Roman Rice-Stuffed Tomatoes (Pomodori al Riso) Recipe

When in Rome, stuff your late-season tomatoes with rice and roast them with potatoes.

A plate of Roman rice-stuffed tomatoes, served with roasted potatoes in a white bowl.

Serious Eats / Joel Russo

Why It Works

  • Par-cooking the potatoes and rice before roasting ensures that all of the elements of the dish end up properly cooked.
  • Using passed tomato pulp and tomato paste to par-cook the rice risotto-style infuses it with deep, sweet and savory tomato flavor.
  • The roast potatoes not only bring substance to the dish, but also serve a practical purpose, keeping the stuffed tomatoes upright in the baking dish while they roast in the oven.

Acouple of months ago, a bunch of us here at Serious Eats got into a very serious Slack discussion about the merits of room-temperature foods, whichMirandaturned into a thoroughexploration of the topic.While working on this piece, Miranda asked us to list the lukewarm dishes we have the hots for. Along with the usual suspects of cakes, cheese boards, and marinated grilled vegetables, I started thinking a lot about one of my favorite late-summer meals: Roman-style pomodori al riso, oven-roasted rice-stuffed tomatoes with potatoes.

Rome, like most of central and southern Italy, gets really, really hot in the summer. In the sweltering month of August, the sanpietrini cobblestones that pave the streets of the historic city center often get so hot that they become sticky and melty; it feels like you are walking around with gum constantly glued to the bottoms of your shoes. When I lived there as a kid, most of the city shut down, with Romans decamping to the seaside or mountains for vacation. This period is called Ferragosto, a holiday that can be traced back to Ancient Rome, enacted by Emperor Augustus to celebrate the hard work of the summer harvest.

The people who do stay in the city during the dog days of summer* have to figure out how to eat without heating up their non-air conditioned apartments even further by cooking (central AC is not a thing when you live in a building that was constructed during the Renaissance). For my family, this translated to going out a lot more for casual sit-down pizza dinners (a cruel passing of the culinary buck to the pizzaioli working infernally hot wood-burning ovens), or bringing home prepared foods that didn't require a lot of cooking.

*"Dog days of summer" also hasAncient Roman roots.

Overhead of rice-stuffed tomatoes in a baking dish with potatoes before being roasted.

Serious Eats / Joel Russo

Roman rice-stuffed tomatoes fall in the latter group. They are commonly sold at rosticcerie, little takeout rotisserie spots that are often also pizza al taglio shops, where you can pick up some "by-the-cut" pizza (the Roman version of a slice) as well as a roast chicken with rosemary-scented potatoes glistening with schmaltz on your way home from work.

The best pomodori al riso that I had as a kid didn't come from a rosticceria though. They were made by Antonietta, the proprietor of our neighborhood fruttivendolo, the fruit and vegetable shop where my parents would shop for produce on days they couldn't make it to the market. Over time, my mother befriended Antonietta and her husband, Lamberto.

Along with giving my mother guidance on how to cook vegetables like cicoria that we hadn't encountered when living in New York, Antonietta eventually admitted her to a small circle of locals who were allowed to buy prepared food. She didn't have a permit to make and sell food on the premises, so she would prepare these items at home, and then keep them stashed out of sight in the back of the shop, bringing them out only for a trusted group of regulars. It was the best speakeasy, rewarding people in the know with aluminum takeout containers of beautifulcarciofi alla romana (braised artichokes)instead of moonshine.

Close-up of rice-stuffed tomatoes in a baking dish with potatoes.

Serious Eats / Joel Russo

In the summer, Antonietta had a clever solution to keep her own kitchen from overheating. She worked out a deal with thebakery across the streetfrom her shop. Once all of the bread had been baked for the day, Antonietta would pop over with disposable baking pans full of rice-stuffed tomatoes and potatoes, and load them into the forno's wood-fired oven, which is fueled by hazelnut shells left over from Nutella production.

The lingering heat of the oven slowly cooked the tomatoes until they were tender, jammy, and sweet, barely able to contain the tomato- and basil-scented arborio rice stuffed inside. The potatoes propping the tomatoes upright in the baking trays turned creamy and soft, fragrant with olive oil and fresh rosemary, with a hint of smokiness from the oven. It was a perfect dish. I would always ask for the maximum possible allotment of tomatoes that Antonietta was willing to part with when they were available, and would devour at least two of them as soon as I got home with a fresh batch. They taste best when served at room temperature.

So when Miranda asked us to list our favorite tepid foods, I had a lot to say. But my rave review of rice-stuffed tomatoes wasn't met with unbridled enthusiasm from my coworkers. I get it; it's not a sexy sounding dish, and most of us have been subjected to bad stuffed peppers at some point in our lives. However, I had won enough stuffed-vegetable goodwill with myThanksgiving roast pumpkinsthat people were willing to hear me out on these tomatoes, so I got to work on developing a recipe.

The Problem With Most Pomodori al Riso Recipes: Wishful Thinking

Photo collage of four different test batches of rice-stuffed tomatoes from the first round of recipe testing.

Serious Eats / Joel Russo

我已经吃了蒲式耳的西红柿my day, but I had never actually made them myself, because as mentioned earlier, this is mostly a takeout dish in Rome. I scoured Italian cookbooks and cooking websites for recipes, and found a common, simple cooking procedure: The tops of tomatoes are cut off, their guts are scooped out and passed through a food mill and stirred together with raw rice, minced garlic, and chopped basil. The rice is soaked in the tomato pulp, ostensibly so that it can soften and absorb moisture, before being spooned into the hollowed-out tomatoes, which are roasted in a baking dish with potatoes that have been tossed in olive oil.

The rice, potatoes, and tomatoes are supposed to cook at roughly the same rate, and an hour or so later, you pull out a casserole of tender, roasted vegetables. This is what is supposed to happen. But it doesn't. Starchy and soft vegetables don't magically cook at the same rate, and grains certainly don't cook in the same time, as well. Anyone who tries to sell you that narrative is a huckster.

Overhead of hollowed-out tomatoes nestled in a baking dish with potatoes.

Serious Eats / Joel Russo

While I had strong suspicions that the recipes that used this one-stop, set-it-and-forget-it cooking method wouldn't produce great results, I still had to try it. So I set up an initial test, cooking four sets of stuffed tomatoes, using the same shoddy method with different types of rice: arborio, carnaroli, long grain basmati, and jasmine. Pomodori al riso are usually made with risotto-style rice (arborio, carnaroli, and the like), so I made sure to test with them, but then also wanted to see how other types would perform.

Photo collage comparing the textures of rice after roasting during the first round of recipe testing.

Serious Eats / Joel Russo

None of them worked. Soaking the rice in strained tomato pulp didn't soften the grains, and they didn't absorb the tomato juices as advertised. As you can see in these photos, the rice and tomato pulp remain separate even after roasting; the grains are mostly white, surrounded by the tomato pulp. And the grains themselves were all over the place in terms of doneness. The risotto-style grains as well as the basmati remained chalky and hard, while the jasmine rice turned to mush. And this is to say nothing of the tomatoes and potatoes, which were way over- and under-cooked, respectively.

It was clear that the simplicity of this cooking method sounds great in theory, but doesn't work in practice. Along with all of the textural issues, it was hard to fill the tomatoes with similar amounts of rice after they'd spent time soaking in the tomato pulp. The flavor was off, too: The rice in a good pomodoro al riso is stained a deep rusty red color, with the tomato pulp cooked to an intense, savory sweetness, reminiscent of a Spanish sofrito. But using the simple cooking method, the strained tomato pulp still tasted raw and astringent, more like the topping forpan con tomate. And even after baking, the filling was soupy and loose. I had to go back to the drawing board.

Overhead of ingredients for rice-stuffed tomatoes: potatoes, fresh rosemary, tomatoes, arborio rice, shallot, garlic, tomato paste, and fresh basil.

Serious Eats / Joel Russo

I set up a second round of testing where I pitted four more casseroles of tomatoes against each other. It was clear that I needed to go with a risotto-friendly grain, so I settled on easy-to-find arborio. The rice clearly needed to be par-cooked before getting stuffed into the tomatoes. After settling on arborio as the grain of choice, I tested different methods for cooking the rice short of al dente prior to stuffing and roasting it. For two of the test batches I par-boiled the rice for a few minutes in water and then mixed it with the tomato pulp before filling the tomatoes.

For another batch, I par-cooked the rice for 10 minutes, risotto-style, using the tomato pulp as the cooking liquid. And for the final test batch, I tried the raw rice and tomato method once more to make sure that this was in fact an inferior method, adding more rice this time just in case my first failed attempt was a ratio-related issue.

Risotto cooking with strained tomato pulp in a saucier.

Serious Eats / Joel Russo

The risotto method emerged as the clear winner in this round. In 10 minutes, the rice was cooked just enough to get rid of its hard, raw bite, and had absorbed the tomato pulp, which had reduced down to a saucy consistency and was full of sweet tomato flavor. I also solved the problem of the undercooked potatoes by giving them a head start in the oven while I worked on hollowing out the tomatoes and cooking the rice. After a lot of failed roasted tomatoes, I had figured out how to cook a Roman-style pomodoro al riso that would have made Antonietta proud.

How to Make Pomodori al Riso

Photo collage of par-roasting potatoes in a baking dish with rosemary and olive oil.

Serious Eats / Joel Russo

The process begins by peeling and dicing Yukon gold potatoes into 1-inch pieces, and tossing them with olive oil, salt, pepper, and fresh rosemary in a largebaking dish. The potatoes go into the oven for a 30-minute roast, until they are tender enough to be pierced with a paring knife.

Photo collage of hollowing out tomatoes with a paring knife and spoon, reserving the scooped out insides.

Serious Eats / Joel Russo

With the potatoes in the oven, it's time to work on the tomatoes. Lop the tops off of six beefsteak tomatoes that are just shy of being fully ripe (save your super ripe and soft tomatoes for other recipes: they'll lose their structural integrity too quickly in the oven). Use a paring knife to carve out the insides of the tomato, and scoop out the pulp with a spoon, making sure to leave enough flesh around the skin so that they don't collapse.

Photo collage of salting hollowed out tomatoes and placing them upside down on a wire rack-lined baking sheet to drain them of excess moisture.

Serious Eats / Joel Russo

Next, I season the interior of the now-empty tomato shells with salt and invert them on a wire rack–lined baking sheet to drain them of excess moisture. Set them aside while you process the tomato pulp.

Photo collage of passing scooped out tomato pulp through a food mill.

Serious Eats / Joel Russo

In an ideal world, you have afood millhandy for this part of the process. Passing the tomato guts through a food mill gives you a deep red tomato purée with a more uniform texture and no seeds. But if you don't have a food mill, youcanuse a food processor or immersion blender for this step; these electric appliances will introduce air, which makes the purée lighter in color, and some seeds may slip through—a very minor flaw at worst. Season the passed tomato pulp with salt, and measure it in a liquid measuring cup. You are looking for a 3:1 ratio of liquid to rice by volume, so you can make adjustments to the amount of rice you're using at this point; if your tomatoes aren't very juicy, you can bulk up the purée with chicken or vegetable broth.

Photo collage of sweating shallots and garlic in a saucier before adding rice.

Serious Eats / Joel Russo

The cooking process for the rice follows the general first steps of cooking risotto. Minced alliums (in this case I use a large shallot and one garlic clove) get lightly cooked in olive oil in a saucier until softened but not brown.

然后我添加米饭、烤了几米inutes until the outer edges of the grains are translucent; the sloped sides of a saucier allow you to stir the rice without grains getting stuck in the corners of the saucepan. Before adding the tomato pulp, I add a tablespoon of tomato paste, which gets incorporated into the mix, coating the rice and turning it a rusty red.

It's then time for the tomato pulp, which is stirred in and the entire mixture is brought to a simmer. After 10 minutes, the rice will have lost its raw bite and the sauce will have reduced and thickened.

Adding chopped basil to par-cooked risotto.

Serious Eats / Joel Russo

Stir in a handful of chopped basil and season the mixture well with salt. If you're like me, and are always looking to get a leg up on savory punch, you can also add a splash of fish sauce at this point, which heightens the umami power of tomatoes.

Adding a few drops of colatura fish sauce to the par-cooked rice. This step is optional.

Serious Eats / Joel Russo

I had some extracolaturakicking around in the test kitchen, so I added a few drops of it to the rice, and it really makes it pop. High-quality Southeast Asian-style fish sauce will work just as well.

It's time to fill the tomatoes: Dab the tomato cavities with paper towels, and nestle them into the baking dish with the now-cooled par-roasted potatoes, using the potatoes as scaffolding for the tomatoes. Fill the tomatoes with the rice mixture, pop on the tomato tops, and give them a final drizzle of olive oil.

Overhead of baking dish with finished rice-stuffed tomatoes and roast potatoes.

Serious Eats / Joel Russo

The baking dish goes back in the oven, and the tomatoes get roasted for about 30 minutes, until their flesh is tender and the rice is cooked through. For a final flourish, crank the broiler to high, and slide the tops off to the side of the tomatoes. Broil the whole deal until the top layer of rice on each tomato is ever-so-slightly charred, and the potatoes are beginning to color and crisp.

These are pomodori al riso done right. And now comes the hardest part—waiting for the tomatoes to cool down before you dig in. Trust me, these are best eaten when warm, not piping hot. Cut into them with a fork, pour yourself a glass of wine, and enjoy this light, late-summer, (surprisingly vegan!) Roman takeout classic.

Close-up side view of a plated rice-stuffed tomato with roast potatoes on the side.

Serious Eats / Joel Russo

September 2019

Recipe Facts

4.7

(6)

Active:20 mins
Total:75 mins
Serves:4 servings

Rate & Comment

开云体育波胆

  • 1 1/2 pounds (675g)Yukon Gold potatoes, peeled and cut into 1-inch pieces

  • 1/4cup(60ml)extra-virgin olive oil, divided

  • 1sprigfresh rosemary, cut into 3 pieces

  • Kosher saltand freshly ground black pepper

  • 6beefsteak tomatoes(8 to 10 ounces each; 225 to 285g)

  • 自制鸡汤orlow-sodium brothorvegetable stock, if needed

  • 1 largeshallot(50g), minced

  • 1 mediumgarlic clove(5g), minced

  • 3/4 cup (6 ounces;165g)risotto rice, such as arborio or carnaroli (see note)

  • 1tablespoon(15g)tomato paste

  • 1to 2teaspoons(5 to 10ml)fish sauce, such ascolatura(optional; see note)

  • 1/2ouncefreshbasil leaves(1 loosely packed cup; 15g), roughly chopped

Directions

  1. Adjust oven rack to upper middle position and preheat oven to 375°F (190°C). In a large baking dish, combine potatoes, rosemary, and 2 tablespoons (30ml) olive oil. Season with salt and pepper, then toss to combine. Spread potatoes in an even, single layer. Roast until a knife meets little resistance when inserted into a piece of potato, about 30 minutes. Set baking dish aside to cool; keep oven on.

    20190903-pomodoro-al-riso-joel-russo17
  2. Meanwhile, using a sharp knife, cut top 1/2 inch off stem end of tomatoes and set aside. Carefully run knife along the cavity of the tomato to loosen core and pulp, then use a spoon to carefully scoop them out into a bowl. Repeat with remaining tomatoes. Season insides of tomatoes and their tops with salt, and place them upside down on wire rack rack set inside a rimmed baking sheet. Set tomatoes aside.

    20190903-pomodoro-al-riso-joel-russo-tomato-prepping
  3. Using a food mill, pass reserved tomato pulp into a non-reactive container; discard seeds. (Alternatively, you can blend the tomato pulp with a food processor or blender, though it'll retain some seeds and will be a lighter color due to incorporated air.) Measure yield of tomato pulp by transferring it to a liquid measuring cup; you should have about 2 1/4 cups (530ml); if you don't have that much, add low-sodium chicken broth or vegetable stock to reach that volume.

    20190903-pomodoro-al-riso-joel-russo16
  4. In a 3-quart stainless steel saucier, heat 1 tablespoon (15ml) olive oil over medium heat until shimmering. Add shallots, season lightly with salt, and cook, stirring frequently with a rubber spatula, until shallots are softened but not browned, about 3 minutes. Add garlic and continue to cook, stirring frequently, until garlic is softened as well, about 1 minute longer.

    20190903-pomodoro-al-riso-joel-russo-adding-rice-tomato-paste
  5. Add rice and cook, stirring, until rice is evenly coated in oil and toasted but not browned, 2 to 3 minutes. (Rice grains should start to look like tiny ice cubes: translucent around the edges and cloudy in the center.) Stir in tomato paste and continue to cook, stirring, until tomato paste evenly coats rice mixture and turns rust-colored, about 1 minute longer.

  6. Add tomato pulp, increase heat to medium-high, and cook rice at a steady simmer, stirring frequently, until rice is just beginning to soften, about 10 minutes. Remove from heat, stir in fish sauce (if using) and basil, and season with salt.

    20190903-pomodoro-al-riso-joel-russo-adding-sauce
  7. Blot tomato cavities with paper towels, then nestle them into potatoes in baking dish so that they remain upright. Fill tomatoes with rice mixture, set tops on tomatoes, and drizzle with remaining 1 tablespoon (15ml) of olive oil.

    20190903-pomodoro-al-riso-joel-russo-fillingl
  8. Roast tomatoes until they are very tender and rice is cooked through, 25 to 30 minutes. Turn oven to broil, remove tops from tomatoes (keeping them in baking dish) to expose rice, and broil until rice and potatoes are lightly charred and crispy, 5 to 7 minutes (keep a close eye as broiler intensity can vary significantly from one oven to the next). Remove baking dish from oven, and let cool for at least 10 minutes. Serve warm or at room temperature.

Special Equipment

Food mill,3-quart saucier,baking dish

Notes

The amount of rice used in this recipe can be adjusted to the yield of passed tomato pulp. You are looking for a 3:1 liquid to rice ratio, by volume.

Fish sauce intensifies the savory richness of the cooked tomato pulp in the rice. It can be omitted to keep the dish vegan.

Make-Ahead and Storage

这个夏末温暖的菜是最好的服务或在罗依om temperature, so it can be made ahead of time, and either stored at room temperature if serving the same day, or covered and refrigerated for up to 2 days. Bring to room temperature before serving.

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Nutrition Facts(per serving)
520 Calories
18g Fat
78g Carbs
14g Protein
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Nutrition Facts
Servings: 4
Amount per serving
Calories 520
% Daily Value*
Total Fat18g 24%
Saturated Fat 4g 20%
Cholesterol9mg 3%
Sodium1048mg 46%
Total Carbohydrate78g 28%
Dietary Fiber 9g 32%
Total Sugars 14g
Protein14g
Vitamin C 66mg 331%
Calcium 122mg 9%
Iron 4mg 21%
Potassium 1951mg 42%
*The % Daily Value (DV) tells you how much a nutrient in a food serving contributes to a daily diet. 2,000 calories a day is used for general nutrition advice.
(Nutrition information is calculated using an ingredient database and should be considered an estimate.)