside a casserole dish. The result of my creation was a man friend who did not say a word throughout dinner, licked his plate, and got seconds. These actions were all precursors to a rave review. This is a super easy, super fresh, super healthy, super delicious, super versatile, and perfect for summer or winter (adjust veggies accordingly).Final verdict: Keeper!
Tomato, Artichoke and Zucchini Casserole
Serves 4
- 3/4 of a pint of Cherry or Grape tomatoes, halved and seeded
- One zucchini, cut into half moons
- One can artichoke hearts, quartered
- 1-2 large shallots
- 3-5 cloves garlic
- Salt
- Pepper
- 3 tablespoons chicken broth
- 1/4 cup white wine
- 1 tsp dried thyme
- handful torn basil
- a few dots of goat cheese or some shredded Fontina
- a few pieces of torn prosciutto or pancetta (optional)
- Bread crumbs (optional - I actually do not think they added anything)
Grease a baking dish. Preheat oven to 400. In a skillet, heat olive oil and add prosciutto or pancetta (if using) and allow to render. Remove from plan and garlic and shallots (properly seasoned) and saute until glassy. Add white wine and chicken broth and reduce a bit to just cook off the alcohol.Add some pepper and the thyme and reserve.While the shallot mixture is cooking, seed tomatoes, cut zucchini and artichoke and combine in the baking dish. Sprinkle with salt and pepper and mix with cheese. Once the shallot mixture is done, pour mixture into the baking dish. Top with breadcrumbs and bake for 15-20 minutes. You can pull out halfway through and top with more cheese (or you can just move the previous addition of cheese to now if using less cheese). Pull out of the oven and spoon into small bowl or onto a plate.
This would be delightful with a piece of toasted garlic ciabatta bread. It would also be delightful with some chicken sausage for a one-pot meal (can you call it a one-pot meal if you also use a pan - in Andiland you can!).
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