These stuffed tomatoes are the brainchild of two recent dining experiences. While in Boulder, my friend Kirsten and I enjoyed tapas and happy hour at The Med (if you’re ever in Boulder, I insist that you do the same!). We ordered a smorgasbord of appetizers and went gaga over one in particular, which was just a ramekin of baked tomatoes, feta, artichoke and kalamata olives. That spread will become a post of its own soon enough, but the combination of ingredients inspired this pretty dish.
A few weeks later, I experienced my first stuffed tomato at my mom’s birthday dinner. After placing my order, my dad mentioned that my grandmother Mimi used to make stuffed tomatoes, which piqued my interest. I cut into the pesto and cheese stuffed tomato and oil exploded onto my plate—not the most appetizing effect. It was good, but I knew it could be better.
When it came to making my own stuffed tomatoes, I decided to use The Med’s tapas ingredients, but turned the tomato into the container. I added quinoa to make it a bit more substantial, went easy on the olive oil, and used feta, which is lower in fat than most cheeses, so it wouldn’t ooze grease. I ate two stuffed tomatoes for dinner but found myself hungry a few hours later, so I think these would be best as a side, or at least accompanied by a hearty green salad. These charming little sides would be great for an upcoming get together!
Mediterranean Stuffed Tomatoes with Quinoa
- Author:
- Prep Time: 15 minutes
- Cook Time: 15 minutes
- Total Time: 30 minutes
- Yield: 4 1x
- Category: Side dish
Mediterranean-inspired baked tomatoes, filled with quinoa, feta, artichokes and kalamata olives, make a beautiful, healthy side dish.
Ingredients
- 1 cup cooked red or black quinoa
- 8 medium on-the-vine tomatoes
- ⅓ can quartered artichokes (about 4 ounces, or ½ cup), roughly chopped
- ½ cup full fat feta, plus a few tablespoons extra for topping
- 15 kalamata olives, sliced thin (I prefer the Mediterranean Organic brand)
- 1 tablespoon olive oil
- 2 cloves fresh garlic (minced or use a garlic press)
- ground sea salt, to taste
Instructions
- Cook your quinoa: Measure out ⅓ cup of quinoa, pour into a mesh colandar, and rinse the quinoa under running water for a minute. Pour the rinsed quinoa into a small pot and add ⅔ cup water (you’re going for a 1:2 ratio of quinoa and water). Bring to a boil, then cover and simmer for 15 to 18 minutes. Remove from heat, let sit for a few minutes, and fluff with a fork. ⅓ cup uncooked quinoa should yield a little over one cup cooked quinoa. I would use all of it in the filling.
- Preheat oven to 375 degrees Fahrenheit
- Core the tomatoes by slicing off the top ⅛ inch of each tomato. Run a small knife vertically around the core. Be careful not to cut through the bottom. Use your finger to gently pull out the core and use the knife to clean out any excess left inside.
- In a medium bowl, mix together the filling (cooked quinoa, feta, artichokes, olives, olive oil and garlic).
- Taste and add salt if necessary (feta and olives are salty to begin with, so you may not need any).
- Spray your dish with cooking oil and brush the tops of the cored tomatoes with olive oil.
- Use a spoon to stuff the tomatoes with the quinoa mixture.
- Top each tomato with extra feta.
- Bake for 15-20 minutes, until the feta starts to turn golden.
- Garnish each tomato with a small basil leaf.
Notes
Created with guidance from a stuffed tomato recipe in The America’s Test Kitchen Healthy Family Cookbook.
▸ Nutrition Information
Grishma
love it!! It looksss sooo delicious and too cute to be eaten :) I am a vegetarian so I am definitely going to try this one. Thanks for the recipe.
la domestique
Your baked tomatoes look so good and I can’t wait to see the full spread you had from The Med (I live in Boulder). I love the combo of artichokes, olives, and feta. Yum.
chinmayie
I shared your blog with somebody and this is what she had to say!
wow….wat a beautiful blog….how can anyone make an everyday tomato look that good?…thank u so much for sharing ur inspiration, i’m gonna peek there for recipes n beautiful snaps….:)’
:)
kate
Thanks, Chinmayie. Your friend’s words totally brightened my day!
Katrina
Cool idea! This looks like such a healthy treat. Yum!
Follow Your Own Way
this looks like little bites of heaven.
Baker Street
Refreshing! Gorgeous clicks Kathryne!
Shelley
do you think I could make this with out feta? I am GF/DF for health reasons but this looks so good!
kate
I bet you could! I would maybe add some diced tomatoes to the quinoa mix to make up for any lost moisture from the feta. A light drizzle of balsamic vinegar would add some extra flavor, too.
Shelley
thanks! I was thinking about using diced tofu with some balsamic vinegar instead since it kind of holds the same shape
kate
That sounds like a great idea! I just remembered this recipe, which is vegan and calls for soft tofu: http://whiteonricecouple.com/recipes/baked-stuffed-tomatoes/. That might give you some ideas, too!
Shelley
thank you for this link!
Whocutthecheese?
Thank you for sharing this! It looks really tasty, and I can’t wait to try it out.
My Fudo
Fabulous! Stuffed tomatoes look so good. I bet the quinoa will give a fine twist on its taste as well.
Kirsten
Thank you! I can’t wait to make some. Thanks for the tips!
Kirsten
I meant that last comment for the pesto…
These look amazing. I really can’t wait to try them. We were at the med last week and definitely got the same little baked feta dish. so good! can’t wait to see the post on your take of that one, too. :)
Carolina HeartString
Thanks for forwarding me the link on facebook. Feta & artichoke are two of my faves. Can’t wait to try. AND great pix!
C&T
This looks delicious! Yum!
Sonia
Hi Kate!
I saw that you replaced the feta for tofu. I am not the biggest fan of artichokes, do you have any other ideas of what I can replace the artichokes with? I know tofu may be an option, but any other ideas?
Thanks!!
Claudia
What a great idea, will try, but without the artichokes!
Erin M
Wow! I just stumbled across your blog from a post on Pinterest. Now I am hooked. Your photos and recipes are great. I’m not a fan of stuffing veggies, but this one looks so good. Artichokes and olives?! Yummy! (All your other recipes are looking mighty good too)
kate
Thanks Erin! I’m happy you found my blog, hope you’ll visit again soon!
Betsy
Cute! I love bite sized anything, and your photos are amazing! We’d love it if you would link up your recipe at seasonalpotluck.com March is artichoke month! http://bit.ly/zRfNjo
Mark Koch
Hi Kate
Looks delicious!
What would you think or do differently if a bulgur was used instead of the quinoa .? I’m not a big fan of quinoa.
Working from home today, going to try this for lunch. Since discovering your blog, have made the Kale and Sweet potato soup, and your sweet potato a fries which are a huge hit. what other recipes are favs of newbies?
kate
Hey Mark! I’m so glad you’ve enjoyed my recipes so far. I think that cooked bulgur would be a fine substitute. Brown rice or couscous might be good as well. I can’t say I’ve tried them, but I don’t think they would require much of an adjustment. I also have a recipe for stuffed globe zucchinis that calls for wheat berries and pesto, which you could use to stuff the tomatoes instead, if you’d like.
If you’d like another hearty sweet potato dish, I highly recommend the sweet potato chili. I also enjoy the sweet potato enchiladas. If you like the bake, my banana bread is a personal favorite and gets rave reviews. The asparagus frittata is gorgeous, easy to make and delicious. The lemony collard green pasta and stir-fried millet are recent favorites, and I really love the watercress salad. Well, really, I love them all!
Mark K.
Kate – thanks for the suggestions, had actually eye spied the Sweet Potato Chili and made it yesterday – also delicious – interesting touch with the cocoa powder. These tomatoes were outrageous, possibly the tastiest thing I have ever cooked. My son and I downed three each at lunch and it took supreme will power to save two for my wife who enjoyed them at dinner. Just planted six tomato plants in my garden, and can see this recipe will be a fantastic way to deal with an overabundance in August. I voted for you over at Saveur – thanks again for your blog.
kate
Hey Mark, thanks again for your comments and feedback (and your vote!). Did you end up using quinoa or something else in these?
Ann
Any suggestions for a light side that would compliment this?
Mark K.
Kate – I ended up using the Bulgur and they turned out great, but will try with the Quinoa as I understand that’s a complete protein. For the past month, your recipes have helped me cut back from having chicken or beef with every lunch and dinner to just a few times a week – so am still a little brainwashed about not getting enough protein. Howver, I feel great eating more plant based meals, and at age 53 am thrilled to have lost 10lbs without feeling hungry, thanks in large part to your beautifully illustrated recipes.
Do you have a good recipe for Greek restaurant style hummus on warm pita bread?
kate
Your comment just made my day, Mark! If you’d like to read a little more about protein in plant-based diets, here’s a link to one article in a series on Grist: http://grist.org/food/never-mind-the-meat-worry-about-eating-plants/.
No, unfortunately, I do not have a recipe for warm pita bread, but I do have a recipe for garlic roasted hummus: https://cookieandkate.com/2012/roasted-garlic-and-white-bean-hummus-recipe/. If you want it to taste like traditional hummus, I’d replace the roasted garlic with just a couple of cloves of raw garlic and use cooked chickpeas instead of white beans. Top it with a sprinkle of paprika instead of rosemary and that should do it! Here is Smitten Kitchen’s recipe for pita bread, which looks like a great one: http://smittenkitchen.com/2009/03/pita-bread/. My friend Erin replaced the white flour with whole wheat pastry flour and her pitas look delicious! http://naturallyella.com/2012/03/09/whole-wheat-pita/. Hope these recipes answer your question, and thanks again for commenting.
gwen
Loved this recipe! Thank you. I’m just starting to experiment with quinoa. This was awesome with Summer fresh tomatoes. I actually made them yesterday, but didn’t have time to cook them. I refrigerated them and cooked today and I can say they were great. Nice to know it can be made-ahead.
Kate
Glad you enjoyed the stuffed tomatoes, Gwen!
Amy
Thank you ever so much for sharing this recipe. I made it tonight, and it was delicious.
Kate
Happy to hear that you enjoyed the stuffed tomatoes, Amy!
pat
so yummy! i skipped the artichokes (didn’t have any) and threw in some capers instead… served with a kale salad. i’ve made ~10 things from your blog and they’ve all been fantastic! even my husband who claims everything ‘tastes better with meat’ admitted he’s throughly enjoyed all the dishes! THANK YOU!!
Kate
Yes! I’m so happy to hear that you’re both loving the recipes, Pat. Thanks for commenting! Capers sound like a great idea here.
Rachel
Great recipe! I used heirloom tomatoes which were on sale which worked really well. And the leftover quinoa stuffing for lunch was a amazing!
★★★★★
Kate
Thank you, Rachel!
Jen
Shared a link to this recipe in a CSA newsletter. People LOVED it!
Kate
Yay, glad to hear that! Thanks, Jen!
Julie
One of the best dishes I’ve ever eaten. This is a wonderful recipe and my family loved it. It will now be a common dish at our house!
★★★★★
Dee
I’m a little intimidated about cooking the quinoa, so I am going to make sure I have lots of free time. My daughter hooked me on a salad she made cooked with the red quinoa which I ate as snacks. I also included avocado, salsa, and habanero cheese. I was so surprised how much my appetite was satisfied. I ate the salad on a thin, multi-wheat cracker.
★★★★★
Kate
Check out my how to make quinoa post! It should help. Here’s the link https://cookieandkate.com/2016/perfect-quinoa/.
Roxana Cooley
I’m going to try your delicious Mediterranean stuffed tomatoe recipe. What will you recommend to serve with the tomato? Just by itself?
Thank you!
Roxana Cooley
Kate
Hi! I like this as is, but you could add a simple salad to go along with it.