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Old May 31, 2016   #1
sjamesNorway
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Default San Marzano origin

Here's an interesting tidbit from the book "Pomodoro!: a History of the Tomato in Italy" by David Gentilcore.

"The tomato variety that made this all possible [a doubling of British and American import of canned tomatoes from Italy] was a… ‘recent cross’ between the ‘Re Umberto’ and ‘Fiaschetto’ varieties. This was the ‘San Marzano’, variety after the town near Salerno, where it was first cultivated. In just a few years, the ‘San Marzano’ had become the major variety used for canned whole tomatoes.”

Steve
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Old May 31, 2016   #2
OzoneNY
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How much time is the author considering for recent?
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Old May 31, 2016   #3
sjamesNorway
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Quote:
Originally Posted by OzoneNY View Post
How much time is the author considering for recent?
Sorry, I should have written that it was the mid-1920s. The excerpt is here on pages 113-114:

https://books.google.no/books?id=hZg...eties.&f=false
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Old June 1, 2016   #4
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I have heard that the name "San Marzano" is a trade marke in Italy. This means that it has to be grown in the town of San Marzano. It is something like Balsamic Vinegar, or Champagne in France.

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Old June 1, 2016   #5
OzoneNY
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Gardeneer View Post
I have heard that the name "San Marzano" is a trade marke in Italy. This means that it has to be grown in the town of San Marzano. It is something like Balsamic Vinegar, or Champagne in France.

Gardeneer
Quite true. Although the point is, San Marzano tomatos are grown in or around the farms of San Marzano near Mt Vesuvius. Otherwise the same tomato grown elsewhere is said to be San Marzano style. Same tomato really (yes different soil) however it is an attempt to protect their farming industry and who can blame them.
Look for the DOP label on canned tomatos.
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Old June 1, 2016   #6
rnewste
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Until the "real ones" ripen in the garden:



They are grown under the shadow of Mt. Vesuvius:



Interesting stuff!

Raybo
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Old June 2, 2016   #7
sjamesNorway
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Default Umberto and Fiaschetto

I thought this was interesting because Fiaschetto (Napoli a Fiaschetto) has been recommended to me by Bower as a variety with excellent old-fashioned taste:

"Steve, to the original question, the classic red tomato taste that I like is at it's best in Napoli a Fiaschetto, a tough, medium sized determinate that I got from Solana Seeds. A rich tomato taste which is balanced, not leaning towards tart nor sweet. These are small fruit."

And there is a long running thread about Umberto, which Tatiana calls Roi Humbert and writes, "A great paste, cooking, or canning tomato":

http://www.tomatoville.com/showthrea...hlight=Umberto

Little wonder the cross became so popular.

Steve
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Old June 2, 2016   #8
Noreaster
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We've come to find San Marzano our very favorite for sauce.

This year, have 40 SM plants going in the garden. Will follow up in a couple
months with pics !
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