Misunderstood tomato. do you enjoy eating salsa and chips? or maybe you like having ketchup on your fries? then you must like the essential ingredient in these sauces,tomatoes. the tomato originally comes from south america and has been eaten by people there for thousands of years. today,tomatoes are popular the world over. however,when they were first introduced, there was quite a bit of
vite a bit of controversy and
worry surrounding them.
ancient aztec writings mention recipes for dishes of tomatoes
ies of tomatoes, peppers, and
ch soldiers conquered the aztecs and
salt - probably the first salsa recipe! spanish soldiers cono
brought tomato seeds back with them to europe. in europe, these
ope, these yellowish
tomatoes were first called "apples of gold". for a long time. de
> > for a long time, people in northern
s of gold”. people were afraid
to the nightshade plant, a deadly
europe and north america did not eat these "apples of gold". peon
to eat tomatoes because the plant looked similar to the nightshade plan
poison. german people even thought that if someone ate tomatoes, he or a
change into a werewolf. however, by the mid-1800s, people all over the world h
accepted the tomato as a good food to eat.
nevertheless, the tomato was due for more controversy. do you think
tomatoes are a fruit or vegetable? actually tomatoes are a fruit. however, in
america, tomatoes are a vegetable by law. why are tomatoes legally a vegetable in
america? in the 1800s, there was no import tax on fruit from other countries, but
there was an import tax on vegetables. at that time, many tomatoes were coming
from other countries into america, and american tomato farmers became worried
about making a living. the government made tomatoes a vegetable by law so that
non-american tomatoes would be taxed.
it is easy to tell that the tomato is really a fruit. in fact, tomatoes are similar
to berries. both have seeds inside, and both grow from the flowers of a plant. both
also have delicious flesh surrounding the seeds. tomatoes and strawberries are
actually in the same family. tomato ice cream, anyone?