A friend of mine, who moved to east Texas, said that this is the only time of year when everybody has to lock their car doors in the church parking lot. If you don’t, your back seat will be filled with zucchini. (Maybe your front seat as well.)
We have had about that many tomatoes so far. Tomato soup is amazingly easy! Basic ingredients: tomatoes, onions, salt, pepper, lemon juice, chicken broth. Other herbs if you desire. I don’t bother—it’s absolutely delish when kept simple.
I can remember helping my mom can tomatoes and tomato juice. She’d pour boiling water over the tomatoes to make them easy to peal, then cut them into quarters, put them into pint jars along with a spoonful of salt and a spoonful of sugar and then process them in a water bath. To make the juice, she’d boil the tomatoes, skin and all, then smoosh them through a cone shaped colander with a wooden device that looked like a sawed off baseball bat. Then the juice would be poured into quart jars and processed in a water bath. Her enamel canner was so big it fit over all 4 stove burners. Those home canned tomatoes were so much better than any store bought ones I’ve ever tasted. Same goes for the juice.
Hey, be glad she’s not growing zucchinis…. Al least with tomatoes, most people are glad to be given fresh home growns and you can also can them and freeze them and make sauce and salsa.
I spent this afternoon making the base for Weapons Grade Ratatouille. I used 8 lbs of tomatoes, 7 shallots, 2 heads of garlic, 4 onions, and 4 large red peppers. It cooked down into 3 pints of intensely tomatoe-y umami jam-like consistency. I diced 2 lbs each of eggplant and zucchini, roasted them, transferred the veg into a bowl and mixed one pint of the tomato base into it. Add a generous heap of juliened basil. It’s wonderful with crusty bread and an omelet. (I froze the other 2 pints of the base sauce, and will use them in the winter when I’m desperate for a taste of summer.)
I used to can a lot of tomatoes back in the day, and make tomato purée for sauce, also juice. Fresh tomatoes never went to waste. I used to dip tomatoes in boiling water for a few seconds and the skins would just peel right off. Zucchini, while tasty fresh or cooked or made into zucchini bread , are not able to be frozen and I never considered canning or freezing them. I suppose they could be pickled but I never tried to do so. I did make a vegetable juice using tomatoes, celery and carrots that I canned.
I only grow cherry tomatoes and some slightly larger. We have a short season, and we never have too many on 4 plants of various types. Looks like we will have about 6 delicata squash. Basil has been enough to make 4 batches of pesto with more to come. We had plenty of snap peas back in the season.
I spy 2 cats playing ball with (so far) 2 tomatoes, and I spy 2 robber mice stealing (so far) 1 tomato. I spy the same 2 robber mice in another panel, and I spy Lupin toe beans too! What do you see in the details of this Sunday strip?
First the prawn tacos and now the sauce. I wonders what’s next week. Something more yummy. Something more delicious. Something special for Super Scrumptious Special Savoury Sundays.
No offense, but I wouldn’t want that sauce. A friend only has two large cats and they go into the kitchen too, including on the counters. They aren’t allowed to, but they don’t care. Everything she makes has cat hair in it.
I lived in a small town for awhile. One year we had a "bountiful " tomato and zucchini season. It was dangerous to leave you’re car unlocked, you would find your back seat filled with tomatoes and zucchini.
I adore Pucky in that last panel. I hope he gets some sauce! Around this time of year I make a big batch of marinara to freeze. Although from farmer’s market tomatoes as my yard is too shaded to grow my own.
My friend, Ron, makes outstanding Salsa with his own tomatoes and homegrown peppers. However, this year the tomato harvest was sub-par, so he has had to supplement his harvest with store-bought vegetables. Too bad the Woman does not live close to St. Louis.
I have known Ron since we were both thirteen. We meet every Saturday we can for lunch – always Mexican food. His salsa comes in three heat levels and, trust me, the “hot” salsa will melt your fillings, but the flavor is outstanding. I have a standing order for three jars, every year.
I’ve got some sort of blight in my soil. Years ago they used to do well. Now, even when I tried putting them in a planter far away from the garden they died. This year, with a lot of anti fungal, some even poured into the soil, I got a handful of small tomatoes. Oh well, only my wife eats them. I don’t like raw tomatoes and we don’t get enough for sauce.
As a tomato lover, I don’t see the problem here. ;)
Also, she either has gotten a whole field’s worth of tomato plants to get that many that quickly, or she has managed to grow some seriously productive tomato plants. My folks have been growing their own tomatoes every summer for years, and never have we ever ended up with that many tomatoes that quickly, and never to the point that we had more than we knew what to do with (that honor fell to the plum trees).
So I sort of want to know now what her secret is to grow that many tomatoes that quickly.
My kitchen looks the same way this day, minus all but one cat and no mice. I told my hubby I didn’t know where to start. Just finished canning and freezing green beans yesterday, so, today is tomato day. And, I was running out of jars, so hubby went to Walmart to pick up more. The lady at the store told him they had more, but haven’t been able to keep up shelving with the demand. And I must get the tomatoes done as next week is grape and apple harvest and that gets made into jam and applesauce. You would think that at 81, I would ‘retire’, but somehow I keep doing this preserving with a lot of help from my husband.
That’s the trouble with home gardens: everything gets ripe at the same time. Tomatoes from a garden are so much better than anything you can buy in a store.
I had an over abundance of cherry tomato’s this year, the big boys I only got about 2 dozen, and a darned horn worm is now destroying my jalapeño plant. I’ve plucked off 2 just in past 2 days. Big boys they were!
I tried growing tomatoes. Got a few puny little ones, and one nice, big, perfect one… that a jerk of a squirrel took a bunch of little bites out of. Not just on one side, no — it took single little chomps all the way around the tomato!
This years tomato crop was huge in my garden. In 2 weeks I canned +71 quarts (net from fresh) of tomatoes and 50 lbs of zucchini. Had to use a wagon to transport all from the garden in my back yard. Plus I put up cooked collards and froze green peppers and jalapenos. Pickled 24 quarts of cucumbers. Ate fresh lettuce all spring. The only things left growing now are the peppers. Boy am I tired.
Our tomato plant flopped. Actually two flopped. I replaced the first and the second did slightly better. We will have a total of about 15 tomatoes. I think we got a bad bag of soil. We’ve never had trouble growing tomatoes in that pot before.
Easiest solution when you have more than you can eat or use: rinse them and put them in the freezer. Once they are frozen you can put them in bags or just leave them loose. The skin slips right off when you want to use one or more.
In re cats and tomatoes: “My cat Horatio loves cheese, but I have had cats who liked tomato and basil sauce or broccoli above all things.”—Cooking the Books / by Kerry Greenwood.
This one really strikes a chord with me. Last month, I visited some family in another part of the country. They have a garden by their house. One of their main harvests is tomatoes, and (I swear) one of their kitchen counters looks exactly like the one in panel 3—covered in tomatoes. Small world. This comic made me smile.
McColl34 Premium Member about 3 years ago
Yes Puck, even you. Unfortunately.
LuvyaBebe05 about 3 years ago
I thought tomatoes were cat poison.
McColl34 Premium Member about 3 years ago
A friend of mine, who moved to east Texas, said that this is the only time of year when everybody has to lock their car doors in the church parking lot. If you don’t, your back seat will be filled with zucchini. (Maybe your front seat as well.)
Zucchini are easy to grow and they are prolific!
Susanna Premium Member about 3 years ago
I see a couple robber mice checking out the tomatoes. Maybe they are going to help the Woman get rid of some.
jemelvin about 3 years ago
We have had about that many tomatoes so far. Tomato soup is amazingly easy! Basic ingredients: tomatoes, onions, salt, pepper, lemon juice, chicken broth. Other herbs if you desire. I don’t bother—it’s absolutely delish when kept simple.
Sue Ellen about 3 years ago
I can remember helping my mom can tomatoes and tomato juice. She’d pour boiling water over the tomatoes to make them easy to peal, then cut them into quarters, put them into pint jars along with a spoonful of salt and a spoonful of sugar and then process them in a water bath. To make the juice, she’d boil the tomatoes, skin and all, then smoosh them through a cone shaped colander with a wooden device that looked like a sawed off baseball bat. Then the juice would be poured into quart jars and processed in a water bath. Her enamel canner was so big it fit over all 4 stove burners. Those home canned tomatoes were so much better than any store bought ones I’ve ever tasted. Same goes for the juice.
ikini Premium Member about 3 years ago
Two robber mice and Lupin and Goldie bapping at each other, lol!
deadheadzan about 3 years ago
Hey, be glad she’s not growing zucchinis…. Al least with tomatoes, most people are glad to be given fresh home growns and you can also can them and freeze them and make sauce and salsa.
WelshRat Premium Member about 3 years ago
I see Goldie and Lupin have started a fruit fight…
Jungle Empress about 3 years ago
My aunt once gave us some homegrown cherry tomatoes. They were quite tasty.
Just look how excited Pucky is in the last panel! ❤
Ahsum about 3 years ago
Sunday Funday
dmah Premium Member about 3 years ago
I spent this afternoon making the base for Weapons Grade Ratatouille. I used 8 lbs of tomatoes, 7 shallots, 2 heads of garlic, 4 onions, and 4 large red peppers. It cooked down into 3 pints of intensely tomatoe-y umami jam-like consistency. I diced 2 lbs each of eggplant and zucchini, roasted them, transferred the veg into a bowl and mixed one pint of the tomato base into it. Add a generous heap of juliened basil. It’s wonderful with crusty bread and an omelet. (I froze the other 2 pints of the base sauce, and will use them in the winter when I’m desperate for a taste of summer.)
https://www.epicurious.com/recipes/member/views/-weapons-grade-ratatouille-50150043
deadheadzan about 3 years ago
I used to can a lot of tomatoes back in the day, and make tomato purée for sauce, also juice. Fresh tomatoes never went to waste. I used to dip tomatoes in boiling water for a few seconds and the skins would just peel right off. Zucchini, while tasty fresh or cooked or made into zucchini bread , are not able to be frozen and I never considered canning or freezing them. I suppose they could be pickled but I never tried to do so. I did make a vegetable juice using tomatoes, celery and carrots that I canned.
DennisinSeattle about 3 years ago
I only grow cherry tomatoes and some slightly larger. We have a short season, and we never have too many on 4 plants of various types. Looks like we will have about 6 delicata squash. Basil has been enough to make 4 batches of pesto with more to come. We had plenty of snap peas back in the season.
DorseyBelle about 3 years ago
I spy 2 cats playing ball with (so far) 2 tomatoes, and I spy 2 robber mice stealing (so far) 1 tomato. I spy the same 2 robber mice in another panel, and I spy Lupin toe beans too! What do you see in the details of this Sunday strip?
Formedras about 3 years ago
Link (of GMM) would hate to see this.
Charliegirl Premium Member about 3 years ago
Better keep an eye on Lupin and Goldie! They’re up to no good.
FreyjaRN Premium Member about 3 years ago
Attack of the Killer Tomatoes, perhaps.
Robin Harwood about 3 years ago
Lupin and Goldie have worked out what to do with the tomatoes.
Robin Harwood about 3 years ago
And The Man said it.
Gent about 3 years ago
I wants some sauce too. For me samosas be more yummy with them.
Gent about 3 years ago
First the prawn tacos and now the sauce. I wonders what’s next week. Something more yummy. Something more delicious. Something special for Super Scrumptious Special Savoury Sundays.
I AM CARTOON LADY! about 3 years ago
You say, Tomato and I say Toma- OH NO!
catmom1360 about 3 years ago
I am now excited and enthused about making some Italian tomato sauce or gravy as they call it.
Lady Bri about 3 years ago
Mmmmmm! ❤ I’ll take half of those tomatoes off your hands!! I cannot believe it costs $10 for six tomatoes in New Zealand. Highway robbery! :(
snarkm about 3 years ago
No offense, but I wouldn’t want that sauce. A friend only has two large cats and they go into the kitchen too, including on the counters. They aren’t allowed to, but they don’t care. Everything she makes has cat hair in it.
in-dubio-pro-rainbow about 3 years ago
When the pizza hits your eye like a big moon I say, tomatoes galore
Robin Harwood about 3 years ago
Latest on GDSMom?
cat19632001 about 3 years ago
Goldie toe beans!
cat19632001 about 3 years ago
I’m with Goldie – these almost look like Tomato Tribbles. Aren’t there more in the seventh panel then there were in the third?
Michael G. about 3 years ago
Just give away the tomatoes, Woman. You’ll be wee at saucing them all!
Ruth Craig Premium Member about 3 years ago
Ironically, I am canning marinara today.
morningglory73 Premium Member about 3 years ago
My mother would make tomato juice and it was very good.
kimmie260 about 3 years ago
I lived in a small town for awhile. One year we had a "bountiful " tomato and zucchini season. It was dangerous to leave you’re car unlocked, you would find your back seat filled with tomatoes and zucchini.
Miss Mina about 3 years ago
I adore Pucky in that last panel. I hope he gets some sauce! Around this time of year I make a big batch of marinara to freeze. Although from farmer’s market tomatoes as my yard is too shaded to grow my own.
Kitty Katz about 3 years ago
Meanwhile, Back on the Nile
At the Cosmos Nursery
Thomios: Looks like you have a great crop, Trev.
Trevor-Hotep: Yep. The pizza trees are almost ready for harvest.
Beatrixia: And the apples look good as well.
Thomios: I’ve also seen hints of the first pumpkin spice crop.
Trevor-Hotep: Yeah, that seems to come in earlier each year. But my greatest success is the miracle zucchini.
Beatrixia: What makes them miraculous?
Trevor-Hotep: Each plant only produces ten zucchini.
rs0204 Premium Member about 3 years ago
My friend, Ron, makes outstanding Salsa with his own tomatoes and homegrown peppers. However, this year the tomato harvest was sub-par, so he has had to supplement his harvest with store-bought vegetables. Too bad the Woman does not live close to St. Louis.
I have known Ron since we were both thirteen. We meet every Saturday we can for lunch – always Mexican food. His salsa comes in three heat levels and, trust me, the “hot” salsa will melt your fillings, but the flavor is outstanding. I have a standing order for three jars, every year.
lsnielson about 3 years ago
@Granny Roberta Any update on your cat NightFury?
prrdh about 3 years ago
Donate the surplus to the victims of the wildfires in Italy.
Seed_drill about 3 years ago
I’ve got some sort of blight in my soil. Years ago they used to do well. Now, even when I tried putting them in a planter far away from the garden they died. This year, with a lot of anti fungal, some even poured into the soil, I got a handful of small tomatoes. Oh well, only my wife eats them. I don’t like raw tomatoes and we don’t get enough for sauce.
Bucinka about 3 years ago
Make ketchup! Easy and fun, plus you can season it the way you like.
The Good Doctor about 3 years ago
OT: GSD Mom
GSD Mom Premium Member about 3 years ago
Thanks everyone. Getting stronger and I finally got to brush my teeth
scyphi26 about 3 years ago
As a tomato lover, I don’t see the problem here. ;)
Also, she either has gotten a whole field’s worth of tomato plants to get that many that quickly, or she has managed to grow some seriously productive tomato plants. My folks have been growing their own tomatoes every summer for years, and never have we ever ended up with that many tomatoes that quickly, and never to the point that we had more than we knew what to do with (that honor fell to the plum trees).
So I sort of want to know now what her secret is to grow that many tomatoes that quickly.
biz.gocomics about 3 years ago
Do not let this woman near any zucchini…
Nuliajuk about 3 years ago
At least hers are ripe. I always seem to end up with a tsunami of green tomatoes.
We are only just finishing off the last jar of green tomato chutney from last year.
serenasakitty about 3 years ago
We didn’t really know that much about zucchini the first time we tried it in the garden. We planted a whole row of the stuff. Yoicks!!!!!!!!
Space_cat about 3 years ago
Both Poody and Roy LOVE red sauce and will crowd the plates on spaghetti night to get the remains to lick up.
The Wolf In Your Midst about 3 years ago
I’ll take a few of the extras. Slice ’em up, add a little salt, chomp!
azevedan about 3 years ago
This little rat plays the harmonica! https://fb.watch/7Qytty7x4Z/
anne o about 3 years ago
O.T.
Granny Roberta about 3 years ago
OT
Sabrina17 about 3 years ago
It could be worse. It could be zucchinis.
scaeva Premium Member about 3 years ago
At least they aren’t zucchinoids …
FrannieL Premium Member about 3 years ago
My kitchen looks the same way this day, minus all but one cat and no mice. I told my hubby I didn’t know where to start. Just finished canning and freezing green beans yesterday, so, today is tomato day. And, I was running out of jars, so hubby went to Walmart to pick up more. The lady at the store told him they had more, but haven’t been able to keep up shelving with the demand. And I must get the tomatoes done as next week is grape and apple harvest and that gets made into jam and applesauce. You would think that at 81, I would ‘retire’, but somehow I keep doing this preserving with a lot of help from my husband.
Le'letha Premium Member about 3 years ago
A pizza the size of the Moon? I want one! Expecting to have pizza for dinner tonight as it is.
(Also, “A Pizza the Size of the Moon” sounds like a perfect children’s picture book.)
anomalous4 about 3 years ago
OT: Guess who did too much yesterday…
paulscon about 3 years ago
That’s the trouble with home gardens: everything gets ripe at the same time. Tomatoes from a garden are so much better than anything you can buy in a store.
kathybear about 3 years ago
OMG! A pizza the size of the moon! Bwahahahahah!
LucyLuLu about 3 years ago
I had an over abundance of cherry tomato’s this year, the big boys I only got about 2 dozen, and a darned horn worm is now destroying my jalapeño plant. I’ve plucked off 2 just in past 2 days. Big boys they were!
Mary Ellen about 3 years ago
I tried growing tomatoes. Got a few puny little ones, and one nice, big, perfect one… that a jerk of a squirrel took a bunch of little bites out of. Not just on one side, no — it took single little chomps all the way around the tomato!
Biskits about 3 years ago
This years tomato crop was huge in my garden. In 2 weeks I canned +71 quarts (net from fresh) of tomatoes and 50 lbs of zucchini. Had to use a wagon to transport all from the garden in my back yard. Plus I put up cooked collards and froze green peppers and jalapenos. Pickled 24 quarts of cucumbers. Ate fresh lettuce all spring. The only things left growing now are the peppers. Boy am I tired.
Daeder about 3 years ago
There’s no such thing as too many tomatoes. They can be canned, etc.
Now if you had grown that much zucchini, you’d have a problem.
serenasakitty about 3 years ago
I did not even notice the mice at first, but Lupin and Goldie in the last panel. Oh my.
Natarose about 3 years ago
No, Puck, no sauce for you.
cat19632001 about 3 years ago
I love Pucky’s gentle paw of consolation for the Woman.
cat19632001 about 3 years ago
The next day — “Honey, why do Goldie and Lupin both have dried tomato pulp in their fur?”
willie_mctell about 3 years ago
Our tomato plant flopped. Actually two flopped. I replaced the first and the second did slightly better. We will have a total of about 15 tomatoes. I think we got a bad bag of soil. We’ve never had trouble growing tomatoes in that pot before.
Gent about 3 years ago
And although this has been noted already, I have to say I just love the colouring in this comic.
buflogal! about 3 years ago
Easiest solution when you have more than you can eat or use: rinse them and put them in the freezer. Once they are frozen you can put them in bags or just leave them loose. The skin slips right off when you want to use one or more.
mistercatworks about 3 years ago
What an unexpectedly saucy woman!
knight1192a about 3 years ago
I think he needed to finish that sentence. I swear it’s “Mamma Mia it’s me, Mario!” Not some lame song that lead to two lame movies.
about 3 years ago
The Man just couldn’t resist.
ikini Premium Member about 3 years ago
In re cats and tomatoes: “My cat Horatio loves cheese, but I have had cats who liked tomato and basil sauce or broccoli above all things.”—Cooking the Books / by Kerry Greenwood.
The Pro from Dover about 3 years ago
Gravy
Mr. Reader about 3 years ago
this reminds me of the “zucchini” era of foxtrot.
Mr. Reader about 3 years ago
Nice action face from elvis in the last panel.
rgcviper about 3 years ago
This one really strikes a chord with me. Last month, I visited some family in another part of the country. They have a garden by their house. One of their main harvests is tomatoes, and (I swear) one of their kitchen counters looks exactly like the one in panel 3—covered in tomatoes. Small world. This comic made me smile.
Laurie Stoker Premium Member about 3 years ago
Great! Where do I send my mason jar?
La Gata Loca almost 3 years ago
Actually sugar-free tomato sauce is a great idea. Freeze it instead of canning (if you have the space!).
leopardglily over 2 years ago
This reminded me of the Jack Prelutsky poem," A Pizza The Size Of The Sun."