How to peel tomatoes easily? [duplicate]



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  • Peeling tomatoes

    6 answers



I went through several websites and found that the easiest way to peel tomato is to boil them . So, How long do we need to boil tomatoes so that you can easily peel them?










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marked as duplicate by moscafj, Cindy, Erica, rumtscho Nov 16 '18 at 14:00


This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.
























    5
















    This question already has an answer here:



    • Peeling tomatoes

      6 answers



    I went through several websites and found that the easiest way to peel tomato is to boil them . So, How long do we need to boil tomatoes so that you can easily peel them?










    share|improve this question













    marked as duplicate by moscafj, Cindy, Erica, rumtscho Nov 16 '18 at 14:00


    This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.




















      5












      5








      5


      1







      This question already has an answer here:



      • Peeling tomatoes

        6 answers



      I went through several websites and found that the easiest way to peel tomato is to boil them . So, How long do we need to boil tomatoes so that you can easily peel them?










      share|improve this question















      This question already has an answer here:



      • Peeling tomatoes

        6 answers



      I went through several websites and found that the easiest way to peel tomato is to boil them . So, How long do we need to boil tomatoes so that you can easily peel them?





      This question already has an answer here:



      • Peeling tomatoes

        6 answers







      tomatoes boiling peeling






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      share|improve this question











      share|improve this question




      share|improve this question










      asked Nov 16 '18 at 6:43









      RidaRida

      7872717




      7872717




      marked as duplicate by moscafj, Cindy, Erica, rumtscho Nov 16 '18 at 14:00


      This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.









      marked as duplicate by moscafj, Cindy, Erica, rumtscho Nov 16 '18 at 14:00


      This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.






















          2 Answers
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          You don't want to boil them, you want to blanch them. This means you bring the water to a boil, cut a shallow cross into each tomato (scoring the peel), add the tomatoes (few enough compared to the amount of water that the water doesn't stop boiling) and let them boil for ~1 minute. Remove the tomatoes and dump them straight into ice water. Once cooled the peel should come right off.






          share|improve this answer


















          • 3





            The peel tends to hang on to the stem, and often, when peeling tomatoes, you're heading for tomatoes concasse. In this case, I use an apple-corer or pointed knife to isolate the hull ( not all the way through) before blanching, leaving the plug in place. It can save a lot of time.

            – Robin Betts
            Nov 16 '18 at 9:33



















          6














          Another method if you use a gas stove is to roast it over the cooking flame gently. To do this you can stick a knife into the tomato (preferrably in the stem part) and hold it over the flame while rotating it. Some of the peel will burn away and the rest will shrivel up which can be removed using bare hands quite easily.



          This isn't a mass peeling method like boiling/blanching but I find it preserves the flavour better.






          share|improve this answer





























            2 Answers
            2






            active

            oldest

            votes








            2 Answers
            2






            active

            oldest

            votes









            active

            oldest

            votes






            active

            oldest

            votes









            17














            You don't want to boil them, you want to blanch them. This means you bring the water to a boil, cut a shallow cross into each tomato (scoring the peel), add the tomatoes (few enough compared to the amount of water that the water doesn't stop boiling) and let them boil for ~1 minute. Remove the tomatoes and dump them straight into ice water. Once cooled the peel should come right off.






            share|improve this answer


















            • 3





              The peel tends to hang on to the stem, and often, when peeling tomatoes, you're heading for tomatoes concasse. In this case, I use an apple-corer or pointed knife to isolate the hull ( not all the way through) before blanching, leaving the plug in place. It can save a lot of time.

              – Robin Betts
              Nov 16 '18 at 9:33
















            17














            You don't want to boil them, you want to blanch them. This means you bring the water to a boil, cut a shallow cross into each tomato (scoring the peel), add the tomatoes (few enough compared to the amount of water that the water doesn't stop boiling) and let them boil for ~1 minute. Remove the tomatoes and dump them straight into ice water. Once cooled the peel should come right off.






            share|improve this answer


















            • 3





              The peel tends to hang on to the stem, and often, when peeling tomatoes, you're heading for tomatoes concasse. In this case, I use an apple-corer or pointed knife to isolate the hull ( not all the way through) before blanching, leaving the plug in place. It can save a lot of time.

              – Robin Betts
              Nov 16 '18 at 9:33














            17












            17








            17







            You don't want to boil them, you want to blanch them. This means you bring the water to a boil, cut a shallow cross into each tomato (scoring the peel), add the tomatoes (few enough compared to the amount of water that the water doesn't stop boiling) and let them boil for ~1 minute. Remove the tomatoes and dump them straight into ice water. Once cooled the peel should come right off.






            share|improve this answer













            You don't want to boil them, you want to blanch them. This means you bring the water to a boil, cut a shallow cross into each tomato (scoring the peel), add the tomatoes (few enough compared to the amount of water that the water doesn't stop boiling) and let them boil for ~1 minute. Remove the tomatoes and dump them straight into ice water. Once cooled the peel should come right off.







            share|improve this answer












            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer










            answered Nov 16 '18 at 7:03









            JohannaJohanna

            2,856918




            2,856918







            • 3





              The peel tends to hang on to the stem, and often, when peeling tomatoes, you're heading for tomatoes concasse. In this case, I use an apple-corer or pointed knife to isolate the hull ( not all the way through) before blanching, leaving the plug in place. It can save a lot of time.

              – Robin Betts
              Nov 16 '18 at 9:33













            • 3





              The peel tends to hang on to the stem, and often, when peeling tomatoes, you're heading for tomatoes concasse. In this case, I use an apple-corer or pointed knife to isolate the hull ( not all the way through) before blanching, leaving the plug in place. It can save a lot of time.

              – Robin Betts
              Nov 16 '18 at 9:33








            3




            3





            The peel tends to hang on to the stem, and often, when peeling tomatoes, you're heading for tomatoes concasse. In this case, I use an apple-corer or pointed knife to isolate the hull ( not all the way through) before blanching, leaving the plug in place. It can save a lot of time.

            – Robin Betts
            Nov 16 '18 at 9:33






            The peel tends to hang on to the stem, and often, when peeling tomatoes, you're heading for tomatoes concasse. In this case, I use an apple-corer or pointed knife to isolate the hull ( not all the way through) before blanching, leaving the plug in place. It can save a lot of time.

            – Robin Betts
            Nov 16 '18 at 9:33














            6














            Another method if you use a gas stove is to roast it over the cooking flame gently. To do this you can stick a knife into the tomato (preferrably in the stem part) and hold it over the flame while rotating it. Some of the peel will burn away and the rest will shrivel up which can be removed using bare hands quite easily.



            This isn't a mass peeling method like boiling/blanching but I find it preserves the flavour better.






            share|improve this answer



























              6














              Another method if you use a gas stove is to roast it over the cooking flame gently. To do this you can stick a knife into the tomato (preferrably in the stem part) and hold it over the flame while rotating it. Some of the peel will burn away and the rest will shrivel up which can be removed using bare hands quite easily.



              This isn't a mass peeling method like boiling/blanching but I find it preserves the flavour better.






              share|improve this answer

























                6












                6








                6







                Another method if you use a gas stove is to roast it over the cooking flame gently. To do this you can stick a knife into the tomato (preferrably in the stem part) and hold it over the flame while rotating it. Some of the peel will burn away and the rest will shrivel up which can be removed using bare hands quite easily.



                This isn't a mass peeling method like boiling/blanching but I find it preserves the flavour better.






                share|improve this answer













                Another method if you use a gas stove is to roast it over the cooking flame gently. To do this you can stick a knife into the tomato (preferrably in the stem part) and hold it over the flame while rotating it. Some of the peel will burn away and the rest will shrivel up which can be removed using bare hands quite easily.



                This isn't a mass peeling method like boiling/blanching but I find it preserves the flavour better.







                share|improve this answer












                share|improve this answer



                share|improve this answer










                answered Nov 16 '18 at 11:02









                RedBaronRedBaron

                1613




                1613













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