Member discussion regarding the methods, varieties and merits of growing tomatoes.
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February 14, 2006 | #1 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: MS
Posts: 1,523
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Tomatoes on Food Channel
Did you guys see the special on tomatoes and making paste earier on the Food Channel? Very neat. It showed mechanical pickers covering acres and acres of tomatoes, then loaded and hauling them in boxcars. Most tomatoes I ever saw in my life. They showed how they processed them, and it was amazing. Best tomato segment I ever say, and pretty lengthy.
I mention it here because I'm sure they will re-run it. Check your guide. Don
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Zone 7B, N. MS |
February 14, 2006 | #2 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: New Hampshire
Posts: 79
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I checked the program scedule for the whole day on foodnetwork.com. I couldn't find anything about tomatoes. Was it maybe another network??
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Charlie |
February 14, 2006 | #3 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: MS
Posts: 1,523
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No, it was the food channel. Maybe it was listed under a different heading. I caught it mid-ways and don't really know how it was listed. They re-run that stuff all the time, so maybe you cant stumble onto it.
Don
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Zone 7B, N. MS |
February 15, 2006 | #4 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: East TN weedpatch.... I know I planted some tomatoes in here!
Posts: 41
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I know they have a series called "Unwrapped", which takes you start-to-finish on a food product, whether it's Tootsie Rolls, Nathan's Hot Dogs, or wax lips. Sounds likely to me that this may have been the series Don06 was watching.....
Don, was the host thin, reddish-blonde, wearing glasses and sorta The World's Worst "Comic"? If so, I'd bet a bushel of Brandywines Unwrapped is the actual show you watched. |
February 15, 2006 | #5 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: MS
Posts: 1,523
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Oh, gosh, MtnMaters, I didn't pay attention to that. It was more like a documentray as I remember. Not sure, though. Don't even recall the face of whoever was doing it. Sorry.
But the format did fit what you described. Don
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Zone 7B, N. MS |
February 15, 2006 | #6 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: West By God Virginia
Posts: 245
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Could have been the show "The secret life of ..." They explore one food topic for the whole half hour. I haven't seen it but will look for it. Thanks for the heads up Don.
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I plant... Therefore I am. - Dunkel What the country needs is dirtier fingernails and cleaner minds. - Will Rogers |
February 15, 2006 | #7 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: Concord CA z9b, just west of Tomatoville
Posts: 415
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I think MtnMaters may have hit it. Does this sound like it Don?
Unwrapped That's Italian It's all things italian as we Tour the Chef Boyardee factory, relish how Ricotta is produced and get the "skinny" on Low Carb pasta. Visit a virtuoso turning noodles into works of art and see how garlic is prepped for packaging. Finally, cool off with Ciao Bella Gelato for dessert! It'll be on again on Feb. 17th at 7:30 PM ET |
February 15, 2006 | #8 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: Oak Hill, Virginia Z 6/7
Posts: 47
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I saw a show sometime back that sounds kind of like this but it was not on the Food network. It might have on The Learning Channel or Discovery. Maybe Modern Marvels or something.
Like you, I didn't see the entire show but the thing that stood out most to me was the size of the trailers they used for harvest. They must have been 8 feet deep filled with tomatoes. Hundreds (maybe thousands!) of pounds of tomatoes on top of each other. Made me understand exactly why store bought tomatoes are as hard as they are! I would like to see the entire show if anyone figures it out. Thanks, Terry Light |
February 15, 2006 | #9 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: Central NY Zone 5
Posts: 1
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Alton Brown's show "Good Eats" is on tonight at 10pm et and is about making sauces.
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February 16, 2006 | #10 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: Victoria, BC
Posts: 300
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Ciao all,
kc, that makes sense that the Food Network would want to get on that Italian bandwagon with the Olympics grabbing most of the viewing population these days. I grew up in California and after University, I lived for a few years in Davis, which is in the Sacramento Valley and is also home to most of the nation's Roma tomato supply. Driving any distance from Davis to anywhere, I'd have to pass by field after field of sprawling Roma plants. During the harvest season, driving would sometimes come to a crawl if I happened to be behind any of the transport trucks. People would sometimes stop their cars and pick up the tomatoes that would fall out of the trucks. I have no clue what the capacity of each truck was, but it was substantial. In a climate like Davis, very hot and very dry, you can dry your tomatoes outside on screens the way my grandparents did in Sicily. I take heart that I don't have to make paste the way my Nonna did by spreading out thickened pressed tomatoes onto a slab outside, then constantly spreading it and re-spreading it over a fortnight until it would mound up and hardly a drop of water was contained in it. Being the modern North American woman of Italian descent, I make it on the stove top, LOL. Buon appetito
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Grazie a tutti, Julianna |
February 17, 2006 | #11 |
Tomatoville® Recipe Keeper
Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: Roseburg, Oregon - zone 7
Posts: 2,821
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julianna,
How 'bout the I-5 freeway on and off ramps with tomatoes spilled all over the road, from the trucks making their turns? LOL I always wonder WHY they fill the trucks so full, when the ones on the top just end up on the road.
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Corona~Barb Now an Oregon gal |
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