Heirloom Tomato Salad : Seasonally Simple
Heirloom tomato salads are the best way to enjoy Summers bounty. Now that our tomatoes are starting to ripen, it’s time to indulge in our first and always most simple salad. This no fuss, totally uncomplicated salad is literally just a few ingredients. You don’t need much more than that but you can always amp-up the salad with more. This is just a reminder of our amazing seasonal heirloom tomatoes are just on their own.

Heirloom Tomato Salad : Hello Summer!
This consistently cool and cloudy weather had us apprehensive, particularly as heirloom tomato gardeners. With almost 20 heirloom tomatoes plants that we’ve been nurturing over the last few months, all we were hoping for was some hot sun to get these plants to bolt out with tomatoes. Unfortunately there hasn’t been much of the sun! May and June gloom kept our tomatoes from ripening as intended and as impatient gardeners, the weather left us staring at green tomatoes for the last few months.
Watch the Video of us Making our Heirloom Tomato Salad


Heirloom Tomato Salad Recipe
Ingredients
- 2 medium to large fresh heirloom tomatoes or 2 cups of cherry size tomatoes
- 2 Tablespoons (30 ml) olive oil
- 1 Tablespoons (15 ml) balsamic vinegar
- 1/4 teaspoon (1.25 ml) flakey salt , or to taste
- (ml) fresh cracked black pepper , to taste
- 1/2 cup (120 ml) fresh basil or fresh herbs, chopped or hand torn
- crumbled goat cheese, feta or grated parmesan , optional
- chili flakes, hot sauce, sliced chiles , optional
- sliced red onion, lettuce, arugula , optional
Instructions
- In bowl or jar, combine 2 Tablespoons (30ml) olive oil, 1 Tablespoon (15ml) balsamic vinegar, 1/4 teaspoon (1.25ml) salt, black pepper to taste, plus any optional seasonings like garlic, chili flakes, hot sauce. Set aside.

- Slice tomatoes about 1/4 to 1/3 " thick. You want them nice and meaty to cut into.

- Arrange the tomatoes on a serving platter.

- Add your extra toppings if you want to add your personal douch. Drizzle dressing on right before serving.

- Slice or tear fresh basil leaves on top. Enjoy!

Video
Nutrition Information per Serving

Patiently waiting for tomatoes to ripen
We could either pickle the green tomatoes or grill green tomatoes like we often do, or just wait patiently and be as tolerant as we could to allow them to ripen. Trust us, it can get excruciatingly painful to stare at green tomatoes for months when you’re craving sweet red ones.
When patches of late afternoon sun would peak out, the tomatoes were soaking up every bit of nurturing warmth. Finally, after, what seems like a decade, some of the heirloom tomatoes started to ripen to their true, sweet colors. Occasionally one or two would ripen up and we’d eat those in one sitting.
But what we were anxiously waiting for was an actual harvest full of tomatoes, meaning at least 10 tomatoes. Five for each of us. That’s a fair split and substantial meal.
With this first substantial batch of ripe heirloom tomatoes, there was only one way to enjoy them. A simple, seasonally appropriate preparation of sliced garden heirloom tomatoes with a drizzle of olive oil and balsamic vinegar is perfection on a plate. Add a dusting of good sea salt, fresh cracked black pepper and aromatically sweet fresh basil. Now finally, that is perfection on a plate.

Simple Heirloom Tomato Salad Recipe : Less is More
Sometimes heirloom tomatoes get too much thought when it comes to preparation. Canning, stewing or drying a batch of gorgeous heirloom tomatoes is great if you have an abundance of them. But for us, to really appreciate the delicacy and treasure of an heirloom tomato is to eat it as it was meant to be: raw and fresh. Just the heirloom tomato sliced on a place with simple accompaniments is all it takes to eat seasonally simple and to celebrate the arrival of Summer. Less is more, especially when it comes to a good heirloom. And we love buying most of our tomato plants from tomatomania.
For Tomato Lovers:
- What are your favorite or best tomato recipes?
- breakfast of baked tomatoes and scrambled eggs
- savory tomato crisp
- heirloom tomato galette
- We originally shared this in 2011 and it’s still our go-to salad for breakfast, lunch and dinner.














Here in Georgia we’ve been enjoying a long stretch of 95+ degree days so our tomatoes are coming in rapidly. I’ve been enjoying the Sun Gold cherry tomatoes and Cherokee Purples for about six weeks now and we still have several late varieties that haven’t started ripening.
Love your wonderfully simple salad. Down South we also love our tomato sandwiches 🙂
Such beautiful images! Thank you for such a wonderful and inspiring post.
Lucky you – my San Diego garden is stalled and way behind schedule.
This is way better than a brick & mortar estbalhimsent.
My favorite way to eat tomatoes in the Summer when they are at their peak! Lovely photos.
Great tomato pictures! And the simple tomato salad recipe at the end is a timeless one!
Nothing better! My garden is at least a month away from ripe tomatoes, but I’m getting a lot of green ones.
Plates of sliced tomatoes are the promise of summer. Warm from the sun, salt shaker in one hand, a tomato in the other, juice dripping off the elbow and chin, that is summer.
Simple recipe, yes, but I’m drooling already. I can almost feel the plump tomato popping in my mouth, with the juice running down my chin.
Your pictures are mesmerizing – crack for foodies!
Stunning! I absolutely love growing and eating heirlooms – unfortunately my crop succumbed to tomato wilt this year so I got very few fruit, but after reading this post I can’t wait till next spring so I can give it another go 🙂
Beautiful photos & produce- thanks for sharing!
I’m looking forward to planting tomatoes this summer here in Australia- got a few packets of heirloom seed in the fridge waiting for spring!
Beautiful!! I can’t wait for some gorgeous heirloom tomatoes 🙂 I have to find out where I can get some seeds to start growing my own next year instead of a bunch of the same tomatoes which is what I’ve been doing. That salad looks fantastic, I’ll have to try it with fresh from the garden tomatoes when I get some 🙂
Heidi, have you seen Gayla Trail’s blog You Grow Girl? (yougrowgirl.com) She has posts on where she gets her seeds in Canada. Seed Savers Exchange (seedsavers.org) is also a good resource.
I’m hoping to grow some heirlooms this summer. Lovely pictures!
What wonderful fun collecting your tomatoes and showing each kind to all of us! I enjoyed seeing these and the photographs are beautiful.
Congrats on a beautiful and delicious harvest! To many, many more tomatoes this summer 🙂
Stunning images, these gems are sure photogenic, too. I’m sorry to hear that even the sunny California isn’t sunny these days. The same gloom persists here in British Columbia… even basil withers as if it had given up on life. I so hope the tomatoes will see the sun real soon. For the moment, I adore the light they have in your photographs.
I love all your tomato pictures! Last weekend I walked across the street to the farmers market here in San Diego and took tons of images of produce but my fave was of tomatoes. I adore them and eat at least one per day. Between the market, a CSA share, the grocery store, and this time of year…I am really excited about tomatoes!
And your photos, as always, beautiful!