• Gamey
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    721 year ago

    That’s definitely from someone who never tasted a home grown tomatoe or waters theirs a lot too often, you can buy tomatoes but they taste like literal shit in comparison! ;)

    • @Pyr_Pressure@lemmy.ca
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      191 year ago

      Also you can leave them on the plant a lot longer than they last in the fridge.

      So you save a lot more, since you aren’t buying tomatoes every week. You just pick them as you need them.

      • @buffaloboobs@lemmy.world
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        17
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        1 year ago

        Don’t put tomatoes in the fridge, if possible. Put them in the sun, if they need to ripen more, otherwise put them somewhere dark and cool, but not cold.

        Basically, store them like potatoes. 50-55F is ideal. They can stay for weeks like that.

        (This is all said with the understanding that the tomatoes are whole/uncut. Once they’re chopped up, the fridge is the best option, but they’re only good for a few days)

        sauce: me, veg farmer

        • @PvtGetSum@lemm.ee
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          51 year ago

          As a vegetable farmer I disagree. Tomatoes do not store well like potatoes, please throw them in your fridge.

          • Gamey
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            11 year ago

            I eat all of them right away but that sparks my interest, could you go into detail?

            • @PvtGetSum@lemm.ee
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              1 year ago

              So of course tomatoes eaten directly off the plant are gonna be “superior” (I personally prefer them a bit cold but that’s just preference), storing tomatoes like potatoes or onions is just completely incorrect if mostly because when you tell people to do that, they’re gonna immediately go to stick them under their sink. While potatoes and onions do well in cool dry storage, they still have a resistance to temperatures above what anyone should be storing tomatoes at.

              While it’s correct to state that tomatoes shouldn’t be stored at temperatures below 40°F, saying “don’t refrigerate tomatoes” is complete BS. Most refrigerators aren’t cooling down to the 30 range, and even if they are your tomato is still gonna do better there than in is on your shelf if you’re trying to keep it for a longer period of time.

              That being said, if you have a tomato that you want to ripen a bit, store it out of the fridge on your counter, it will help it out a bit. But as for a ripe tomato? Keep it in your fridge. We pick hundreds of pounds of tomatoes a week at my farm, most of them are sold only a day or two after picking at our farm stand, but we still have to refrigerate them over night because if we don’t, they will turn to shit, and no one is gonna pay to eat a shitty tomato that’s been festering overnight during a hot summer, especially if you live in a humid area. Potatoes and onions on the other we leave out overnight and they do fine for days without any discernable difference.

              Refrigerate your tomatoes, keep your fridge set to a reasonable temp (40-44°F), do not treat your tomatoes like onions or potatoes.

              • Gamey
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                11 year ago

                Thanks, that’s a fantastic explenation!

        • Gamey
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          41 year ago

          Or in other words in the fridge if you live in a “modern” house because there won’t be any better place?

          • @buffaloboobs@lemmy.world
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            -21 year ago

            What do you mean? Normal fridge temps are too cold for things like tomatoes, potatoes, eggplant, basil, etc.

            I’m talking about a cool garage, basement, a root cellar. Somewhere cooler, so that the ripening process is slowed down to increase shelf life, but not so cold that they get shitty and mushy and gross.

            • Gamey
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              21 year ago

              I know but about half of the many houses I lived in didn’t have anything like that, I just want a old earth cellar to store stuff but that’s luxery by now.

        • Gamey
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          11 year ago

          Mine are on the balkony because I don’t have a garden this year, shitty but at least there is less competition if I leave them, well if you would leave any of them even long enough to ripe properly that is!

    • @BCsven@lemmy.ca
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      31 year ago

      I think the issue is they taste of nothing, and the flesh is all this mealy mush texture. People have a surprisingly low standard of what the accept as a tomato

      • Gamey
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        21 year ago

        Yea! Many evdn try to grow their own but water them too much and don’t taste the real difference because of that. I love tomatoes but the store bough ones really suck even in summer! (I get that they can’t taste all that ripe in winter)