This is a dish that I make when I’m missing the long warm days of summer and those delicious homegrown tomatoes.

It’s surprising how good store-bought tomatoes can taste, considering you’re eating them in wintertime. The trick is to slice them, marinate them and serve them at room temperature. To do that, you have to make the marinade a couple of hours ahead. The good news is it takes only 10 minutes to make the raw tomato sauce, and only one bowl.

The original recipe calls for sliced turkey breast. If I can’t find it sliced, I buy a half turkey breast and slice it myself. You will have some smaller-sized slices as you reach the breastbone, but you can throw the bones and bits of meat in the freezer for soup, which Lee Bailey, the author of this recipe, suggests.

If you don’t want to bother with that, you can also substitute it for thin-cut boneless pork chops; I wouldn’t be surprised if Bailey’s inspiration for this recipe came from wiener schnitzel. Schnitzel, a popular dish in both Austria and Germany, is thinly pounded, breaded veal or pork.

Here, however, I used the easiest and probably the most accessible protein of all: boneless chicken thighs. I think they are more flavorful than chicken breasts, and at this time of year, frankly, I’ve had enough turkey to last me for a while. If you flatten the thighs, they cook more evenly; to do that, lay them flat between two pieces of plastic wrap and whack them a couple of times with a small cast-iron pan, or a mallet if you have one.

Because the thighs are not sliced, I find it easier to coat them by putting the flour, 2 teaspoons of salt and about six grinds of pepper in a large brown grocery bag, tossing in the pounded thighs, folding the top of the bag closed a couple times and giving it a good shake. Check to see if they are coated, then shake off the excess flour as you pull them out of the bag. Now, dip them first into the beaten egg, then the breadcrumbs, and cook them. They are delicious served with a green salad.

Claudia Alexander, a resident of Marin County, has been happily cooking for family and friends for more than three decades. She has a weekly food blog, sweetbynurture.com. You can contact her at sweetbynurture@gmail.com.