It was the middle of a heatwave, and on top of that, my hand was stuck in a splint. Cooking anything remotely complicated was out of the question, but I still wanted something good.
Pan con tomate was the obvious answer. The simpler the recipe, the better it usually turns out – and this one barely counts as cooking at all.
Normally I grate the tomato by hand, but with one hand out of commission that wasn’t happening, so everything went straight into the blender instead – garlic, basil, olive oil, salt, tomato, all at once. The result was ridiculously good: deep, savoury, almost meaty umami, with barely any effort.
Lazy Pan con Tomate – About the dish
Pan con tomate, or pa amb tomàquet in Catalan, is one of Spain’s most beloved simple pleasures: toasted bread rubbed or topped with ripe tomato, good olive oil, and a bit of salt. It’s a breakfast staple, a tapas classic, and the base of countless bocadillos across the country.
The traditional method calls for rubbing bread with a halved tomato and a garlic clove, then finishing with oil and salt. This version cheats a little by blending everything together instead, including a handful of basil, which isn’t traditional but adds a fresh, herby lift that works surprisingly well.
Lazy Pan con Tomate – Recipe
Ingredients – Advice & key points
- Tomatoes: Use the ripest, most flavourful tomatoes you can find – they’re really the whole dish here. Room temperature tomatoes taste sweeter and more fragrant than cold ones.
- Olive oil: Go for a good quality extra virgin olive oil. It gets blended right into the mix, so its flavour really shows.
- Garlic: One raw clove is enough to season the whole batch once blended. Use less if you’re sensitive to raw garlic, or add a second clove if you love a stronger punch.
- Basil: Not traditional, but a nice twist – it adds a fresh, slightly peppery note. Feel free to leave it out for a purist version.
- Salt: Add it in pinches and taste as you go – tomatoes vary a lot in natural sweetness and acidity.
- Bread: Any type would do, but ideally go for a sturdy country loaf or sourdough. It needs to hold up to a juicy topping without turning to mush.
Recipe – Advice & key points
- Blend instead of grate: Traditionally the tomato is grated by hand, but blending everything together works just as well and is much faster – especially handy one-handed.
- Toast your bread properly: A light toast won’t cut it – go for a deep, sturdy golden-brown so the bread doesn’t turn soggy once topped.
- Assemble just before eating: The tomato mixture is juicy, so top your toast right before serving rather than letting it sit.
- Taste before serving: Adjust salt and oil at the end – a good pinch of salt really brings out the tomato’s natural sweetness.
- Keep it simple: This is not a recipe to overthink. The less you fuss over it, the better it turns out.
Even with one hand out of action, this came together in about five minutes flat, proof that some of the best things really are the simplest.
Enjoy !
Lazy Pan con Tomate
Description
A one-hand-friendly, blender shortcut to the Spanish classic: ripe tomatoes, olive oil, garlic, and basil blitzed together and piled onto well-toasted bread. Ready in about 10 minutes.
Ingredients
Instructions
Blend the topping
Add the tomatoes, olive oil, garlic, basil leaves, and salt to a blender. Blend until smooth.
Toast the bread
Toast the bread slices until deeply golden and crisp, so they hold up to the juicy topping.
Assemble and serve
Spoon the tomato mixture generously over the toasted bread and serve immediately.
