The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Tomatoes are in season — who wants pie?

Mayo, cheese often define this classic, but you can make a ‘pie’ with neither.

- By Wendell Brock

Until recently, I’ve been rather dismissive of tomato pie.

Baking tomatoes in a crust with cheese and mayo sounded like a foolproof way to ruin one of the defining flavors of summer. Why waste precious tomatoes, and time, in pastry when you can enjoy their delicate acidity with nothing more than salt and pepper?

After my former AJC colleague John Kessler posted a nine-second YouTube sensation some years ago — a sneaky little film of a dish of Mary Mac’s tomato pie tipped sideways, a trickle of orange oil spilling out onto a white plate — I became even more put off. Didn’t seem like this kitschy old recipe was ready for its close-up.

Then came PeachDish. This spring, the Atlanta-based company created a meal kit with all the makings for two personal-size mater pies featuring Georgia-grown ingredient­s: firm but flavorful tomatoes, Vidalia onions, Sweet Grass Dairy’s Thomasvill­e Tomme. It was delicious. I wanted more.

What I discovered, after some research, is that tomato pies are as various as the fruit itself, which can be as petite as grapes and cherries or as beefy as a steak, and come in a sunburst palette of reds, oranges, yellows, greens, pinks, purples and innumerabl­e combinatio­ns thereof.

Tomato pies are fun, fuss-free, free-form and very forgiving.

You can build a tomato pie in a flaky, hand-rolled traditiona­l pie crust — or use anything from buttermilk biscuits to crusty bread to crushed crackers as a base. Cheddar is the Southern go-to, but you may select just about any kind of cheese you want: a dab of goat, a dollop of ricotta, a fat slab of mozzarella.

Cookbook author Alex Hitz, an Atlanta native who now lives in Los Angeles, bakes his Heirloom Tomato Pie with a mixture of Gruyere, sharp cheddar and Parmesan, in that order. Washington, D.C.-area food writer Cathy Barrow makes Fried Green Tomato Slab Pie with pimento cheese and a Ritzcracke­r crust. Barrow’s Southern-Style Tomato Slab Pie uses extra-sharp cheddar — in the filling and the crust. Ashley Christense­n of Raleigh, North Carolina, who won this year’s James Beard Award for Outstandin­g Chef in the country, suggests buttermilk cheddar for her puffy, soufflelik­e tomato

pies, which call for an eggand-cream custard zipped up with horseradis­h and Dijon. As I posted pictures of my various tomato-pie tests on Facebook, a friend from Italy commented:

“I make these. We call them torta rustica.

There are so many interestin­g variations.

I’d often use whatever I had at hand, black olives, ham, spinach, any type of cheese.”

“What about mayo?” I asked.

“Hell, no,” he fired back. Well, there you have it. More than others, perhaps, Southerner­s love their maters with mayo, be it on a sandwich or in a pie. Mayonnaise, it appears, is the defining ingredient of the Southern classic.

In fact, Savannah food historian Damon Fowler believes that were it not for the invention of grocerysto­re mayo, there would be no tomato pie as we know it today.

“I suspect it’s the product of a home economist for one of the commercial mayo manufactur­ers in the 1940s, ‘50, or ’60s,” Fowler told me in a lively text exchange.

“And there are no tomato pie recipes like that before commercial mayo became common.”

Now if only some genius scientist could come up with a way to dehydrate summer tomatoes, which tend to be as juicy as they are flavorful. In the name of avoiding a soggy crust, some cooks slice and bake the tomatoes first.

Christense­n puts them though a salad spinner.

One of these days, I’ll try those methods. In the meantime, I’ve had fine luck with draining sliced and salted tomatoes on a wire rack, then dabbing them with paper towels.

After some testing, I came up with a Southern Tomato Pie that nods to Italy.

It’s made with cheddar and mayo, with some Parmesan and basil mixed in.

Made with a 100% organic store-bought crust I bought at Kroger (because, really, who wants to deal with chilling and baking pastry dough in this heat?), it will satisfy any tomatopie purist’s fantasy.

If the idea of a fat-rich pastry strained of tomato essence still doesn’t appeal, I have just the recipe for you.

Carla Hall’s Tomato Pie With Garlic Bread Crust isn’t really a pie at all. It’s basically tomatoes with garlic and snippets of fresh thyme, baked on crusty bread with lots of olive oil. Bite into a slice and let juices drip down your cheeks.

This vegan “pie” contains no mayo or cheese and still tastes like a tomato.

So simple and so good. A killer way to have tomato pie and eat it, too.

 ?? STYLING BY WENDELL BROCK / CONTRIBUTE­D BY CHRIS HUNT PHOTOGRAPH­Y ?? For generation­s, Southerner­s have baked tomatoes, cheese and mayo in a crust and called it tomato pie. This Southern Tomato Pie nods to Italy with the addition of basil and Parmesan. Use whatever cheese and herbs you like, and if you end up with extra cheese, it never hurts to sprinkle a little more on top.
STYLING BY WENDELL BROCK / CONTRIBUTE­D BY CHRIS HUNT PHOTOGRAPH­Y For generation­s, Southerner­s have baked tomatoes, cheese and mayo in a crust and called it tomato pie. This Southern Tomato Pie nods to Italy with the addition of basil and Parmesan. Use whatever cheese and herbs you like, and if you end up with extra cheese, it never hurts to sprinkle a little more on top.
 ?? STYLING BY WENDELL BROCK / CONTRIBUTE­D BY CHRIS HUNT PHOTOGRAPH­Y ?? A tomato pie is perfect for the lazy days of summer: (from top) Ashley Christense­n’s Homegrown Tomato Pie, Carla Hall’s Tomato Pie with Garlic Bread Crust, and Southern Tomato Pie.
STYLING BY WENDELL BROCK / CONTRIBUTE­D BY CHRIS HUNT PHOTOGRAPH­Y A tomato pie is perfect for the lazy days of summer: (from top) Ashley Christense­n’s Homegrown Tomato Pie, Carla Hall’s Tomato Pie with Garlic Bread Crust, and Southern Tomato Pie.

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