Tomato Chips
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Turn garden fresh tomatoes into deliciously seasoned and crisp tomato chips in a few easy steps.
There is nothing like fresh garden tomatoes. I love roasting them under the broiler, topping them with fresh mozzarella cheese and a bit of basil, and having nothing but that for lunch (see my recipe here). But I have found an even better way to snack on tomatoes and it’s awfully convenient, too…TOMATO CHIPS!
If you’ve never had a tomato chip, but love the taste of tomatoes, you have yet to fully live your life! They are THAT GOOD! And YES, if you don’t have a dehydrator, you really should buy one. I’m trying to encourage everyone to grow something, preserve something, and put back something when it comes to food sources this year. Dehydrating is one of the easiest ways to preserve food because it doesn’t require the time commitment of canning or the freezer space of freezing. You just pop it in, dry it, and store it.
I even heard of some folks who serve these with dips but I gotta tell ya, the sweetness of the chip combined with the slight saltiness of the sea salt and the hint of extra seasoning from dried basil is all I need. This is one of those snacks that has so much flavor it is intensely satisfying – more than potato chips ever hope to be! And think of how much healthier it is, too! (I keep a mason jar of tomato chips by my chair where they stay nice and crispy just waiting on me to eat them throughout the day).
I’ve currently planted 2 Roma tomato plants at my house and 4 at my mother’s, just to make more chips this summer. But any tomato will do, I just find the size of Roma tomatoes to be the most convenient.
Recipe Ingredients
- Dehydrator
- Roma tomatoes (others would work also, but smaller ones are better)
- Sea salt or kosher salt (something coarse)
- Dried basil
How to Make Tomato Chips
Slice your tomatoes, with the skin on, about 1/4 inch thick.
So, that looks closer to 1/2 inch… so aim for 1/4 but if you end up hitting 1/2 keep on walking and don’t look back.
Arrange tomato slices on a dehydrator tray.
Sprinkle them with sea salt or kosher salt (you want a coarser salt) and a bit of dried basil.
Go easy on the salt because whatever you add will taste like double once the chips are dried.
Set dehydrator to vegetable temperature (around 135 degrees) and dry until crispy. This will be anywhere from 8 to 12 hours.
Store in an airtight container and enjoy!
Get ready to make some more though, because these won’t last long.
Storage
Store leftovers in an airtight container in a cool, dry place for up to 12 months.
Recipe Notes
- Make parmesan tomato chips by sprinkling them with parmesan cheese and baking for an additional few minutes, until the cheese melts.
- Try these other seasonings: garlic powder, za’atar seasoning, and Italian seasoning.
Recipe FAQs
How do you make tomato chips in the oven?
Instead of dehydrating the tomato chips, brush them with olive oil and then place them on parchment paper on a cooling rack on a cookie sheet. Then bake them in a 275-degree oven for 2.5 to 3 hours. Just give them a quick check every now and again to ensure they don’t burn. You’ll want to let them cool for at least an hour before serving.
How do you serve tomato chips?
We all know I could eat them all as is, but here are some other serving suggestions:
- Add a slice of goat cheese or mozzarella between two tomato chips.
- Dip them into your favorite dip, like baked onion dip.
- Add as a garnish to pizza, quiche, tomato soup, pasta, or a salad.
- Elevate an ordinary sandwich, burger, or grilled cheese sandwich with a few tomato chips.
Check out these other posts from my dehydrating series:
Dehydrate Frozen Vegetables To Save Freezer Space and Money
Use a Dehydrator To Make Your Own Instant Rice
Dehydrating Ground Beef (makes instant beef)
Dehydrating Peaches (and recipes)
A dehydrator is an excellent investment to allow families to preserve food with little fuss and also make wonderful snacks – even “real” fruit snacks for your kids!
Ingredients
- Roma tomatoes can use others
- kosher or sea salt
- dried basil
Instructions
- Cut tomatoes into 1/4 inch slices and arrange them on the dehydrator trays.Roma tomatoes
- Sprinkle very lightly with salt and basil.kosher or sea salt, dried basil
- Dry on the vegetable setting for 8 to 12 hours or until crispy.
Nutrition
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Submitted by Carolyn Tyler. Click here to submit your own.
I don’t have a dehydrator, but what also works extremely well is slicing small cherry tomatoes in half, sprinkling a bit of sugar and salt on top and drying them in the oven for some time. I like to add a tiny bit of sugar because it really brings out the tomato flavor in combination with the salt. I’ll have to try these as well!
I have been saving your recipes on ziplist for a long time. I went to the site this morning and only 1 recipe is there! Can you find out what happened or if I did something please?
I am not sure what could have happened, maybe you accidentally logged out? You can contact ZipList @ziplist.com and see if they can help you.
A friend of mine dehydrates lots of veggies, and grinds them into powder. She adds them to soups, stews, and lots of sauces. I think that that is a fabulous idea if you have family members like I do that won’t touch a squash. Imagine the possibilities of getting more veggies into their diet! I always add V-8 juice to meat loaf and use oat meal instead of bread crumbs. I hope that it makes it a healthier dish. So thank you Christy for the info on the dehydrator, I am getting one for sure!
What a great idea!! 🙂
We just planted 65 tomato plants this week, 40 of which are Romas. I make my own salsa, spaghetti sauce, stewed tomatoes and this year will be trying some tomato chips. These look yummy. I also plant and dehydrate my own basil so will use that on my chips. Yum! Thank you for all your yummy recipes!
Oh my goodness!!! 65 plants!!! WOW!!
I looked at Amazon and saw there is a really wide range of prices for dehydrators. Do you think the less expensive ones work as well? (I was going to call them cheaper, but I think I am the one who’s cheap!!)
You’re not cheap, just practical! This is something new to you and I completely understand not wanting to sink that kind of money into it, because I was the same way. I started out with a dehydrator much like this one: http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B000LNVUJQ/ref=as_li_ss_tl?ie=UTF8&camp=1789&creative=390957&creativeASIN=B000LNVUJQ&linkCode=as2&tag=christyssouthernplate-20 And used that for a few years. When I upgraded to an Excalibur this past Christmas, I passed that one on to a friend and it is still going strong!
Just bought a Dehydrator, have dehydrated Banana Chips and Pineapple so far, couldn’t get my Banana Chips crisp, it was on for about 24 hrs. Any idea. Also love all you dehydrator recipes, keep it up please.
A lot of those banana chips you buy in store have been fried, so they are crisp because of that. Mine are crisp, but a little bit tough to chew, almost like a crisp taffy. The kids love them though! Katy takes them to school for a snack several days a week, when we manage to have some she hasn’t eaten right out of the jar at home! Stay tuned for an upcoming posts with lots of fun things you can do with banana chips!
hope that you get to do a dehydrator giveaway this summer!!! love this tomato chip recipe. ty <3
I hope I can do one as well Barbara!!