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Tomato and Roasted Garlic Pie

3.7

(44)

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Photo by Laura Murray, styling by Judy Mancini

If you haven’t used Taleggio before, now is the perfect time to try it. Don’t be put off by the smell; this cheese has a very mild flavor and is an ideal complement to fresh tomatoes.

Recipe information

  • Yield

    Makes one 9" pie

Ingredients

pounds mixed heirloom tomatoes, cored, sliced ¼-inch thick

3

tablespoons olive oil

¾

teaspoon kosher salt, divided, plus more

¼

teaspoon freshly ground black pepper, plus more

6

garlic cloves

½

cup (1 stick) unsalted butter

9

ounces Stoned Wheat Thins or other whole grain crackers

2

large eggs

10

ounces Taleggio cheese, rind removed, coarsely grated (about 1½ cups)

ounces finely crumbled Parmesan (about ½ cup)

½

cup mayonnaise

1

tablespoon chopped thyme, plus ½ teaspoon leaves

1

small shallot, thinly sliced

Special Equipment

A 9-inch-diameter springform pan

Preparation

  1. Step 1

    Place a rack in middle of oven; preheat to 475°. Arrange tomatoes on a rimmed baking sheet, covering entire surface (it’s okay if they overlap). Drizzle with oil; season with salt and pepper. Roast until tomatoes begin to look dry on top, 25–30 minutes. Let cool.

    Step 2

    Meanwhile, cook garlic and butter in a small saucepan over medium-low heat, swirling often, until butter foams and milk solids turn golden, 5–8 minutes. Strain through a fine-mesh sieve into a heatproof measuring cup; transfer garlic and toasty bits to a cutting board. Finely chop and set aside.

    Step 3

    Reduce oven temperature to 375°. Pulse crackers and ¼ tsp. salt in a food processor until fine crumbs form (you should have about 2 cups). Add eggs and 6 Tbsp. garlic butter and pulse until mixture is the consistency of wet sand.Transfer to springform pan. Using a flat-sided measuring cup, press crumbs firmly onto bottom and 1½" up sides of pan. Bake crust until fragrant and edge is just starting to take on color, 8–10 minutes. Transfer pan to a wire rack and let crust cool.

    Step 4

    Mix Taleggio, Parmesan, mayonnaise, chopped thyme, remaining ½ tsp. salt, remaining ¼ tsp. pepper, and reserved chopped garlic in a medium bowl. Gently dollop half of cheese mixture over bottom of crust, then spread into an even layer with an offset spatula (don’t press too hard or you will break the crust). Layer half of tomato slices over and press down to even out layers. Repeat with remaining cheese mixture and tomatoes. Brush remaining garlic butter over tomatoes. Top with shallot, then scatter thyme leaves over.

    Step 5

    Bake pie until filling bubbles vigorously and crust is browned, 60–75 minutes. Let cool 1 hour before serving.

    Step 6

    Do Ahead: Pie can be made 1 day ahead. Cover loosely and chill (it’s really good cold).

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Reviews (44)

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  • I love this recipe as do friends that I have served it too. I did lighten the recipe up by reducing amount of cheese and Mayo.

    • Lillyz

    • Clayton ga

    • 6/15/2023

  • This was beautiful, and gross. Very enjoyable to make, but the crust was flat and bleh, and the flavors just didn't work. I think changing up the crackers on the crust and the herbs, maybe adding some ricotta or something,I don't know, but this was a hot mess, ended up throwing it away.

    • Sarah

    • Austin, CO

    • 11/14/2021

  • So good! I subbed in Simple Mills almond crackers and earth balance dairy free butter for the crust, basil instead of tarragon, and manchego for the cheese as I had it on hand. This was a great use of extra black krim tomatoes from the garden- I would definitely make this again.

    • Anonymous

    • St. Paul, MN

    • 9/29/2021

  • I have made this recipe twice now. It is time intensive. I’d recommend having a friend over and doing it together so it feels like you’re making an event out of it. But I really enjoyed it both times and am surprised by the negative comments. My mom loves tomatoes so I’ve made it two late summers in a row for her, using heirloom tomatoes when they’re perfectly in season. Maybe these additions will help? What I do: For the tomatoes - I saw someone had mentioned they felt they were too soggy, so I sprayed a baking/cooling rack with olive oil spray and put that on top of a baking sheet. Then layered the tomatoes on the rack, added salt and pepper, and drizzling with olive oil. That way any excess water could drain to the sheet. Some may stick, but if you layer them like the directions say, you’ll still have plenty whole slices. However, you’re never going to get completely air-dried, chip-like tomatoes if that’s what you think this recipe is. For the crust: I use nabisco whole wheat wheat thins. I have no idea if this is correct or not, but it adds a slight sweetness to the crust since they have a little sugar. I’ve also made the same mistake twice now where I accidentally skip over the part where you reserve 2 tbsp of garlic butter to brush on top, and end up pouring the whole mixture into my ground wheat thins. I know some people say their crust is brittle - I’ve never had that problem, possibly because of the extra butter? I’m not much of a baker so not sure. I have a double oven, so I put it in the other oven rather than try and get the temp from 475 down to 375, and then bake it for 8 mins. After that, I poke 2-3 little toothpick holes in the bottom of the crust in case the fat from all the cheese needs a little drainage, layer in the ingredients and brush a little butter on top. Then I place the springform pan on top of another baking sheet rather than directly on the rack and bake for the lower option of 60 mins. Again, as I’m not a baker, this might be all wrong, but it’s come out tasting good to me. Finally, I love the tip someone mentioned of freezing the talleggio a little so it’s easier to grate! Will try that next time.

    • ASW

    • Austin, TX

    • 8/22/2021

  • The crust was very crumbly, and it took about 3.5 hours to make. It did make enough food for many meals (which is good because all that Taleggio & tomatoes were expensive!) but in the end I'm not sure it was worth all the fussy ingredients and consecutive oven processes.

    • Paulina

    • 12/13/2020

  • I tried this recipe twice, and both times were a disaster: the first time I used heirloom tomatoes, and they were far too watery; the second time, I used one-the-vine tomatoes, which seemed more appropriate. Both times, the pie came out too dark, and didn't have a tremendous amount of flavor. Also, I was confused as to whether the pie was meant to bake at 375 as it never really says (although it is implied). In the end, it turned out to be an expensive disaster (twice), even though I followed the directions step-by-step (save switching the type of tomato the second time).

    • coakland

    • Austin, Texas

    • 9/9/2020

  • Deeeelicious. One big adaptation is that I used a nut crust instead. BA's ganache tart nut crust from last winter (no sugar) using almonds, add 1/4 C toasted sesame seeds, a few caraway crackers to help bind, and then the eggs and garlic butter from the tomato pie recipe. Turned out great and added good crunchy crunch. I love the tang from the mayo, the fresh thyme. People went back for thirds. This is an inspired recipe and looks beautiful. Thanks BA.

    • obglassy

    • san francisco

    • 9/7/2020