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For the Love of Tomatoes
Chef Blog

For the Love of Tomatoes

by Ana Patuleia Ortins

 copyright 2014

 For the love of tomatoes, I don’t know about you, but I have to admit that every year, I start planting. I begin in mid March.  Obviously, I am nearly obsessed with planting, growing and harvesting my favorite tomato, to cook with and eat. The vision is really about a nice ripe one sprinkled with salt and eaten like an apple. Favorite recipes turn over in my head as harvest time draws near. Do you ever think how lucky we tomato lovers are?

 When Spanish explorers returned from the new world with the tomatoes, it was looked at with disdain and fear by citizens of Spain. Since tomatoes belong to the night shade family, these savory fruits were thought to be poisonous. According to oral history, when the rejected fruit made its way into Italy by way of the Moors.  A courageous person, for the love of tomatoes, stood in the midst of a crowd in the center of an Italian town and devoured a tomato. Amidst the shock, he proved to all it was not poisonous, but delicious.

That changed the course of culinary history, influencing not just Italian cuisine, but other food ways as well.   If the Spaniards had the ability for the love of tomatoes,  to see the future, things would be different.  How the tomato would impact so many foods of the world, Spaniards might have looked at their farming and culinary habits differently.   Eventually, even the Spaniards added the tomato to their Gazpacho.

Though technically it is a fruit, the tomato is often lumped into the vegetable group.  No matter what the category, tomatoes are included in 90 per cent of homegrown gardens. Even people without land plant them in barrels, oversized flower pots and buckets.  More people prefer tomatoes than any other homegrown ingredient.  It is so popular, the tomato was designated the official state fruit of Ohio. There are contests at state fairs across the country for the biggest and best.

Growing tomatoes is not difficult when using the proper soil. Soil that has been enriched with bone meal for phosphorus, manure for nitrogen and wood ash for potassium is the best.  Composted horse, chicken and rabbit manure were and are still highly recommended.  Unless you can get elephant manure which is considered the best, you need to substitute. Techniques to improve the tomato for size, color, flavor and growth have become more sophisticated than ever.

Seed catalogs offer a vast array of varieties.    Take your pick from heirloom, tiny cherry, grape tomatoes to the meatier types like beefsteak, to the golden ones, purple one.  The list goes on.  My favorite, the heirloom Heart of an Ox variety, is grown in both Portugal and Italy.  Did it migrate from Portugal to Italy or from Italy to Portugal during the Roman occupation?  I couldn’t tell you, but I am doing my part to see that they flourish here in America.  The seeds I plant every year are saved from the previous year’s harvest. I love to plant them for the following year.

Surprising to many, tomatoes are used in Portuguese savory dishes. You will find over fifty percent of Portuguese stews and braises incorporate a peeled, seeded, chopped tomato.  Even a tablespoon of tomato paste, might satisfy you for the love of tomatoes, into their base ingredients, called refogado.  Onions are sautéed in olive oil until translucent or lightly golden.  Then a chopped ripe tomato is added where it will simmer, covered, until  the tomato is partially dissolved and married to the onions.  A cook will sometimes add a spoon of tomato paste when fresh tomatoes are not available. Sometimes it is added to even infuse an extra concentrated flavor to the chopped tomato base.

In addition to meaty stews and braises, we use tomatoes in other dishes. Tomato is added to our simple Tomato Rice (Arroz de Tomate), Chicken Stew (Galinha Estufada), and other aromatically heady rice and vegetable dishes.  Very ripe tomatoes are also used to make Tomato Jam (Doce de Tomate). It is a delightful cinnamon and lemon spiced jam which is enjoyed on toast as well as a filling for cakes and pastry.  Whatever variety of tomato you choose for your culinary creations, make sure it is one that you absolutely love.

(this article was also published on The Cook’s Cook.com)

 

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