Dahlia
Deeply Rooted
So many grapes!Thank you. They are on a zero water zone in the garden. Wow growing grapes in sand I guess it was good sand. You had lots of grapes at harvest.
So many grapes!Thank you. They are on a zero water zone in the garden. Wow growing grapes in sand I guess it was good sand. You had lots of grapes at harvest.
Do those green tomatoes taste like ripe red tomatoes?Next two ripe tomatoes in (even if they don't look it).
View attachment 67501
The longer one is NOT ripe yet, but it fell off while I was touching it, so it is presumably pretty close (though I do not a potential issue with this one, it has the SMALLEST attachment point of any tomato I have ever seen. It's not even the size of a pinhead (the tomato itself is about the size of a grape).
Oh and both of these come from ones I picked up at the farmers market, so I don't know the variety names.
It LOOKS exactly like a grape!(the tomato itself is about the size of a grape).
Well, not EXACTLY, as each color of tomato has their own taste notes due to the pigments also having flavors. But, if you mean do they taste ripe, yes.Do those green tomatoes taste like ripe red tomatoes?
One other thing about that one. I'll have to be careful about saving every seed, as not only does it not make many, it can make ones that have no seeds AT ALL (which makes me wonder if it could be the variety called Thompson's Seedless Grape). Unlike with a lot of other seedless tomatoes it WILL have fully sized seed cavities with full get, but there will be no seeds in the gel. It's sort of the reverse of the one I used to have I called Drywall, which produced fruit with seeds that had no gel around them (I ended up discarding that one, as it also had basically no water in the fruit walls as well, and was not only tasteless, but dry to the point of cardboard-y.)It LOOKS exactly like a grape!
The name is vaguely accurate. While Turandot is what Filet Mignon is sometimes called in French (as in Turandot Rossini, the literal meaning is "Turn the back". The legend is that Rossini the famous composer (Barber of Seville, Willian Tell Overture) was in a restaurant, and complained that he was tired of all of their beef dishes. When the chef tried to steer him to other areas of the menu, he said he only liked beef. Then he proposed the basic idea of what would become Turandot Rossini. The chef said such a dish would be unpresentable. Rossini said "Well, then arrange for it not to be seen". The dish became popular, and is now a classic of French fine cooking, but still, by tradition, it is never to be prepared in the sight of the diner.I have collected a few tomatoes over the years with amazingly small (insufficient) attachment points; if I even brush up against the plant, a cascade of tomatoes tumble to the ground. Usually they're pear shaped with constricted necks/tops. Turandot comes to mind, very, very productive but don't touch the plant until harvest time. lol
View attachment 67503
You could make fried green tomatoes with them then!Well, not EXACTLY, as each color of tomato has their own taste notes due to the pigments also having flavors. But, if you mean do they taste ripe, yes.
No, you need UNRIPE tomatoes for that. Ripe ones would bee too wet and mushy.You could make fried green tomatoes with them then!