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This is so true. I couldnât stand tomatoes or mustard when I was a kid, and they werenât big in my family. Then, I had to learn to accept them to make my husbandâs sandwiches. And now, Iâm a Believer! And, when the weather starts to turn, and itâs just about cool enough for a soup pot, but there are still garden tomatoes coming in â thatâs the sweet spot! Soup beans with cornbread, garden fresh cukes, green onions, and chef dâoeuvre of the repast, the beefsteak my husband just picked, lovingly sliced and plated solo, and reverentially presents to the diners while hovering anxiously, awaiting the reviews as if he were the agent of Mother Nature herself.
Just in case this was the problem: when you hit âsubmitâ and it seems like nothing happensâŠgive it a few minutesâŠor open the same forum in a different window⊠and see whether your post is there.
Donât keep clicking the button, cos when this creaky âol site catches up, youâll have posted multiple times.
Anyway ⊠a good September tomato doesnât need anythingâŠno recipe, no salt, no salad dressingâŠ
Use that stuff on lesser tomatoes⊠the better-than-supermarket-but-not-home-grown ones from the fruit stand, for exampleâŠ.Donât bother eating the supermarket ones this time of year unless you really canât grow any where you are, get to a farmerâs market, or prevail upon the kindness of friends with gardens.
But somebody please buy that kid a small one from the store, and have her taste it next to a real tomatoâŠ.Iâve known tiny children who relish the difference, and wait for the summer crop with huge anticipation.
I help sell wonderful tomatoes at an evening farmerâs market in summer ⊠it just ended last week, sadly.One family stopped by almost every week this year just to buy a pound or so of cherry tomatoes for their toddler sonâŠ..who gleefully âsampledâ from the bins the whole time they were there.They kept telling him to stop and he criedâŠI told them it was fineâŠ. we love to see future happy customers.
My darling wife buys tomatoes from the supermarket in the winter sometimes. Iâve pleaded with her to stop, I really can wait for the garden to produce, there is that much difference.
Growing up, I never had anything but canned tomatoes and half-ripe slices in elementary school lunches. I didnât learn to like fresh tomatoes until I began seeding them, and I still donât like raw ones by themselves. Chopped in salsa is fine; a slice on my sandwich gets picked off.
I canât stand whole, raw tomatoes â itâs both a taste and texture thing. I grew up with my parents growing them, so itâs not from the quality. I now grow them for my wife, but I still wonât eat them (cooked is OK.)
thebird55, thatâs true about most things in lifeâŠ.
A little salt, a little pepper on a beefsteak, YumâŠ.Cherry tomatoes are so sweet they donât need anything, but dipping them in ranch dressing is sooooo good itâs sillyâŠYumâŠ.
in the â40âs, back-yard tomato sammiches on whole-wheat bread, a slather of sugar and mayonnaise and being chased out to the back porch where the juice could run down off our elbows and nom-nom-nom ! (âgit away, cats!!â)Odd how tomato plants would mysteriously pop up under the porch next spring wherever us kids et them sammiches !Nobody ever said that farm life waz for the genteel.
Summer means a home-grown tomato that is juicy and goes so nicely in a BLT sandwichâŠHEAVEN!!!Been eating my own 3 varieties of Cherry tomatoes on salads these past few weeks!! Also very nice over cottage cheese.
Night-Gaunt, yes, people do have âdifferent taste buds.â It can be difficult to understand how someone can enjoy a taste that is âdisgustingâ to yourself. And vice versa. -Susan, your story about the toddler is especially resonant for me. Since I didnât like tomatoes as a child, it never occurred to me that my children might. Then, when she was about 6, my oldest daughter came home from playing in her friendâs yard, and told me they had been eating cherry tomatoes off the vine, and she loved them. I was so surprised! Well, that was how we started planting tomatoes. My husband had always loved them, but we hadnât gotten into gardening before then. After that, we always planted several cherry tomato plants for the children to eat at will, and other varieties for us⊠that is, if we were fast enough!More than one summer day, my husband would come home, looking forward to enjoying the tomatoes he had scoped out while watering the previous evening, only to find the plants picked clean of anything ripe. (We had four children by then, and our daughters would also invite their tomato loving friends over to forage.) It was frustrating, in an amusing way, but it is now a precious memory. I am sure that you are helping to create a treasured memory for that toddlerâs family.
GoBlue over 10 years ago
My Dad used to call them Michigan Gold. :)
alviebird over 10 years ago
You have to live long enough be disappointed a few times to really appreciate one.
jnik23260 over 10 years ago
Youâd see it if you remember what an imported winter tomato tastes like!
Last Rose Of Summer Premium Member over 10 years ago
Nothing better, there are 13 of them on the kitchen windowsill right now!
Arianne over 10 years ago
This is so true. I couldnât stand tomatoes or mustard when I was a kid, and they werenât big in my family. Then, I had to learn to accept them to make my husbandâs sandwiches. And now, Iâm a Believer! And, when the weather starts to turn, and itâs just about cool enough for a soup pot, but there are still garden tomatoes coming in â thatâs the sweet spot! Soup beans with cornbread, garden fresh cukes, green onions, and chef dâoeuvre of the repast, the beefsteak my husband just picked, lovingly sliced and plated solo, and reverentially presents to the diners while hovering anxiously, awaiting the reviews as if he were the agent of Mother Nature herself.
SusanSunshine Premium Member over 10 years ago
YikesâŠ. AlexiâŠ. You can delete a couple now.
Just in case this was the problem: when you hit âsubmitâ and it seems like nothing happensâŠgive it a few minutesâŠor open the same forum in a different window⊠and see whether your post is there.
Donât keep clicking the button, cos when this creaky âol site catches up, youâll have posted multiple times.
SusanSunshine Premium Member over 10 years ago
Anyway ⊠a good September tomato doesnât need anythingâŠno recipe, no salt, no salad dressingâŠ
Use that stuff on lesser tomatoes⊠the better-than-supermarket-but-not-home-grown ones from the fruit stand, for exampleâŠ.Donât bother eating the supermarket ones this time of year unless you really canât grow any where you are, get to a farmerâs market, or prevail upon the kindness of friends with gardens.
But somebody please buy that kid a small one from the store, and have her taste it next to a real tomatoâŠ.Iâve known tiny children who relish the difference, and wait for the summer crop with huge anticipation.
I help sell wonderful tomatoes at an evening farmerâs market in summer ⊠it just ended last week, sadly.One family stopped by almost every week this year just to buy a pound or so of cherry tomatoes for their toddler sonâŠ..who gleefully âsampledâ from the bins the whole time they were there.They kept telling him to stop and he criedâŠI told them it was fineâŠ. we love to see future happy customers.
bmatraw over 10 years ago
My darling wife buys tomatoes from the supermarket in the winter sometimes. Iâve pleaded with her to stop, I really can wait for the garden to produce, there is that much difference.
trollope'sreader over 10 years ago
Howâs that song go? Paraphrased: âBest things in life are true love and home-grown tomatoes.â
masingermo over 10 years ago
Growing up, I never had anything but canned tomatoes and half-ripe slices in elementary school lunches. I didnât learn to like fresh tomatoes until I began seeding them, and I still donât like raw ones by themselves. Chopped in salsa is fine; a slice on my sandwich gets picked off.
matzam Premium Member over 10 years ago
tomatoes are a berry, not a vegetable kid
jrgtr42 over 10 years ago
I canât stand whole, raw tomatoes â itâs both a taste and texture thing. I grew up with my parents growing them, so itâs not from the quality. I now grow them for my wife, but I still wonât eat them (cooked is OK.)
57-Don over 10 years ago
Just slice them into wedges, little salt, little pepper, couple drops of Sriracha⊠Heaven!
Fido (aka Felix Rex) over 10 years ago
Of course, there are always those summer tomatoes with crazy gams to admireâŠ
Seed_drill over 10 years ago
Sorry, Iâm 46 and still canât stand them. Cooked until theyâre mush in a sauce, theyâre good. Raw they are nasty.
Varnes over 10 years ago
thebird55, thatâs true about most things in lifeâŠ.
A little salt, a little pepper on a beefsteak, YumâŠ.Cherry tomatoes are so sweet they donât need anything, but dipping them in ranch dressing is sooooo good itâs sillyâŠYumâŠ.
unca jim over 10 years ago
in the â40âs, back-yard tomato sammiches on whole-wheat bread, a slather of sugar and mayonnaise and being chased out to the back porch where the juice could run down off our elbows and nom-nom-nom ! (âgit away, cats!!â)Odd how tomato plants would mysteriously pop up under the porch next spring wherever us kids et them sammiches !Nobody ever said that farm life waz for the genteel.
mollie05 over 10 years ago
Summer means a home-grown tomato that is juicy and goes so nicely in a BLT sandwichâŠHEAVEN!!!Been eating my own 3 varieties of Cherry tomatoes on salads these past few weeks!! Also very nice over cottage cheese.
nosirrom over 10 years ago
From the 1920âs through the 1950âs Tomato was slang for âa womanâ. The guy in the bib overalls may be thinking this.
Not the Smartest Man On the Planet -- Maybe Close Premium Member over 10 years ago
I saw that even when I was a kid.
James Hopkins over 10 years ago
Iâm 32 and I hate tomatoes. Now any tomato based products like sauce or ketchup? Iâm all about that!
Arianne over 10 years ago
Little Feat, 1978. Weâve got this album, lurking somewhere in the basement.
Arianne over 10 years ago
Night-Gaunt, yes, people do have âdifferent taste buds.â It can be difficult to understand how someone can enjoy a taste that is âdisgustingâ to yourself. And vice versa. -Susan, your story about the toddler is especially resonant for me. Since I didnât like tomatoes as a child, it never occurred to me that my children might. Then, when she was about 6, my oldest daughter came home from playing in her friendâs yard, and told me they had been eating cherry tomatoes off the vine, and she loved them. I was so surprised! Well, that was how we started planting tomatoes. My husband had always loved them, but we hadnât gotten into gardening before then. After that, we always planted several cherry tomato plants for the children to eat at will, and other varieties for us⊠that is, if we were fast enough!More than one summer day, my husband would come home, looking forward to enjoying the tomatoes he had scoped out while watering the previous evening, only to find the plants picked clean of anything ripe. (We had four children by then, and our daughters would also invite their tomato loving friends over to forage.) It was frustrating, in an amusing way, but it is now a precious memory. I am sure that you are helping to create a treasured memory for that toddlerâs family.
alviebird over 10 years ago
I like my tomatoes acidic. I want them to bite back.