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Slow Food - tomatoes

Stilly River Sage 06 Jun 05 - 03:51 PM
The Fooles Troupe 23 Apr 05 - 07:47 PM
Stilly River Sage 23 Apr 05 - 12:24 PM
Stilly River Sage 20 Jan 05 - 03:09 PM
Stilly River Sage 20 Jan 05 - 10:24 AM
Stilly River Sage 19 Jan 05 - 10:45 AM
Bunnahabhain 19 Jan 05 - 08:00 AM
JennyO 19 Jan 05 - 05:56 AM
Stilly River Sage 18 Jan 05 - 05:46 PM
TheBigPinkLad 18 Jan 05 - 12:25 PM
just john 18 Jan 05 - 11:54 AM
TheBigPinkLad 18 Jan 05 - 11:35 AM
Georgiansilver 16 Jan 05 - 07:13 PM
GUEST 16 Jan 05 - 02:28 PM
Stilly River Sage 15 Jan 05 - 02:29 PM
Stilly River Sage 14 Jan 05 - 01:02 AM
GUEST,.gargoyle 13 Jan 05 - 10:29 PM
TheBigPinkLad 13 Jan 05 - 02:50 PM
GUEST 13 Jan 05 - 02:34 PM
Stilly River Sage 13 Jan 05 - 02:30 PM
GUEST,MMario 13 Jan 05 - 02:09 PM
TheBigPinkLad 13 Jan 05 - 01:52 PM
TheBigPinkLad 07 Jan 05 - 06:25 PM
Stilly River Sage 07 Jan 05 - 06:14 PM
Stilly River Sage 07 Jan 05 - 06:11 PM
TheBigPinkLad 07 Jan 05 - 05:46 PM
Stilly River Sage 07 Jan 05 - 05:40 PM
TheBigPinkLad 07 Jan 05 - 05:31 PM
Stilly River Sage 07 Jan 05 - 05:06 PM
Stilly River Sage 07 Jan 05 - 05:03 PM
TheBigPinkLad 07 Jan 05 - 02:59 PM
Stilly River Sage 07 Jan 05 - 02:20 PM
TheBigPinkLad 07 Jan 05 - 12:54 PM
Stilly River Sage 07 Jan 05 - 12:28 AM
McGrath of Harlow 06 Jan 05 - 09:41 PM
Liz the Squeak 06 Jan 05 - 05:54 PM
Stilly River Sage 06 Jan 05 - 01:28 PM
TheBigPinkLad 06 Jan 05 - 12:00 PM
TheBigPinkLad 06 Jan 05 - 11:59 AM
Stilly River Sage 06 Jan 05 - 12:28 AM
open mike 05 Jan 05 - 11:50 PM
Stilly River Sage 05 Jan 05 - 10:10 PM
McGrath of Harlow 05 Jan 05 - 08:00 PM
The Fooles Troupe 05 Jan 05 - 07:50 PM
Stilly River Sage 05 Jan 05 - 07:09 PM
McGrath of Harlow 05 Jan 05 - 04:46 PM
open mike 05 Jan 05 - 04:01 PM
Metchosin 05 Jan 05 - 10:12 AM
Stilly River Sage 05 Jan 05 - 10:11 AM
MMario 05 Jan 05 - 09:25 AM
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Subject: RE: Slow Food - tomatoes
From: Stilly River Sage
Date: 06 Jun 05 - 03:51 PM

Oh, my! I just ate a handful of my home-grown cherry tomatoes with my lunch. Each one was a juicy cool burst of wonderful tomato flavor.

Something is clobbering a couple of my plants out in the garden. (On the other hand, I also have a few volunteers that I've popped cages over). Time to start the garlic pepper spray, and mix up the Neem.

SRS


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Subject: RE: Slow Food - tomatoes
From: The Fooles Troupe
Date: 23 Apr 05 - 07:47 PM

... just leave the the grope ones alone though...


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Subject: RE: Slow Food - tomatoes
From: Stilly River Sage
Date: 23 Apr 05 - 12:24 PM

Digging more beds and turning the compost today. I have some cherry tomatoes and superfantastic tomates in. I'm planning to go look for some grape tomotoes as well.

SRS


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Subject: RE: Slow Food - tomatoes
From: Stilly River Sage
Date: 20 Jan 05 - 03:09 PM

Here's a great site a friend sent to me today. I'll post it on one of the garden threads also.

Kitchen Gardeners International

SRS


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Subject: RE: Slow Food - tomatoes
From: Stilly River Sage
Date: 20 Jan 05 - 10:24 AM

We have two days of spring-like weather in our forecast, so I'll be out stirring up the compost and moving some to the front beds. This is the first step of the compost surprise process.

SRS


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Subject: RE: Slow Food - tomatoes
From: Stilly River Sage
Date: 19 Jan 05 - 10:45 AM

Bunnahabhain, That's Stilly river, please! The name is not an oxymoron, it is shortened from Stillaguamish, as in the river in Western Washington state.

I have seen several sets of letters meant to dance around the BC that is so embedded in christianity, but is clearly still the easiest one to remember. These CE and BCE seem to turn up most often. I've always objected to the birth of christ as the marker for setting our calendar, but to sidestep his name and use the same calendar is a bit disengenuous. I find the current politically correct substitutions aren't used consistently enough to do more than confuse people, but I'm not going to suggest changing our calendar to reflect something else. Who would get to choose what that something might be? We need to just live with it.

Before Present as a term sounds completely arbitrary. At least archeologists in their digs and record-keeping have a reason for choosing 1945 as a before/after date to reflect the beginning of today's era of atomic bombs. The fallout is noticable in the modern layer of soil.

Glow in the dark tomatoes, anyone?

My garlic and onions are perking along in the back yard, but because of the unusual mix of really warm weather between cold fronts, my quince has bloomed and I have confused daffodils (narcissus) popping up in flower beds. One of my oldest favorite flower pots by the side door finally broke under the effects of frost-heaving in this last cold snap.

SRS


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Subject: RE: Slow Food - tomatoes
From: Bunnahabhain
Date: 19 Jan 05 - 08:00 AM

Silly river sage,

BP stands for before present, defined as 1950.
The terms you were thinking of are CE, common era, and BCE, before common era, covering the same time frame as AD and BC.
Or does this belong in useless trivia?

Bunnahabhain


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Subject: RE: Slow Food - tomatoes
From: JennyO
Date: 19 Jan 05 - 05:56 AM

I love "compost surprise"! I've had tomatoes, potatoes and pumpkins spring up out of my compost in previous years. The pumpkins turned out to be butternuts - yum! The plant rambled all over the place and I had picked pumpkins sitting in rows in the laundry, enough to last for several months.

This year, I found two tiny tomato seedlings growing in the ditch in front of some big tomato plants I had. I transplanted them into another part of the garden and watched them grow into big lush bushes. It wasn't till the fruit started to form, that I realised I had Romas. Strange thing is I have never grown Romas. Might have eaten some that I bought, but the compost heap is about 20 feet away. I would maybe think that someone here before me might have grown them, except that this is a garden which didn't exist till I came here 18 months ago. It was a lawn. So who knows? I'm certainly not complaining though!

The Roma tomatoes are getting to full size now and about to get some colour, so that's something else to enjoy soon, along with my cherry tomatoes, Big Reds, passionfruit, spinach and beans. Just starting to pick beans, and I'm giving passionfruit away - even gave some to the NRMA man who came to try and fix my car which has basically died. He did try awfully hard, so I thought - why not?

Jenny


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Subject: RE: Slow Food - tomatoes
From: Stilly River Sage
Date: 18 Jan 05 - 05:46 PM

Then there is the "compost surprise." Every year I use my compost from the year before for gardening and top dressing beds. So there's always something that made it through the heat of the heap and the cold of winter and grows happily out out of place. I had some nice canteloupes last summer, out in the bed of lantana in the front yard. I intentionally planted tomatoes and peppers in the front yard, and I plan to again. They did very well and looked great.

SRS


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Subject: RE: Slow Food - tomatoes
From: TheBigPinkLad
Date: 18 Jan 05 - 12:25 PM

That made me laugh just john -- near where I lived as a kid there was a sewerage plant that was always covered in 'feral' tomato plants. Although some were put off by the nutrient source, many others gathered the rarely-ripening green tomatoes for chutney etc.


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Subject: RE: Slow Food - tomatoes
From: just john
Date: 18 Jan 05 - 11:54 AM

I remember how tomato plants would spring up after we'd moved the outhouse and filled in the old hole. (Which was nearly full, and why we were moving the outhouse.) Tomato seeds are unusual in that they can survive a trip through the human digestive tract.

So, this suggests a strategy, if you can't get the seeds any other way. Find somebody who's eaten some and invite them over ....


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Subject: RE: Slow Food - tomatoes
From: TheBigPinkLad
Date: 18 Jan 05 - 11:35 AM

gargoyle ... for some reason my email is being rejected by your server (says it can't find any such address) and neither can I PM you via Mudcat ... thanks for the offer anyway. Very kind.


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Subject: RE: Slow Food - tomatoes
From: Georgiansilver
Date: 16 Jan 05 - 07:13 PM

69


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Subject: RE: Slow Food - tomatoes
From: GUEST
Date: 16 Jan 05 - 02:28 PM

That's just cruel SRS ... the temp dropped to -8 Celsius here in Victoria over the weekend ... might be a while before I plant anything out!

gargoyle thanks for the generous offer. I will contact you via email.


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Subject: RE: Slow Food - tomatoes
From: Stilly River Sage
Date: 15 Jan 05 - 02:29 PM

Back to the top. It was a good thread. My slow food onions are looking nice out in the yard now, and I'm going to set up flats this week for starting tomatoes indoors from seed.

SRS


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Subject: RE: Slow Food - tomatoes
From: Stilly River Sage
Date: 14 Jan 05 - 01:02 AM

Gargoyle,

What are the plant and fruit characteristics? And the temperature conditions where you grew them?

I've had luck with cherry tomatoes and one called "super fantastic" here in the hot Texas climate. They seem to do better when the hot nights slow down the pollination of other tomatoes (typically, if it doesn't cool below 80 degrees at night, tomatoes won't pollinate).

Nice offer, though. I've saved a few seeds from some of my good garden plants also. Peppers in particular.

SRS


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Subject: RE: Slow Food - tomatoes
From: GUEST,.gargoyle
Date: 13 Jan 05 - 10:29 PM

contact me at :

gargoyle@fcbayern.de



I will send you some excellent tomatoe (fermented aged ready to plant) seeds - my best producer last year. Since we are in the EU there should be no problem.



Sincerely,

Gargoyle


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Subject: RE: Slow Food - tomatoes
From: TheBigPinkLad
Date: 13 Jan 05 - 02:50 PM

Some excellent information here: Sam Cox's page ... with references cited!


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Subject: RE: Slow Food - tomatoes
From: GUEST
Date: 13 Jan 05 - 02:34 PM

More then in passing - there are quite lengthy descriptions of the foods and meals dating right back to the original expeditions


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Subject: RE: Slow Food - tomatoes
From: Stilly River Sage
Date: 13 Jan 05 - 02:30 PM

You have to look at a lot of different sources if you're trying to piece together a large story like this. There is a story for corn that has been evolving also. It migrated around North America from it's original location in the Andes, where it was a simple grain with a few kernals. It was nurtured and just as farmers of today work to increase the output of a plant, native farmers brought it to a point where what was traded was a much improved food crop with the ear as we see it today. The biologists who have been looking into the earliest forms of corn are upset that Monsantos' varieties are going to cross-pollinate and destroy the native plants that still grow in the wild, or those that are cultivated in remote regions.

I suspect that someone looking into the ethnographic materials from as far back as they have been collected could shed light on attitudes toward some of these plants that came through in stories but weren't the primary reason for the interviews so haven't been highlighted in the literature. This has certainly been the case in my research toward cultural attitudes toward this nebulous thing we call "The Environment" among native North Americans prior to or early into the exploration and colonial periods.

Last year at this time I was writing a book chapter on sports and recreation in the Southwest. It went back far before colonization, and one way to try to interpret early activities is to look at the writings of the first Europeans to have extensive contact within cultures. Admittedly a lot of it is dismissive and biased, but you can still pick up information simply by looking at what they dismiss. I was researching the ancient ballcourts and games, and this sentence is extracted from that chapter:

    The writings of Fray Diego Duran (1537-1588), a Spaniard who moved to Mexico as a child, provide valuable information about the historic sources about ball courts and games. As a Friar, Duran was a prolific chronicler of the customs and religion of the indigenous people. Book of the Gods and Rites and the Ancient Calendar was reprinted by the University of Oklahoma Press in 1977.


Who knows, maybe something about tomatoes and other foods or plants turns up in passing in a text like this.

SRS


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Subject: RE: Slow Food - tomatoes
From: GUEST,MMario
Date: 13 Jan 05 - 02:09 PM

Tomatoes came originally from the Andes (what's now Peru) and historians can find no evidence they were used as food. Indeed, none of the languages of the area even have a word for 'tomato.'

More accurately the closest extent wild relatives of the tomato come from a section of the Andes -

but tomatoes were brought to Europe from MEXICO - and the local languages there are what we derived our word "tomato" from.


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Subject: RE: Slow Food - tomatoes
From: TheBigPinkLad
Date: 13 Jan 05 - 01:52 PM

Well, this certainly turned out to be a damp squib ...re. 2000 year old Chinese tomato seeds

Dear [BigPinkLad]; Sorry for the delay in response ... [snip] ... I have done some digging, including talking to our former writer who now lives in BC. Source material from 1995 no longer appears to be available. The only thing I can suggest at this point, is a web search.


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Subject: RE: Slow Food - tomatoes
From: TheBigPinkLad
Date: 07 Jan 05 - 06:25 PM

I agree there's lots of speculation regarding this issue, but no hard evidence. Did you see the PBS program about the skeletal remains unearthed (in New Hampshire?) that differed significantly from American Indians (forgive me if I have that term incorrect) physiologically? There is a law that requires burial of Indian remains ASAP so the scientists could not conclude their study, but the buzz was the age of the bones indicated they did not belong to the same strain of humans as American Indians. Interesting.


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Subject: RE: Slow Food - tomatoes
From: Stilly River Sage
Date: 07 Jan 05 - 06:14 PM

I just lowered my brower screen and found a notepad screen with another source that I cut and pasted because it looked interesting in the discussion above:

FOX, CARLES LALUEZA. 1996. "Mitochondrial DNA haplogroups in four tribes from Tierra del Fuego-Patagonia: Inferences about the peopling of the Americas." Human Biology 68(6):855-871.

It seems some of these studies show that groups in South America came straight across the ocean from east or west, not on a long trek down through North and Central America. This may be a text that discusses that.

SRS


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Subject: RE: Slow Food - tomatoes
From: Stilly River Sage
Date: 07 Jan 05 - 06:11 PM

Is he still lying low?


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Subject: RE: Slow Food - tomatoes
From: TheBigPinkLad
Date: 07 Jan 05 - 05:46 PM

My son has a salamander as a pet in a terrarium in his room. We named it "Rushdie."


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Subject: RE: Slow Food - tomatoes
From: Stilly River Sage
Date: 07 Jan 05 - 05:40 PM

They're quite tasty with a little mustard. . . (actually, I think some of the salamanders have toxic defenses, so it's best to take along a key and know what you're getting into if you're going to snack in the woods.)   :)

SRS


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Subject: RE: Slow Food - tomatoes
From: TheBigPinkLad
Date: 07 Jan 05 - 05:31 PM

I never did buy a GPS. Last year a woman went missing in the forest in BC (morel hunting in the springtime) and they gave up looking for her after only two days! I figure I won't be gong that ddep into the woods for chanterelles. I had a good season this--I guess last-- year. Found more than I could eat, so I ended up giving lots away. Still love doing it. Took my nine-year-old son last time. He loved it too, although he was much more interested in the salamaders than the shrooms!


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Subject: RE: Slow Food - tomatoes
From: Stilly River Sage
Date: 07 Jan 05 - 05:06 PM

P.S., back to the subject of food, how are your mushrooms out in the woods? Have you beaten a regular path to them? Did GPS come into it?

SRS


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Subject: RE: Slow Food - tomatoes
From: Stilly River Sage
Date: 07 Jan 05 - 05:03 PM

There are some obvious possibilities in the news recently, like Kennewick Man, who predates Columbus by several thousand years. One National Park Service memo (follow the link above to this and other bits about him) The BA date (Beta-133993) gave a conventional radiocarbon age of 8410 +/- 40 BP (Hood 1999a and Attachment 1). The equivalent calibrated radiocarbon age (using the two sigma, 95% probability) in years BP is cal BP 9510 to 9405 and cal BP 9345 to 9320. The question then arises, what was he doing here, was he alone, what did he bring with him? (Since "BC" is not used much any more in scholarly applications, there is a collection of terms. I think "BP" is something like "Before Present" era (meaning BC without mentioning Mr. C.) So you're looking at a traveller who might have come through the area 11,400 years ago or so.

I've seen programs recently also about European mummys turning up in China. NOVA ran a program about it. Trade is once again considered a major factor in the travels of these individuals.

All of this is a tangle when doing a web search. The beginning dates of humans in the New World is as big a question as how they got here and how often they made the trips back and forth.

My information about early travel to the New World comes through American Indian literature classes, and the material that surrounds the study of the origin stories of many tribes or nations.

There is one book that I can think of off the top of my head that explores the (possible) results of early European visits to the New World (going back to the times of the Vikings and the sea-going Irish and Spanish who are presumed to have landed here while fishing long before Columbus made his trips). That's Keepers of the Game: Indian-Animal Relationships and the Fur Trade by Calvin Martin. It has been several years since I read this, but I believe he backs up these contacts to well before Columbus' travels, and he suggests that the main reason for these early contacts was for trade. (Some of his conclusions at the end of the book are rather over-the-top, but the research he presents up to that point is interesting.)

It's quite an interesting subject, hampered primarily by the skimpy evidence since any perishable trade goods are not extant today. But that doesn't mean they weren't traded, just that it's difficult to prove. Personally, I think that given the curiosity and resourcefulness of humans, it is almost safer to assume that they did make trade trips a long time ago than that they didn't. Modern humans are so hung up on their technology that they seem to think humans didn't figure out how to get around before the manufacture of iron or the invention of the internal combustion engine.

SRS


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Subject: RE: Slow Food - tomatoes
From: TheBigPinkLad
Date: 07 Jan 05 - 02:59 PM

I must have dozed off when all this evidence came to light. Can you direct me to these sources?


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Subject: RE: Slow Food - tomatoes
From: Stilly River Sage
Date: 07 Jan 05 - 02:20 PM

Evidence of pre-Columbian trade and travel is vast. There are so many sources now one wonders where to begin. It didn't take Europeans doing it and writing home about it to make it so for the rest of the world. And there are fascinating studies about the population of South America, where quite a number of years ago now they found (and continue to uncover) archeological evidence of habitation that is far older than the debunked "Bering Land Bridge" theory would allow for.

SRS


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Subject: RE: Slow Food - tomatoes
From: TheBigPinkLad
Date: 07 Jan 05 - 12:54 PM

SRS -- Trade was happening long before Columbus sailed the ocean blue, and seeds might well have been swapped.

I'm no expert in this area, but I thought there was no evidence of oriental/pre-Columbian trade or even contact, although there are some suspicions it may have happened. Tomatoes came originally from the Andes (what's now Peru) and historians can find no evidence they were used as food. Indeed, none of the languages of the area even have a word for 'tomato.'

I banged off a note to the company that published the book with the 'bamboo seeds' claim and asked them to confirm their source. They replied yesterday saying they'd check into it and get back. Seems to me if it is true it would turn the conventional view of history on its head and we'd have heard before now. Stay tuned.


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Subject: RE: Slow Food - tomatoes
From: Stilly River Sage
Date: 07 Jan 05 - 12:28 AM

I wonder if there is a difference in what grows in the UK vs in the US, holly-wise? It might explain the differing levels of local lore regarding toxicity.

SRS


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Subject: RE: Slow Food - tomatoes
From: McGrath of Harlow
Date: 06 Jan 05 - 09:41 PM

As few as ten holly berries has been lethal. Better not to experiment though - leave them to the birds.


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Subject: RE: Slow Food - tomatoes
From: Liz the Squeak
Date: 06 Jan 05 - 05:54 PM

Tomatoes is the Portugese slang term for testicles.. becareful asking for plump juicy ones in Braganca!

LTS


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Subject: RE: Slow Food - tomatoes
From: Stilly River Sage
Date: 06 Jan 05 - 01:28 PM

Trade was happening long before Columbus sailed the ocean blue, and seeds might well have been swapped. But I find the story bogus not because the old seeds sprouted but because you say this artifact was apparently wrapped in a wet cloth. That's nuts--water is very destructive in the context of preservation of old stuff. I would be inclined to think it's made up for that reason. But more information regarding the origins of the bamboo and the context in which it was found might shed light on this story.

SRS


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Subject: RE: Slow Food - tomatoes
From: TheBigPinkLad
Date: 06 Jan 05 - 12:00 PM

Sorry ... I forgot to mention the bamboo tube was found in a tomb in China. Kinda important bit of information ... oops!


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Subject: RE: Slow Food - tomatoes
From: TheBigPinkLad
Date: 06 Jan 05 - 11:59 AM

Tomatoes plants ARE poisonous. The leaves and stems will cause violent gastric distress and have even caused death in livestock (deadstock?).

I just read last night that a bamboo tube containing seeds 2,000 years old was wrapped in wet cloth to protect it and two days later the seeds sprouted. The plants turned out to be tomatoes, different shape to modern ones, but the same red-to-green colour as they ripened. Sounds a bit fishy to me -- I was always led to believe the plant came originally from Central America. I'll see what else I can unearth ...


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Subject: RE: Slow Food - tomatoes
From: Stilly River Sage
Date: 06 Jan 05 - 12:28 AM

There are always exceptions to the rule--it was a generalization offered in a course that had survival tips. Or maybe in one of my biology/botany classes. I grew up in the Northwest, and learned never to eat leaves or stuff off of a tree that has bark like the alder (alnus rubra) as Cascara does.

SRS


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Subject: RE: Slow Food - tomatoes
From: open mike
Date: 05 Jan 05 - 11:50 PM

except cascara which causes diarrhea. (red berries)


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Subject: RE: Slow Food - tomatoes
From: Stilly River Sage
Date: 05 Jan 05 - 10:10 PM

Mistletoe berries are white. One of those survival rules of thumb I learned ages ago is to not eat white berries, they might be poisonous. I've only heard that holly isn't good for you, not really toxic. Red and blue berries are usually safe.

SRS


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Subject: RE: Slow Food - tomatoes
From: McGrath of Harlow
Date: 05 Jan 05 - 08:00 PM

"Or someone in Europe watched the birds eat them and not die?" Birds eat bright red holly berries too. If we eat them we die. And the same goes for mistletoe. Plenty of opportunities for bumping off the relatives over Christmas...


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Subject: RE: Slow Food - tomatoes
From: The Fooles Troupe
Date: 05 Jan 05 - 07:50 PM

Slow Food - refers not only to method of preparation, but also method of consumption.


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Subject: RE: Slow Food - tomatoes
From: Stilly River Sage
Date: 05 Jan 05 - 07:09 PM

Or someone in Europe watched the birds eat them and not die?

Brrrr but it turned cold here overnight. It was in the 70s until yesterday, and now it is below freezing. Time for some slow food! I have a pot of split pea soup simmering right now. A few slices of homemade bread, or maybe baking powder biscuits, and a little apple cobbler for dessert. All made from scratch.

SRS


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Subject: RE: Slow Food - tomatoes
From: McGrath of Harlow
Date: 05 Jan 05 - 04:46 PM

Tomatoes "slow food"? You can't get anything much quicker than a tomato sandwich. And when you throw them at poublic meetings they fly pretty fast. A very versatile fruit.

I've long been curius how people in Europe found out tomatoes weren't in fact poisonous - I mean, they look pretty deadly if you didn't know. I've got this theory it might have been the Borgias or some similar bunch of Renaissance villains unsuccesfully trying to whack a rival with a tomato dish.


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Subject: Lyr Add: SLOW FOOD (Greg Brown)
From: open mike
Date: 05 Jan 05 - 04:01 PM

Greg Brown has a song called slow food....and here it is.
(i think the first line means to say everybody wants that fast food..)
i saw a banner in fornt of a fadst food place that said:
your order in a minute or its free.....no slow food there!

from the web site www.gregbrown.org

Slow Food
On WERU's First CD, 1997.

Copyright © 1997 Greg Brown and Hacklebarney Music

People want that fast food Two minutes and they grouch
But give me ham baked all day long And help me to the couch
Help me to the sofa Put the quiet music on
I will lie and think about that ham Long after it is gone.
I want some slo-o-o-o-ow food. I don't want no food with cute names
No neon on a sign A man can't live on advertising slogans
and conceptual design Let somebody else go surf and turf
Someone else go carry out Me, I want my food to know itself
Before it knows my mouth. I want some slo-o-o-o-ow food
With all the love cooked in. Why don't we start it in the mornin' Leave us plenty of time for lovin' Weekend homemade hot fresh bread Make the whole house smell like an oven And let it all just simmer Cook in the good juices and the greases Then we'll sit down at the table, baby And slowly tear it into pieces.
I want some slo-o-o-o-ow food What's the big rush?..../
Don't want no hard-hearted Hardee's,
no muck-muck-muck-muck-donald's....
I want a chef, not a clown, to make my food...
/it can even be tofu with the right kinda sauce....
I want some slo-o-o-o-ow food With all the love cooked in.


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Subject: RE: Slow Food - tomatoes
From: Metchosin
Date: 05 Jan 05 - 10:12 AM

Also with the potato you didn't eat the little fruit that was produced.


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Subject: RE: Slow Food - tomatoes
From: Stilly River Sage
Date: 05 Jan 05 - 10:11 AM

I have sacred datura/jimson weed growing as an ornamental in the yard. It hasn't gotten so big and showy as it's desert version, but they are marvelous flowers that open at night.

SRS


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Subject: RE: Slow Food - tomatoes
From: MMario
Date: 05 Jan 05 - 09:25 AM

The eggplant is old world - and the tomato was taken up quite quickly by those countries that already used eggplant on a regular basis - less so by others. But there are records of them being eaten in books of the late 1500's and early 1600's


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Mudcat time: 15 June 9:56 PM EDT

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