Tomat Hijau Goreng
Fried green tomatoes are a Southern classic: thick slices of tart, unripe tomato wrapped in a seasoned buttermilk wash and a crunchy cornmeal crust, then shallow-fried until deep golden. The contrast is the whole point, a shatteringly crisp shell giving way to a juicy, still-firm, pleasantly sour interior. Salting the slices first and using a real cornmeal-and-panko coat is what keeps them crisp instead of soggy.
Slice 4 firm green tomatoes about 1 cm (1/4 inch) thick, salt them, and let them drain on a rack for 10 minutes while you set up three bowls: seasoned flour, a buttermilk-egg wash, and a cornmeal-panko crust spiked with garlic, paprika, and pepper. Pat each slice dry, coat in the flour, dip in the wash, then press firmly into the cornmeal so it sticks. Shallow-fry in 1 cm of 175C (350F) oil, a few at a time, 2 to 3 minutes per side until deep golden, then drain on a wire rack and finish with flaky salt. Serve hot with remoulade or comeback sauce.
- Salt the slices and pat them bone-dry; surface moisture is the number-one cause of a soggy, sliding crust.
- Hold the oil at 175C/350F; below that they turn greasy, above it the cornmeal scorches before the inside warms.
- Fry in small batches and rest them on a wire rack, never a plate or paper towels, so steam escapes and both sides stay crisp.
Equipment
- Cast-iron skillet or heavy frying pan
- Three shallow bowls for dredging
- Kitchen tongs or a slotted spatula
- Wire rack set over a baking sheet
- Instant-read or clip-on oil thermometer
- Paper towels
Bahan
Tomatoes
- firm green tomatoes, unripe and hard, about 680 g / 1 1/2 lb total
- 5 g kosher salt, for drawing out moisture
Coating
- 95 g all-purpose flour, seasoned, first coat
- large eggs
- 120 ml buttermilk, or thinned plain kefir
- 5 ml hot sauce, optional, adds tang
- 140 g fine yellow cornmeal, not corn flour or masa
- 55 g panko breadcrumbs, for extra crunch
- 2 g garlic powder
- 2 g smoked paprika
- 1 g cayenne pepper, optional heat
- 3 g fine sea salt, for the cornmeal mix
- 2 g black pepper, freshly ground
For frying & serving
- 360 ml vegetable oil, peanut or canola, for shallow frying
- flaky sea salt, for finishing
Cara membuat
- LANGKAH01
Core the tomatoes and cut them into even 1 cm (1/4 inch) slices, discarding the thin end pieces. Lay them on a wire rack, sprinkle both sides with the kosher salt, and let them sit 10 minutes to pull out surface moisture and season them through.
- LANGKAH02
Line up three shallow bowls. In the first, put the seasoned all-purpose flour. In the second, whisk the eggs, buttermilk, and hot sauce until smooth. In the third, stir together the cornmeal, panko, garlic powder, smoked paprika, cayenne, fine sea salt, and black pepper.
- LANGKAH03
Blot each tomato slice firmly with paper towels; they must be dry for the coating to grip. Coat a slice in flour and shake off the excess, dip it fully in the buttermilk wash, then press it into the cornmeal mix on both sides so it sticks in an even, thick layer. Set coated slices on a clean plate.
- LANGKAH04
Pour about 1 cm (roughly 1/2 inch) of oil into a cast-iron skillet and heat over medium until it reads 175C (350F) on a thermometer. If you don't have one, a pinch of cornmeal should sizzle briskly on contact.
- LANGKAH05
Lay 3 or 4 slices into the oil without crowding. Fry 2 to 3 minutes per side, turning once with tongs, until deep golden brown and crisp. Adjust the heat between batches to keep the oil steady at 175C (350F) and skim any loose crumbs.
- LANGKAH06
Transfer the fried tomatoes to a clean wire rack (not paper towels, which trap steam) and immediately shower with flaky salt. Serve hot with your dipping sauce while the crust is at its crispest.
Make ahead
You can slice and salt the tomatoes and stir together the dry cornmeal coating up to a day ahead, storing the drained slices layered between paper towels in the fridge. Dredge only just before frying; coated raw slices left to sit will weep and go gummy. The finished tomatoes don't hold well, so fry them a la minute.
Storage
Fried green tomatoes are best eaten within a few minutes of frying. Refrigerate leftovers in an airtight container for up to 2 days; reheat in a 200C (400F) oven or air fryer for 5 to 7 minutes to bring back the crunch. Skip the microwave, which turns the crust soft and rubbery.
Variations
Gluten-free
Swap the all-purpose flour for rice flour and use certified gluten-free cornmeal plus crushed gluten-free cornflakes in place of the panko. The crust fries up just as crisp and sandy.
Air-fryer
Coat as directed, spray both sides generously with oil, and air-fry at 200C (400F) for 8 to 10 minutes, flipping halfway, until golden. Lighter, with a slightly drier crust.
Extra-spicy Cajun
Add another 1/2 tsp cayenne and 1 tsp Cajun seasoning to the cornmeal, and stir a tablespoon of hot sauce into the buttermilk wash for a peppery, tangy kick.
Serve with
Nutrition per serving
Nutrition values are estimates based on the metric measurements. Adjust as needed.
Pertanyaan umum
What kind of tomatoes make the best fried green tomatoes?
Use true green tomatoes, meaning unripe, firm, and tart ones, not just under-ripe red varieties. They should feel hard when squeezed and slice cleanly without collapsing. That firmness is what lets fried green tomatoes hold their shape and stay juicy inside while the crust crisps.
Why do my fried green tomatoes turn out soggy?
Usually one of three things: the slices weren't salted and patted dry, the oil ran too cool, or they were drained on a plate where trapped steam softened the bottom. Salt and thoroughly dry the tomatoes, keep the oil at 175C/350F, and rest them on a wire rack.
Cornmeal or flour, which gives the best crust?
A combination. Seasoned flour helps the wash grip the tomato, while cornmeal with a little panko delivers the signature gritty, sandy crunch. All-flour coatings tend to fry up pale and go soft quickly.
Can I make fried green tomatoes without buttermilk?
Yes. Thin plain yogurt or kefir with a splash of milk, or stir 1 tablespoon lemon juice into 1/2 cup regular milk and let it sit 5 minutes to clabber. The mild acidity helps the coating cling and adds a little tang.
What sauce goes with fried green tomatoes?
Remoulade and Southern comeback sauce are the classics, but ranch, garlic aioli, or a quick sriracha-mayo all work well. A squeeze of lemon and a pinch of flaky salt is enough if you want the tomato itself to shine.
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