Two things peak like clockwork every August on our Wisconsin farm: Both the tomato harvest and the flow of guests at our B&B, Inn Serendipity, hit their peak. A time of rich abundance sprinkled with managed chaos, everything dances wildly amidst summer seasonal flow.

Which means I’ll gladly embrace any way I can simplify life right now, particularly when it comes to serving that morning meal daily to our B&B guests. Here’s a serving of our favorite tips and ideas for hosting a summer breakfast of your own, showcasing the abundant local, fresh flavors of the season and featuring our house recipe favorite: Fresh Tomato Breakfast Pie.

1. Prep the Night Before

This Fresh Tomato Breakfast Pie recipe serves up a great example of my ideal B&B recipe: Looks and tastes much more complex than it is. My morning B&B routine is a whole lot simpler if I can prep and organize my dishes the night before and just cook them fresh before serving. This recipe works well for that: Make and bake the crusts the night before. Chop and prep the tomatoes and other ingredients, then just assemble the pie in the morning and bake.

2. Feature Half (Or More) Fresh Ingredients

During this time of the season, at least half the ingredients in any of my B&B recipes feature fresh garden produce. Save the cooked tomato sauce and dried basil for winter months; this is the time to eat fresh. The bulk of the ingredients in this Fresh Tomato Breakfast Pie suffice that need with two cups of fresh tomatoes. I primarily use Roma tomatoes as these tend to be firmer with less liquid, but any tomato will work.

By chopping the tomatoes the night before and letting them sit in the refrigerator overnight, some of the liquid will drain out. Pour out this liquid before setting the tomatoes in the crust.

3. Showcase Other Local Fare

What other ingredients from your area compliment the garden fresh flavors in your menu? For our Wisconsin B&B, that compliment naturally is cheese. While this recipe is written for Swiss and cheddar cheese, you can readily experiment with other flavorful melting cheeses made in your area.

4. Invite Good Karma

Remember the key ingredient around the table isn’t actually the food; it’s the company you share it with. Running a B&B, I admit I am perpetually spoiled when it comes to good company karma, as B&B guests bring a relaxed, vacation-mode happy spirit with them. As a green B&B, our guests tend to be savvy on and engaged in sustainability issues, so discussion is typically engaging and provocative, adding a healthy jolt to the experience aside from the coffee. Who are people you can invite around your table who will add positive, inspiring energy to your meal?

5. Provide Guests Take-Home Booty

With tomatoes in abundance for those of us with gardens, this is the season for sharing. Send home a sample pack along with this recipe with your guests and share the seasonal breakfast experience all over again.

Fresh Tomato Breakfast Pie

Ingredients:

¾ c. flour

½ c. cornmeal

½ t. salt

1/3 c. butter

6 – 7 T. cold water

Filling:

2 1/2 c. chopped tomatoes

1 t. salt

2 T. fresh basil

½ c. chopped chives

½ c. cheddar cheese, shredded

½ c. Swiss cheese, shredded

2 T. flour

1 c. evaporated milk

2 eggs

Directions:

*   Combine the first four ingredients in a large bowl.

*  Cut in butter until crumbly. Add water, stirring lightly until dough forms a ball. Refrigerate for 30 minutes.

*  Roll out dough on a floured surface and Transfer to a 9-inch, greased pie pan. Flute edges. Bake at 375 for 10 minutes. Cool completely.

*  Place tomatoes in the crust.  Sprinkle with salt, basil, chives and cheeses.

*  Whisk flour, milk, and eggs until smooth. Pour over filling.

*  Bake at 375 for 40-45 minutes or until a knife inserted near the center comes out clean.

*   Let stand for 10 minutes before cutting.  Serve warm or at room temperature.

Photo Credit:  Lisa Kivirist

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About The Author

Lisa Kivirist

Lisa Kivirist embodies the growing “ecopreneuring” movement: innovative entrepreneurs who successfully blend business with making the world a better place. Lisa is co-author, with her husband, John Ivanko, of Rural Renaissance: Renewing the Quest for the Good Life, capturing the American dream of farm living for contemporary times. Her latest release, ECOpreneuring: Putting Purpose and the Planet Before Profits is a compact, dynamic tool kit for a fresh approach to entrepreneurial thinking, blending passion for protecting and preserving the planet with small business pragmatics. As a W.K. Kellogg Food & Society Policy Fellow and Director of the Rural Women's Project, Lisa champions a voice for women farmers and rural ecopreneurs through media, speaking and advocacy work. Lisa runs the award-winning Inn Serendipity Bed and Breakfast in southwest Wisconsin, completely powered by renewable energy and considered amongst the “Top Ten Eco-Destinations in North America.” Her culinary focus on local and seasonal cuisine – with most ingredients traveling less than 100 feet from her organic gardens to B&B plates – earned recognition in publications from Vegetarian Times to Country Woman and inspired her cookbook, Edible Earth: Savoring the Good Life with Vegetarian Recipes from Inn Serendipity. In addition to feature writing for publications such as Hobby Farm Home, Mother Earth News and Wisconsin Trails, Lisa is the lead writer for Renewing the Countryside, a non-profit organization showcasing rural entrepreneurial and agricultural success stories. Lisa also penned Kiss Off Corporate America: A Young Professional’s Guide to Independence. Lisa shares her farm with her husband, their young son, a 10kw wind turbine and a colony of honeybees.

One Response to Five Tips to Host a Local Food Summer Breakfast (Tomato Pie Recipe Included)

  1. kira says:

    The tomato pie came out perfectly! Very yummy, thank you.

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