I spaced out and forgot to wash (and have already chopped) the 5 supermarket-bought plum tomatoes that the recipe called for. The tomatoes will not be cooked, just tossed into the pasta when it’s done.
Will the final pesticide-laden product give me cancer of the intestine or something equally as dreadful 10 years from now?
I wouldn’t be so much worried about the pesticides as I would about what they went through just sitting in the grocery store. I’ve seen people drop stuff on the floor and put it back in the pile, or sneeze in their hand and start picking over stuff. How about the field workers that pick the stuff? I’m going to guess they don’t exactly have keys to the executive washrooms, if you get my drift.
That having been said I don’t usually wash anything before I eat it. When your number’s up, your number’s up. I probably drink enough vodka to sterilize my innards anyway.
Here’s the recipe, in case anyone’s interested:
1 (16 ounce) package bow tie pasta
2 green onions, chopped
1 (6 ounce) package feta cheese, crumbled
1/4 cup balsamic vinegar
1/4 cup extra virgin olive oil
2 cups chopped fresh tomato
Fresh basil garnish
I’m hoping the balsamic vinaigrette sterilizes it.
I just did a similar pasta. Fresh chopped plum tomatoes, olive oil, basil, garlic, crushed red pepper, salt and pepper. Mix and let sit out for an hour to get all gooshy. Tossed it into a half-pound (it was a side dish) of cooked fusilli and grated asiago over the top. It was yummy.
And as for the pasta being cooked, it never hurts for people to check. After all, my landlord’s 6-year old daughter served me a plate of raw macaroni the other day (I politely declined)