- Kitchen Culinaire - https://kitchenculinaire.com -

Spaghetti with Fresh Tomatoes, Mozzarella and Basil

Tomatoes, tomatoes everywhere! I know it is a cliché but there really is nothing like a beautiful, juicy, ripe tomato in season. With the lousy spring and early summer that Vancouver had this year I am unsure as to where things are at in terms of the current local crop. Before we left I did see some tomato varieties starting to make their way to the Trout Lake Farmer’s Market but the ones I saw were still far from the gorgeous, sun-blushed, sensuous, bursting-with-ripeness beauties that usually make their appearance in late August.

Here in Florida I have yet to find the Farmer’s Market but the availability and selection of tomatoes at the grocery store just down the street is inspiring. We have greedily been devouring them every day. Max always takes a few grape or cherry tomatoes tucked in alongside his sandwich for school, but he only likes the red ones. We have made BLTs with thick slices of ripe beefsteaks, bread salads made with green zebras and gorgonzola, mixed tomato bruschetta to go on top garlic rubbed toasts. My favourite lunch these days is a grilled slice of country bread with Caspian Pink or Black Brandywine tomatoes, salsa verde with an additional drizzle of good olive oil over the top.

The thing with really good, ripe tomatoes is that the less you mess with them the better. Here is where this pasta “sauce” comes in. It is not a tomato sauce in the traditional sense as the only heat these tomatoes feel is when the hot pasta hits them. Still, it is enough to soften them just a bit, release some of their delicious juices without altering their inherent fresh flavour. Add in some garlic (that is allowed to steep in some olive oil for an hour or two) some fresh basil (lots of it if you are like me), some Parmesan (salty and nutty) and fresh mozzarella (creamy and tangy). Good grey sea salt, plus a few grinds of fresh ground pepper = perfection. Actually, if you serve this pasta alongside some arugula leaves that have be lightly dressed with a grainy mustard and walnut vinaigrette and a handful of toasted walnuts then it is even better than perfect.

Just one last thing before I get to the recipe… please don’t even attempt to make this with hard, pale, unripe winter tomatoes. It would simply suck.