Tomatoes and peaches are all you need to feel like it's really summer.
Tomatoes for dinner, because that's what you really want right now.
Our hearts were captured by a grilled summer salad with herbs at its center.
Tabouli gets a makeover once again.
Nothing is better than ripe, juicy summer tomatoes. This recipe makes them shine.
Move your green tomatoes out of the frying pan and onto the grill.
This week, Jenny is taking a day off. But we know a Monday with no Jenny would be a very sad day indeed, so we tracked down our favorite Jenny recipe.
With a can of tomatoes -- or a stack of them -- the pantry can be a place of exploration: an easy path to a burden-free dinner, just as exciting as one after a trip to the market.
You've got a bundle of celery in the back of your crisper drawer. (Go check. You do.) This is what you should do with it.
Watch Cleo and Julia make Kale, Tomato and White Bean Stew.
Here's Amanda with the latest from Brooklyn's most well-fed first graders -- those tomatoes totally do look like fish scales: Bacon, lettuce, and semi-green tomatoes, sliced super thin so they lay on the bread like scales on a fish. (I made one big sandwich and split it in two for the kids.) Our nanny made apple pie with Walker and Addie; thought they should take their creation to school.
It's a cross between summer and Meatless Monday in the twins' lunchboxes today -- although those apples are an omen of fall! We'll let Amanda explain: There were still peppers and corn in the market so I decided it was time for a stew of them. That was the main course, just glistening sweet pepper stew. On the side, yogurt, and an apple. I figured they could get meat or fish at dinner. What's in your lunchbox?
Pack all of summer's tomato flavor into jars of conserva to add sunshine to your winter.
Capturing all of tomatoes' greatness, to the last drop.
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