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In the beginning...
Tomatoes first grew as wild, cherry-size berries in the South American
Andes, but the fruit, as we know it today, was developed in Mexico where
it was known as tomatil and traveled to Europe by boat with the returning
conquistadors.
Upon arrival in Italy, the heart-shaped tomato was considered an
aphrodisiac, thus tomato in Italian, poma amoris, means "love apple."
Regarded as poison by American colonists because of its relation to deadly
nightshade, the tomato's reputation was saved by Robert Gibbon Johnson,
who stood on the New Jersey courthouse steps in 1820, and ate a
tomato--with no adverse effects, to the amazement of the town.
A ripened ovary of a seed plant, the tomato is by definition a fruit, but
in 1893 the U.S. Supreme Court over-ruled Mother Nature declaring that
tomatoes were not fruits, but vegetables.
The development of "tougher" tomatoes and the invention of the mechanical
harvester saved processing tomato industry in the early 1960's, which had
struggled with labor problems since WWII. Today, 100 percent of processed
tomatoes are machine harvested.
You say tomatoes, I'll say tomatoes--when dealing with fresh vs. processed
tomatoes, few similarities exist. Harvested earlier, green and with plenty
of juice, fresh contrasts with the vine-ripened, tomatoes processors
cherish for their high solids and red color.
The super ingredient....
The Joy of Cooking--your grandmother's favorite cookbook--lists 64 tomato
recipes. These versatile fruits end up in everything from pasta and pizza
to Bloody Marys and barbecue sauce and can be stuffed, boiled, stewed,
pureed, deviled, glazed, pickled, grilled and fried.
Ketchup, tomato sauce, pizza, tamales, cocktail sauce, tomato juice,
meatloaf and barbecue sauces have many different flavors, but tomatoes are
a main ingredient in these, as well as many other ethnic dishes.
Move over spinach. Among all vegetables except potatoes, tomatoes
contribute the greatest amount of nutrients to the American diet.
If you suffer from skin disease, a tomato a day may keep the doctor away,
as tomatine, tomato's principle alkaloid, concentrated in its branchy
leaves and green fruit, heals certain fungous diseases of the skin.
A star in its own right, the popular tomato is the fruit of choice for 85
percent of the 30 million of us who are home gardeners.
Each man, woman and child in America consumes almost 80 pounds of tomatoes
every year.
Big, versatile and delicious...
Aside from the potato, tomatoes are America's most important commercial
vegetable, both in yearly weight consumed and annual yield.
While sunny California is far and away the world's largest producer of
processed tomatoes, accounting for nearly half of the world's total
production, the "love apple" is also an international hit, being grown in
such diverse nations as Italy, Argentina, Algeria, Taiwan, Australia and
Chile.
Florida may have Disney World, Fort Lauderdale and the largest fresh
tomato industry, but California is clearly number one nationally in
processed tomato production, growing nine out of every 10 tomatoes
processed in the U.S., with a crop value exceeding $547 million.
As hard as other states work to catch up, California's prolific canners
process more tomatoes in a few days than Ohio, the second largest
producing state, processes during the entire season.
With California's processed tomato tonnage skyrocketing from 3.3 million
tons in 1970 to 10.75 million tons in 1994, California tomato acreage has
more than doubled from 141,300 acres in 1970 to 311,000 in 1994.
Moist, dry, salty or sandy, the tomato can be grown in a surprising range
of climates and in almost any soil. In California, tomatoes seem to grow
EVERYWHERE--from the far northern portions of the state in Butte County
clear to the Mexican border.
A virtual tomato seed smorgasbord, the Tomato Genetics Stock Center at the
University of California, Davis has more than 2,750 genetic varieties of
tomatoes.
California's tomato season is in it's peak from July through September
when harvesters run 24 hours a day. The season, however, actually runs a
full six months, beginning in June and running all the way through
November.
The largest tomato on record is a 7-pound monster grown in Oklahoma. |
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How do tomatoes survive
transport?
If you have ever seen a load of tomatoes rolling down the freeways of
central California filled to the brim, you may have wondered what keeps
them from smashing themselves. These tomatoes have been selectively bred
for over 50 years to be quite different from the tomato you would buy in
the store. One of the qualities they have is a much thicker skin than
fresh tomatoes, it is this property that allows them to survive the weight
of 25,000 pounds of tomatoes without suffering much damage.
What are the differences between store tomatoes and processed tomatoes?
There are an incredible amount of differences between store bought
tomatoes and tomatoes that are processed for canning and sauces. One of
the first and most important is that processed tomatoes are picked ripe
and red. In contrast, fresh market tomatoes are picked green and some of
the fresh tomatoes are gassed with the fruits own natural ripening hormone
called ethylene to promote consistent ripening.. The second is that
processed tomatoes are used immediately, from the moment of picking less
than 6 hours pass until the tomato is in the can. Third, processing
tomatoes are completely machine harvested, the only humans needed are for
picking out stray vines and any rare tomatoes that are moldy or crushed.
How much does a tomato truck hold?
A typical tomato truck holds 50,000 pounds of tomatoes, which is about
300,000 tomatoes. (6 X 50,000)
Why are tomato trucks uncovered?
Time. During the height of the season, California tomato growers are
producing 2,000,000,000 pounds of tomatoes per week! To put that in
perspective that is 40,000 tomato trucks each carrying 300,000 tomatoes.
The other main reason is that since tomato harvest is in the summer
covering the trucks could result in the tomatoes being damaged by the
trapped heat.
Are tomatoes fruits or vegetables?
The answer to this question is an interesting bit of tomato trivia.
Technically a tomato is a fruit, since it is the ripened ovary of a plant.
But in 1893 the supreme court ruled in the case of "NIX v. HEDDEN"
tomatoes were to be considered vegetables. If you find this hard to
believe here is a link to take you to the court ruling:
NIX v. HEDDEN, 149 U.S. 304 (1893).
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