
Spanish-Style Tomato Toast with Jamón Serrano
This simple Spanish breakfast proves that the best dishes come from perfect ingredients treated with respect. Ripe tomatoes get grated into jammy pulp, then layered onto crisp toast with silky olive oil and paper-thin jamón serrano. It's breakfast that tastes like sunshine and tradition.
Walk into any Barcelona café at breakfast and you'll see locals standing at the bar, cradling coffee and demolishing plates of pa amb tomàquet. This isn't just toast with tomato — it's a ritual that transforms four simple ingredients into something that captures the essence of Catalan cooking.
The technique matters here more than you might expect. Grating the tomato rather than slicing it creates a jam-like consistency that soaks into the bread without making it soggy. The garlic rub adds just a whisper of sharpness, while good olive oil ties everything together with its fruity richness. When you drape that silky jamón serrano over the top, you get the perfect balance of salt, acid, and fat.
This dish lives and dies by the quality of its components. Hunt down the ripest tomatoes you can find — they should give slightly when pressed and smell like summer. Your olive oil should be something you'd happily eat with a spoon, and the bread needs enough structure to stay crisp under all that juicy tomato. It's the kind of simple perfection that Spanish cooks have been perfecting for generations.
You can, but choose a sturdy sourdough or country white that will toast up crispy. Avoid soft sandwich bread — it won't have the structure to hold up to the tomato juices.
Prosciutto di Parma makes an excellent substitute and has a similar delicate, salty flavor. In a pinch, even good quality deli ham works, though you'll lose some of the authentic Spanish character.
The components can be prepped ahead — grate the tomatoes and store covered, slice the ham, toast the bread — but assemble right before serving. Pre-assembled toasts will get soggy within minutes.
This usually happens with underripe tomatoes or if you've included too much of the watery center. Make sure your tomatoes are fully ripe, and don't press too hard when grating to avoid the watery core.