Can you actually taste a difference between Tomatoes?

In this video, we are doing a deep dive into tomatoes.
📃 Discover recipes for tomato season: www.cookwell.com/discover/col...
🍔 The Mouthful Newsletter (free) ➡ www.cookwell.com/newsletter
🍳 All the Kitchen Gear I use (& why) ➡ www.cookwell.com/shop
📚 Videos & Sources mentioned:
▪ Does chilling reduce tomato flavor? - www.pnas.org/doi/10.1073/pnas...
▪ On Food & Cooking, Harold McGee
▪ Greenhouse tomato statistics - www.ers.usda.gov/data-product... the early 2020s%2C greenhouse,tomatoes to the United States.
▪ Greenhouse tomato histoy - www.ers.usda.gov/webdocs/publ...
▪ Heirloom vs Modern Tomatoes www.science.org/doi/10.1126/s...
📸 Instagram ➔ / echleb
🎚 TikTok ➔ / ethanchlebowski
🐣 Twitter ➔ / ethanchleb
⏱ TIMESTAMPS:
0:00 Intro
1:43 What are tomatoes?
4:46 How are tomatoes grown? ‪@epicgardening‬
8:44 Why are farmer’s market tomatoes better than grocery store ones?
11:57 Should you refrigerate tomatoes?
13:06 BLT Test
16:16 3 Categories of Tomatoes
17:18 Heirloom Tomato Test
21:04 What is the flavor of tomatoes?
22:20 Snacking Tomatoes Test
23:55 What happens to tomatoes when cooked?
25:35 Do Organic tomatoes taste better? (Test)
28:00 What are the best canned tomatoes?
28:26 How to shop for tomatoes year round
🎵 Music by Epidemic Sound (free 30-day trial - Affiliate): share.epidemicsound.com/33cnNZ
MISC. DETAILS
Filmed on: Sony FX3 & Sony A7C
Voice recorded on Shure MV7
Edited in: Premiere Pro
Affiliate Disclosure:
Ethan is a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for us to earn fees by linking to [Amazon.com](amazon.com/) and affiliated sites.

Пікірлер: 1 200

  • @EthanChlebowski
    @EthanChlebowski20 күн бұрын

    We put together a little collection of recipes that use tomatoes in a variety of ways if you want to get some ideas on what to make this season: www.cookwell.com/discover/collection/tomato-season Tomato season is almost coming to an end in Texas, I may need to travel to the east coast during August & September to prolong the season and get my fix 👀

  • @scottmansfield626

    @scottmansfield626

    20 күн бұрын

    You can cover your tomato plants with white shade cloth and give it phosphorous fertilizer. The reason they stop producing is because stress from the heat and the white shade cloth will help medigate that and the phosphorous fertilizer will help encourage production. You won't get a lot of tomoatoes but they will trickle in until October and in Texas, where I am also from, you get a second season because of our mild falls. Beginning in October you will have an explosion of fruit but most will not be ready when the first frost hits and you will be forced to pick a premature crop in the beginning of December or late November. These will be picked green and will have to ripen off the vine.

  • @bodyofhope

    @bodyofhope

    20 күн бұрын

    I don't have a green thumb by any means, but one year when I was growing tomatoes in flower pots on my porch (which I had grown from seedlings), I made a cool discovery that changed how I grew everything else thereafter. This was before composting was popularized. But I started burying my food scraps in one of my tomato pots (organic plant matter only), and left the other pots without. I didn't do anything fancy apart from chop the veg scraps up and bury them in the tomato growing soil. The one with scraps grew 3x the size and produced the most, and the best fruit. The other pots without the scraps were pretty shrimpy by comparison. From then on, that soil was my rich soil that I'd distribute to other plants, as well as add more plant material. Just make sure you bury it deep enough or it will smell and attract raccoons and flies.

  • @douglascoats7081

    @douglascoats7081

    20 күн бұрын

    \Are you ever going to do a video on the canning process to preserve things like tomatoes?

  • @exotic-grower-gamer

    @exotic-grower-gamer

    20 күн бұрын

    kevin says that vine ripened and home ripened tomatoes arent diffirent and better to pick at the breaker stage

  • @robertmarsh8334

    @robertmarsh8334

    20 күн бұрын

    I love that Chettie decided to video bomb your cameo lol

  • @epicgardening
    @epicgardening20 күн бұрын

    Grocery store tomatoes are certified NOT EPIC. Grow your own ;) - thanks for the feature, Ethan. Keep on growing, Kevin

  • @christophergardens

    @christophergardens

    20 күн бұрын

    Nice job Eric!

  • @o1ecypher

    @o1ecypher

    20 күн бұрын

    have you ever tasted a spicy Melon 🍈 , well we sell them back home and we get spicy Melons by planting a spicy pepper beside each melon. try to use a pepper that isnt too spicy. the trick is finding the best pepper for the type of melon you want to grow. its delicious in the summer! i hope this comment get to you. i am a subscriber and long time fan. oh and im not a bot lol

  • @MsSwitchblade13

    @MsSwitchblade13

    20 күн бұрын

    Was surprised to see you here!

  • @nc1901

    @nc1901

    20 күн бұрын

    Loving the collaboration

  • @mattymattffs

    @mattymattffs

    20 күн бұрын

    Generally agree, but with cherry tomatoes I can't tell

  • @lightspiritblix1423
    @lightspiritblix142320 күн бұрын

    One of my coworkers had a friend who passed away two years ago, and left behind an old WWII military uniform. Inside, was a packet of tomato seeds labeled "Germany 1945". Only 3 plants grew from that initial packet of like 60 seeds, but the tomatoes they made were enormous, closer in size to a grapefruit or a small melon. And they were sooooooo delicious. He preserved the seeds from one and now has an heirloom line of "Nazi tomatoes", and every year he gives away plants from that line to coworkers and friends

  • @mattia_carciola

    @mattia_carciola

    19 күн бұрын

    I'm always down for unusual varieties or ingredients (next year I'm planting many lesser known chili peppers varieties) and some tomatoes that comes unmodified from 80 years ago sounds fun. If your friend is ok with that I can send 2$ for the international shipping fee (according to one minute of googling for US -> Italy letters prices) for few seeds

  • @GreenWitch1

    @GreenWitch1

    19 күн бұрын

    Awesome story! I’d love to see them.

  • @karenneill9109

    @karenneill9109

    19 күн бұрын

    Cool story- it would be neat to see how big they are!

  • @marjoriejohnson6535

    @marjoriejohnson6535

    18 күн бұрын

    Would have loved to get my hands on those. I used to plant s German paste tomato that was not only huge but flavoirful the person raising them passed away and no one i knew got seeds..l used to have a friends and family gathering when tomatoes were in full production. Celebrity tomatoes were the most popular every year.( I grew the 3 favorites plus at least 3more varietys.

  • @trolltaker

    @trolltaker

    18 күн бұрын

    I know a guy that digs old outhouses to collect bottles, but he also salvaged and managed to propagate a strain of tomatoes from 150 year old seeds that he found in one. (the seeds are almost always present in that dirt but not always viable)

  • @donscott6431
    @donscott643121 күн бұрын

    I love tomatoes and, as a life long restaurant cook, was excited to better understand the different varieties/flavors commonly available

  • @EthanChlebowski

    @EthanChlebowski

    21 күн бұрын

    It is super interesting comparing different varieties side by side!

  • @ethanp1erce

    @ethanp1erce

    21 күн бұрын

    Love hearing this. Respect to you for sharing that you’re still learning! Too many cooks “already know it all” ;) I’m excited for the remainder of this video. In the summertime a GREAT strawberry, or tomato can make my whole day.

  • @user-ci7wn5im5i

    @user-ci7wn5im5i

    21 күн бұрын

    ​@@EthanChlebowskiyou should do a video on dry vs fresh aromatics

  • @violetviolet888

    @violetviolet888

    20 күн бұрын

    @donscott6431: As a restaurant cook, talk to the farmers, there's a lot that was not included in this video. Sorry Ethan, but you missed the #1 answer to your question. I give talks on this. The main difference is a better focus on the explanation of the distinction between heirlooms vs F1 hybrids. Conventional tomatoes were hybridized for production: uniform size, shape, color, disease and pest resistance, yield, and to ripen at the same time for easier harvest. With every “feature” mentioned, what do you lose? *FLAVOR.* This is the *number one reason* for lack of flavor. *Heirlooms will always win out over hybrids for flavor.* This is the number one answer to the title of this video. Even over “how” they are grown or where they are grown (farm vs home). Heirloom cultivars, particularly when home grown are the tomato of choice for true tomato connoisseurs. What you ate was an F1 hybridized tomato that likely also received too much water before harvest. Both contributing factors to lack of flavor. And if they used synthetic inputs for fertilizer, and failing to stop irrigation before harvest also take away from flavor. You said you tried them multiple times throughout the summer. Plants (like humans and all animals) have a peak of optimum health in an average life. A young tomato plant or young fruit true does not come into maturity even though it can get pregnant. The plant and human have to be mature enough to reproduce healthy offspring. The phenomena is consistent for most fruit bearing vegetables, annuals and fruit trees. A fruit tree may not come into full maturity until it's 7-13 years old for the best tasting fruit. And even then, each season the early fruit will never taste as good as a couple of weeks or so later. My advice to you: grow "Cherokee Purple" and grow darker colored heirloom cultivars. You can harvest all tomatoes no matter what color they are- blindfolded. Give them a gentle squeeze and if they give like a ripe avocado or peach, and release *easily* from the vine when you tilt it up, then it's ready to eat.

  • @christieharrison9542

    @christieharrison9542

    20 күн бұрын

    @@violetviolet888all heirlooms were hybrids at some point

  • @DatKrayon
    @DatKrayon20 күн бұрын

    For whoever need it: If you find a really nice tomato variety and want to save seed, don't just scrape the seeds on a paper towel. They will stick to the towel and the goo around the seeds inhibits germination later on, so you would need to sow more seed to guarantee success. Instead, scrape out the seeds with the goo, add a bit of water and put that in a jar covered with a bound cloth. Let that sit in a warm place and start to ferment for ~5-7 days and shake up every few days. If you pass that trough a strainer you'll get perfectly goo-less seeds that you can then dry without them sticking

  • @andysplants

    @andysplants

    9 сағат бұрын

    Darn! I already did some on a paper towel, but I smushed/smeared them until the goo came off, so they look relatively clean. Do you think they might still be somewhat usable even though they didn't ferment like you described? Or should I try again? Theyre just for personal use so it's not a huge deal if they don't have the best germination rate, but if they won't germinate at all I'd better save a new batch of seeds! I'm growing 22 varieties this year and I definitely want to save se3d to grow some of the same ones next year!:)

  • @missinglinq
    @missinglinq21 күн бұрын

    Home grown tomatoes are such a treat. Incomparable to store bought.

  • @incendiary6243

    @incendiary6243

    21 күн бұрын

    I could eat homegrown tomatoes like an apple

  • @MIKAEL212345

    @MIKAEL212345

    21 күн бұрын

    I must be the odd one out, cause I was so excited when I tried home grown tomatoes, and they looked fine but they tasted the same as a regular tomato.

  • @marthasundquist5761

    @marthasundquist5761

    21 күн бұрын

    ​@MIKAEL212345 were they 'heirloom' type or the standard around my part of the country.. Celebrity variety, or big boys, or some such? Another thought...did you pick them ripened on the vine or pick at first blush(to avoid critters getting them) and .aybe not wait quite long enough for them to ripen. I find the bigger best difference when testing heirlooms ...only store-bought I can handle are cherry type tomatoes as they retain more flavor than slicing varieties do.

  • @MIKAEL212345

    @MIKAEL212345

    21 күн бұрын

    @@marthasundquist5761 I don't remember exactly since it was last year, but I remember picking them multiple times over the summer. The first ones were definitely worse than the latter ones. My mother liked them so she is growing them again this year so I will have another chance to try them. I think this time I will do one of those blind tests that I see Ethan do with the "pick 2 of each, mix them up, pull one out then try to guess which is which" method. Thank you for the help

  • @RebelSoul_

    @RebelSoul_

    20 күн бұрын

    Depends on the tomato you grew. I jave some that taste sweet some that are almost salty and a mix of a few others.​@MIKAEL212345

  • @randolphpinkle4482
    @randolphpinkle448221 күн бұрын

    Some people dislike tomatoes because they've never tasted a perfectly ripe one off the vine. It's like the humble banana. I didn't truly taste a banana until I picked one off a tree in Sri Lanka. Orange skinned and small, it was a revelation.

  • @karminiparsan9256

    @karminiparsan9256

    21 күн бұрын

    Any fruit straight from the tree. I am from the Caribbean so we are blessed

  • @kjdude8765

    @kjdude8765

    21 күн бұрын

    ​@@karminiparsan9256I'll never forget the fresh bananas I had right off the bunch in the Carribean. What a treat.

  • @DMTSSOUPKITCHEN

    @DMTSSOUPKITCHEN

    21 күн бұрын

    You are blessed!!!

  • @Imbatmn57

    @Imbatmn57

    20 күн бұрын

    I miss the bananas the us used to have before they went extinct, its the banana that banana flavoring mimics. I think i ate those bananas before they went extinct.

  • @jr8260

    @jr8260

    20 күн бұрын

    ​@Imbatmn57 I believe you are talking about the Gros Michel variety, which is not extinct. It is still grown all over the world but in small batches as large plantations are susceptible to the Panama disease. You could still have it if you travel.

  • @bridgiesue7
    @bridgiesue721 күн бұрын

    No way Kevin was featured 😂 I've been subbed to him for years, totally was not expecting this colab!

  • @PersiAndLeo

    @PersiAndLeo

    20 күн бұрын

    You mean Eric, right? 🤣

  • @bridgiesue7

    @bridgiesue7

    20 күн бұрын

    @@PersiAndLeo ah yes, excuse me, Eric. The shamamalay gardener.

  • @Lexlugr

    @Lexlugr

    6 күн бұрын

    He finally figured out what do do with his tomato trees lol

  • @PersiAndLeo

    @PersiAndLeo

    5 күн бұрын

    @@Lexlugr *cough* you mean Eric *cough cough*

  • @Lexlugr

    @Lexlugr

    5 күн бұрын

    @@PersiAndLeo haha. Yes

  • @jacksonsanborn246
    @jacksonsanborn24621 күн бұрын

    1:48 minor correction. Gooseberries are NOT related to nightshades. Physalis Peruviana common called the misnomer “Cape Gooseberry” is a relative of ground cherries which is a tomatillo like plant in the nightshade family. True Gooseberries are in the currant family and do not have a papery husk as is common with nightshade fruits.

  • @ludwigiapilosa508

    @ludwigiapilosa508

    21 күн бұрын

    Correction to your correction: specific epithets (species names) are not capitalized.

  • @violetviolet888

    @violetviolet888

    20 күн бұрын

    Always appreciate fellow plant people who understand the value of Scientific names for plants. And in this case, plants that yield fruit. @ludwigiapilosa508 is correct, it is _Physalis peruviana_ - not Physalis Peruviana.

  • @DD-DD-DD

    @DD-DD-DD

    20 күн бұрын

    This is a cage match between pedants 🤣

  • @-Noble

    @-Noble

    20 күн бұрын

    also, aren't tomatoes considered fruits?

  • @ludwigiapilosa508

    @ludwigiapilosa508

    20 күн бұрын

    @@-Noble botanically, yes

  • @Crowbars2
    @Crowbars220 күн бұрын

    Another reason why people were scared of tomatoes during and before the early 1800's was because not only did they _think_ they were poisonous, they also appeared to be poisonous as well. Tomatoes are quite acidic, and when eaten on pewter plates like many wealthy people did during and before the 1800's, it leached lead (and possibly antimony) from the pewter plates, causing many cases of lead poisoning. This lead people to believe that the tomatoes themselves were poisonous, rather than the plates they ate off of.

  • @Jack-vk5ko

    @Jack-vk5ko

    20 күн бұрын

    I thought it was because of the use of copper pans, which the tomato acid would form copper salts, which causes copper poisoning. If it was lead from the plates, that should have been a lot slower and harder to pinpoint, where as the side effects of copper salts would be noticeable after ingestion. It's still a risk today if you use copper pots/pans and they're damaged.

  • @Crowbars2

    @Crowbars2

    20 күн бұрын

    ​@@Jack-vk5ko I did some googling to double-check, and it confirms that when tomatoes were eaten off of pewter plates, the acidity of the tomatoes caused significant amounts of lead to leach from the plates, leading to lead poisoning, which contributed to the belief that tomatoes were poisonous. When it comes to copper cookware, copper toxicity usually occurs from chronic exposure to small amounts of copper rather than acute poisoning, which is rare and would require ingesting several grams of copper salts at once. Chronic copper poisoning occurs over time, often from using unlined copper cookware, but it typically takes several months to years to become apparent. So, while both lead from pewter plates and copper from cookware can cause poisoning, when it comes to the early 1800's, the main problem back then was the lead from pewter plates, since they were so widely used by wealthy people, who were also the types of people to be able to afford to import these fancy new berry things from the New World being grown in Southern Europe.

  • @mattia_carciola

    @mattia_carciola

    19 күн бұрын

    @@Jack-vk5ko Moreover, copper oxidize to becoming blue-green, and you'd basically bring the original colour back, so it's something easily noticeable on the spot you'll remember after feeling sick and link those events (even if you got food poisoning from something else).

  • @OptionallySavage

    @OptionallySavage

    19 күн бұрын

    So you're telling me nobody ate dishes seasoned with citrus juices or vinegar? Or are you saying anyone that did became sick from heavy metal poisoning and people didn't notice the reason why?

  • @mattia_carciola

    @mattia_carciola

    19 күн бұрын

    @@OptionallySavage it wasn't as likely to be the main part of a dish, or at least enough to affect the total pH this much, being seasonings they were kinda everywhere so no way to track it back to them and yes, lead exposure due to their dishes and chalices (because it was a luxury alloy, not as much as silverware but still not for "commoners"), as wine is also acidic, was a serious social issue, even though something chronic and widespread is easily brushed off as "normal" (like cancer could be nowadays, we know risk factors, but many are things everyone do so most of us wouldn't be surprised to end up in the wrong side of the statistic)

  • @elias7065
    @elias706515 күн бұрын

    I work at farmers markets in Germany and I love that you show flawed tomatoes in your video. It is so important for people to understand that flawed fruit and vegetables are perfectly fine.

  • @Caffeine.And.Carvings

    @Caffeine.And.Carvings

    9 күн бұрын

    We have those american style Farmers markets in Germany? Born and raised here, I only know the Turkish markets, which basically aell the same stuff as supermarkets

  • @elias7065

    @elias7065

    8 күн бұрын

    @@Caffeine.And.Carvings yeah, look it up, it’s called Wochenmarkt. If you want to get fresh local produce and delicacies, it’s the place to go.

  • @yarondavidson6434

    @yarondavidson6434

    7 күн бұрын

    He shows flawed tomatoes, and shows cutting/slicing them in general, but doesn't actually show dealing with the flaws in any way. On the one hand he never shows actually eating any of the flawed bits, so not showing these are safe to eat. But on the other hand he also never shows cleaning/removing around the flaws, so not showing how exact or limiting or wasteful handling the flaws is. I'd have appreciated seeing something on that. Otherwise it really doesn't help "for people to understand that flaws fruit and vegetables are perfectly fine". That's a great expensive tomato, you just need to throw away about a half to third of it before using (so much more expensive than you think and also requires more work than if it wasn't flawed), may still be OK, but isn't "perfectly fine".

  • @elias7065

    @elias7065

    4 күн бұрын

    @@yarondavidson6434 the American mind can’t fathom that you can eat blemished produce

  • @themarlboromandalorian

    @themarlboromandalorian

    2 күн бұрын

    The only good tomato is an ugly tomato.

  • @alexaramachandran7392
    @alexaramachandran739221 күн бұрын

    growing & eating your own tomatoes is a joy unlike any other

  • @danilooliveira6580

    @danilooliveira6580

    21 күн бұрын

    I tried, twice, they just refuse to stay alive. tomatoes either grow like weed or die if you look at them wrong, there is no middle ground.

  • @bbrainstormer2036

    @bbrainstormer2036

    20 күн бұрын

    @@danilooliveira6580 They need heat.

  • @danilooliveira6580

    @danilooliveira6580

    20 күн бұрын

    @@bbrainstormer2036 I live in Brazil, they got plenty of heat. Unless they were not getting enough sun since the pitanga tree I have in my backyard steals most of the sunlight

  • @quirkyviper

    @quirkyviper

    20 күн бұрын

    ​@danilooliveira6580 oh yeah, they definitely need sun. Especially to ripen. But also too much heat (I think between 85-90 degrees F) can stunt growth. We get temps over 100 here so I plant mine early when it's in the 70s so they are strong by the time the hot heat kicks in. They still grow but it's slower than in the spring.

  • @danilooliveira6580

    @danilooliveira6580

    20 күн бұрын

    @@quirkyviper then I'll probably need to plant them by mid autumn and try to find a spot that still gets a lot of sunlight

  • @MajoraZ
    @MajoraZ20 күн бұрын

    To be clear "Tomatl" in Nahuatl, the Aztec language, referred to Tomatillos! What we call "Tomatoes" today would have been "Xitomatl": See David Bowles's Medium post for more on the etymology. Also, while in this case culinary history is a tiny part of the video in general, I do wish that with New World crops, people spoke more about their Pre-Columbian use, not just them originating in the Americas and then solely talking about their use in Eurasia: Ancient Americas for example has a 40 min video on Chocolate's culinary, economic, and ritual use by Mesoamerican civilizations like the Aztec and Maya (I helped write that video!). In general, there's a lot more info out there then you might expect on botany and horticulture by Mesoamerican civilizations, the Aztec especially, because the Columbian exchange was NOT just Spain etc exporting New World crops, but also seeking their botanical and medical knowledge, the Aztec especially having really developed sciences for those areas, with botanical gardens acting as sites of study and for experimentation and to stock medical herbs, hydroponics, etc. The rest of this comment will be a bigger explanation of that, if anybody is curious! ------- Mesoamerican city planning in general had a big emphasis on incorporating open and naturalistic or green spaces into urban areas, with city centers organizing temples, palaces, etc around plazas, and palaces in turn having open-air courtyards rooms were arranged around, with gardens often being built into communal spaces or inside or around palaces. Around the main urban core of cities, you then radial suburbs of commoner residences extending out, interspersed with agricultural land or managed natural reserves and agroforestry. But the Aztec sort of took this to another level. Most of Tenochtitlan, the Aztec capital (which was located in the middle of a lake, now drained) was built out of artificial islands known as chinampas, which involved staking out the shallow lakebed, filling it with layers of soil and vegetative matter, and then anchoring it to the lakebed via planting Willow trees; with canals left between the plots. This used both to make extra urban/residential land and as hydroponic farms, all while his used local soils, preserving the existing ecology with fish and amphibians, the trees acting as wind breakers and the canals/plots as flood management. So a huge amount of the city was criss-crossed with Venice like canals that ran through suburbs with tons of greenery and flowers, and then you also had massive, richly painted palace and temple complexes, giant markets, aqueducts, royal zoos, aquariums, aviaries, etc. It was REALLY common for Aztec rulers to have giant botanical gardens built into palaces or royal retreats: At Huaxtepec, Moctezuma II had a royal botanical garden that covered 10 square kilometers with over 2000 kinds of plants, some of which were intentionally brought in from different climates to see if they would grow there. At Texcotzinco, a site of a royal palace retreat, baths, and gardens for Nezahualcoyotl, the most famous king of the second most powerful Aztec city, Texcoco; the bathes and gardens were fed water via a 5 mile long series of aqauaducts, which at some points rose 150 feet off the ground and had a series of pools and channels to regulate the flow rate. This aqueduct then formed a circuit around the hilltop the palace and baths were at, where the water flowed into fountains and shrines with painted frescos and sculptures, and then finally formed artificial waterfalls that watered the terraced gardens at the hills base, which had different sections to emulate different Mexican biomes and ecosystems. As the playing around with ecology and growing conditions implies, a lot of these royal gardens weren't just recreational elite pleasures, but were actually a precursor to modern academic botanical gardens (indeed, it's been suggested the first European examples of that, which show up in Europe within the next century or so, were inspired by Aztec examples, since there's some other academic borrowing of botanical science, which I'll get back to): You had them stocking plants used for medical purposes, experimenting with growing conditions and properties, sorting them into taxonomic systems (not phylogentically, because no theory of natural selection, but still a formal taxonomic system, even with a binominal naming scheme!) etc! I don't know if we have sources discussing the management of them, but we know that Moctezuma's zoo and aviary had full time staff to care for animals and (take this with a grain of salt as I can't relocate the source, I may be thinking of Jaguar remains at the Templo Mayor or at Teotihuacan) there's even been Jaguar remains found that had healed surgical wounds, so there surely would have been career botanists caring for and overseeing things. Sadly, of course, almost all Prehispanic Mesoamerican books and documents were burned by the Spanish, but we do have some surviving botanical documentation, mostly from sources with joint Aztec-Spanish authorship made during the early colonial period, such as the Badianus Manuscript and books 10 and 11 in the Florentine Codex. Both of these sources also describe a ton of pharmaceutical and medical applications for plants and herbs, with the Aztec also having really developed medical and sanitation practices for the time (there was an entire fleet of civil servants that washed buildings and streets and collected waste from public toilets to reuse for fertilizers and dyes, to name one example), with tons of toothpastes, mouthwashes, soaps, colognes, perfumes, laxatives, and ointments made from plants; recorded surgeries for skin grafts, eye surgeries, the first recorded use of intramedullary nails to set broken bones, better understanding of the circulatory system then Europe at the time (perhaps not surprising given sacrifices...), etc. Francico Hernandez, the personal naturalist and physician to Philip II, actually traveled to Mexico and documented Aztec medicine, botany, and zoology (sadly only some of his records on this survive) and begrudgingly admitted Aztec sciences here were better then Spain's, something Cortes and Motolinía also claimed. And then there's all the ways flowers and plants played into art and poetry and such. People love to talk about sacrifice and skulls and such with the Aztec, but ANY sort of context you could possible imagine they'd find a way to slap flowers or birds/feathers or jade into things artistically, and those 3 things were seen as the prime symbols of luxury and elegance, in the same way we talk about Gold or Diamonds. Newborn children were talked about by their parents in nursery songs as bundles of jade or flowers or precious feathers, The word for "poetry" in Nahuatl/the Aztec language literally meant "flowery song", soldiers who died in combat were reborn as hummingbirds or butterflies to suckle on nectar in a floral solar afterlife; while another afterlife, Tlalocan, was a tropical mountain paradise with lakes, streams, and springs, which many royal botanical gardens were an emulation of. For people who wanna read more on this, I recommend "An Aztec Herbal: The Classic Codex of 1552" (an annotated translation of the Badianus manuscript) and "Flora of the Codex Cruz-Badianus" (there's also some high res color scans of the original Badianus manuscript online on the INAH's mediateca site); Book 10/11 of the Florentine Codex, "Public Health in Aztec Society", "Aztec Medicine by Francisco Guerra" (though it repeats outdated, disproven info re: inflated sacrifice totals), "Empirical Aztec Medicine by Bernard R. Ortiz de Montellano", and "Precious Beauty: The Aesthetic and Economic Value of Aztec Gardens" (and a lot of papers/books by Susan Toby Evans, who is an expert on mesoamerican gardens and palaces), and Kelly McDonough and Enrique Rodriguez-Alegria's research on testing Aztec medical treatments. A lot of this stuff is published online for free as open access research, too. I also have extended writeups about this I've made myself (I do essays and help history/archeology channels with stuff on Mesoamerica), if people want that messag me on twitte, I'm Majora__Z

  • @kovial6944

    @kovial6944

    20 күн бұрын

    Thank you for sharing all this information!! Learned a lot from it. It’s such a shame so much of Mesoamerican history and knowledge has been lost due to colonialism, and on top of that, what we do know is not widely shared so we can learn from it. As someone from Chile and has lived and traveled around the globe, it aggravates me how much of what is taught is primarily or almost exclusively through a European/Western lens. People across the world have so much to offer, we as humans should learn to embrace our collective past and learnings!!

  • @Pesky_demon

    @Pesky_demon

    20 күн бұрын

    👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽

  • @Tinil0

    @Tinil0

    20 күн бұрын

    Hoping this gets pinned!

  • @JamesonWilde

    @JamesonWilde

    20 күн бұрын

    This is spectacular. Thanks for this!

  • @bjaminf113

    @bjaminf113

    20 күн бұрын

    Fascinating read!

  • @JohnHausser
    @JohnHausser19 күн бұрын

    🇮🇹: 🍅 is deeply part of our History Food historians : LOL

  • @blrfivvuvu

    @blrfivvuvu

    19 күн бұрын

    To be fair, it is a part of their recent history and totally changed their cuisine, shaping what they have today, sure, tomatoes did not originate there but it's still very culturally significant to them. Just like hot peppers were not original from India, but still present in almost each one of their meals

  • @TheRealJBMcMunn

    @TheRealJBMcMunn

    10 күн бұрын

    ​@@blrfivvuvuYeah but the Italians act like they struck a rock and out popped tomatoes.

  • @Matty002

    @Matty002

    5 күн бұрын

    ​@@TheRealJBMcMunnyeah the old world loves to gloat about their cuisines but they literally owe it all to plants native americans domesticated, and we get no credit

  • @daveski99x
    @daveski99x18 күн бұрын

    The purple tomato he likes so much is called Cherokee Purple in NJ. I have 4 of those, but I'm still waiting for them to ripen. Unfortunately, if I fully ripen on the vine, the mockingbirds come and ruin the fruit. I lost a lot 2 years ago.

  • @be.A.b

    @be.A.b

    Күн бұрын

    They’re a different variety entirely. There’s an estimated 10,000 tomato varieties in the world! 500 that are actually available for growers

  • @stephanromero4979
    @stephanromero497921 күн бұрын

    I heard a lot of the tomato varieties in the US are made, not with taste in mind, but with shelf life and ease of cultivation

  • @karminiparsan9256

    @karminiparsan9256

    21 күн бұрын

    Not forgetting eye appeal😊

  • @rnkelly36

    @rnkelly36

    21 күн бұрын

    That is a business thing. Most grocery stores world wide source from producers that have tomatoes that are grown for shelf life and consistency. Personally I grow various tomatoes to see which grows and taste better in my area and which are less a drag on fertilization and soil types. More stores that source locally are able to have more varieties that are friendly with local ecology. Some varieties grow better in different soil types. The US is so big with many different climate and agricultural zones so different varieties.

  • @jujube2407

    @jujube2407

    21 күн бұрын

    In the grocery store... 100%

  • @rnkelly36

    @rnkelly36

    21 күн бұрын

    @@jujube2407 Sort of depends on the store but yeah. Big store chains tend to source cheapest and from large producers. Local grocery stores and farmers markets try to source closer and from local "within the area" producers. On producers or farms it is up to how their tomato market supports the farm. With my small garden having tomatoes that rot fast is not fun because I cant eat them fast enough and my neighbors get tired of me leaving veggies on their doorsteps, haha. Ethan basically described why grocery store tomatoes lack a flavor contrast. It is because they have to be stored.

  • @jujube2407

    @jujube2407

    21 күн бұрын

    @rnkelly36 nost grocery stores thst carry local farmers mean within 150 miles... those are still picked green... and most of them( not allllll) are hybrids... some hybrids are good... but most of them are not nearly as good as heirlooms taste wise... he's got tiki tomatos that are a trade marked commercially grown tomato... either his farmer lied to him and they aren't tiki... or they are tiki and he's a conventional grocery farmer and these are his "waste" that is still good enough to sell...but by far is not going to beat home grown heirlooms in quality and taste... that lemon boy ahould.not have the word acid anywhere near its description in flavor either... I question the ethics of the farmers at his market...

  • @Kenxclout
    @Kenxclout21 күн бұрын

    What type of tomato smells best? A Roma

  • @avanap8096

    @avanap8096

    17 күн бұрын

    Whatever one you brush against in the garden! I do grow Roma for sauces and chutneys

  • @fransvanoostveen7522

    @fransvanoostveen7522

    14 күн бұрын

    Underrated comment 😂

  • @vespasiancloscan7077

    @vespasiancloscan7077

    14 күн бұрын

    there are basically two schools of thought

  • @PersiAndLeo
    @PersiAndLeo20 күн бұрын

    Man, never expected to see Eric make an appearance on an Ethan Chlebowski video, Epic Gardening is spreading and I love it!

  • @autumnelaines

    @autumnelaines

    18 күн бұрын

    😂

  • @Neenerella333

    @Neenerella333

    8 күн бұрын

    "My worlds are colliding!!!"

  • @ivacheung792
    @ivacheung79220 күн бұрын

    Quick note about vine ripening: you don't have to fully ripen tomatoes on the vine to get maximum flavour. When they're about halfway ripe, they've got all they need from the plant to completely develop their flavour. You can pick them then and let them fully ripen on your kitchen counter.

  • @MissGimpsAlot

    @MissGimpsAlot

    20 күн бұрын

    It's said to let the rest upside down. Id like to know if that actually helps 🤔

  • @edrupp2318

    @edrupp2318

    20 күн бұрын

    That's really good to know. When my homegrown tomatoes ripen on the vine, its a constant race between me and the mockingbirds to see who gets them first. Usually its the nefarious mockingbird!

  • @sarahwatts7152

    @sarahwatts7152

    20 күн бұрын

    I would add not to let them ripen on things like sheet trays - tomatoes cause some sheet trays to rust because of the water and the acid

  • @swcoder

    @swcoder

    20 күн бұрын

    @@MissGimpsAlot I think that is to minimize bruising. Less contact, and more air flow.

  • @kutmulc

    @kutmulc

    15 күн бұрын

    @@MissGimpsAlotit's because they ripen from the bottom up, so if the bottom of the tomato is sitting on your counter, it can bruise by the time the tomato is fully ripe

  • @josephbowers9111
    @josephbowers911121 күн бұрын

    Ethan- you are the modern day Alton Brown, taking us on deep dives into the history, varieties, and uses of multiple individual ingredients.

  • @elyolchie

    @elyolchie

    20 күн бұрын

    Ethan and Adam Ragusea. They dont teach cooking, they teach food

  • @TundieRice

    @TundieRice

    20 күн бұрын

    Alton Brown would salt and pepper his BLT tomatoes 👀

  • @nyanuwu4209

    @nyanuwu4209

    20 күн бұрын

    No he isn't. Alton Brown's still alive.

  • @JohnHausser

    @JohnHausser

    19 күн бұрын

    He should make regular collaborations with Kenji Lopez-Alt

  • @HickoryDickory86
    @HickoryDickory8619 күн бұрын

    For those who like growing their own tomatoes, Joseph Lofthouse, who advocates for landrace gardening, has reintroduced wild tomato genetics from South America and allowed them to freely (he calls it "promiscuously") pollinate with many different heirloom varieties. You can get some of his seeds if you want to experiment and see what comes up. You might be able to develop new, robust varieties that are highly adapted to your area.

  • @Neenerella333

    @Neenerella333

    8 күн бұрын

    My favorite low desert variety is Ciudad Victoria, from Chiapas. They are a relentless, thin skinned hundreds style. While only semi wild, the flavor is extraordinary and they readily reseed. One packet from Native Seeds/SEARCH out of Tucson came back every year for 12 years.

  • @MrTStat
    @MrTStat20 күн бұрын

    I grow a single tomato plant all the time on my balcony not a ton of space for gardening but the tomatoes I grow always taste incredible

  • @JohnHausser

    @JohnHausser

    8 күн бұрын

    What’s the difference between a Cowboys fan and a tomato plant ?

  • @blackkennedy3966

    @blackkennedy3966

    Күн бұрын

    ⁠@@JohnHausser the tomato plant is less inbred 😂

  • @shirleyjchu
    @shirleyjchu21 күн бұрын

    This is the collab I did not expect and I LOVE it! I learned a lot from Kevin @ Epic Gardening and am growing my own tomatoes for the purpose of farm-to-table gardening/cooking. Great episode, Ethan!

  • @francisrodriguez2369
    @francisrodriguez236921 күн бұрын

    Tomatoes are the only vegetable i find worth growing at home. It's such a huge difference vs grocery. Great video. Regarding refrigeration, my experience is it affects texture more than flavor (if you let them come back to room temp) and is dependent on how cold your fridge is. A very cold fridge seems to do more damage and lead to a worse quality.

  • @gohabs9

    @gohabs9

    20 күн бұрын

    GARLIC has to be right up there in the worth growing at home discussion. Its so easy to grow, stores very well, and unbeatable taste, plus you get to enjoy garlic scapes, early leaves, and, green garlic - in addition to the bulbs. Plus the value, good garlic is quite expensive in my area yet grows ultra easy.

  • @bbrainstormer2036

    @bbrainstormer2036

    20 күн бұрын

    Homegrown potatoes are amazing as well

  • @2toeninja

    @2toeninja

    20 күн бұрын

    Agree

  • @francisrodriguez2369

    @francisrodriguez2369

    20 күн бұрын

    @@bbrainstormer2036 really? i'm surprised but i'll try to track some down and give them a try.

  • @juliantheapostate8295

    @juliantheapostate8295

    17 күн бұрын

    They're fruit. Which is why they don't spoil as quickly out of the fridge

  • @InfiniteQuest86
    @InfiniteQuest8620 күн бұрын

    I've seen so many of these videos now. But I'm still in complete awe at how much food he can shove into his mouth in a single bite. He should go competitive eater. Dude can literally shove an entire sandwich into his mouth in one bite. Incredible.

  • @Write-me_EthanChlebowski

    @Write-me_EthanChlebowski

    15 сағат бұрын

    ❤❤❤🎉😊

  • @Write-me_EthanChlebowski

    @Write-me_EthanChlebowski

    15 сағат бұрын

    ❤❤❤🎉

  • @dinlupus3196
    @dinlupus319620 күн бұрын

    one important thing to take notice if you are going to grow your own tomatoes is that they tend to absorb a lot of water really fast,they can swell in the course of one night and in doing so they don't absorb the plant nutrients as well and sometimes they can burst due to the excesive humidity so when the tomatoes absorb too much water they get picked up faster and they dont mature so well. keep the humidity levels in your tomato plant stable so it can grow properly and get a better taste. note: sweet peppers work that way too

  • @nicoskefalas
    @nicoskefalas21 күн бұрын

    Hey Ethan! Just wanna say I love these deep dives. Keep em coming 😃

  • @bridgiesue7

    @bridgiesue7

    21 күн бұрын

    My boyfriend and I have been binge watching them lately! I'm an absolute tomato maniac and I literally texted him "Ethan posted a tomato video!" We followed his sweet potato fries experiments last night and they turned out great!

  • @Krisp.food23
    @Krisp.food2320 күн бұрын

    I really love these deep dive food videos. Thanks for continuing to make them with such high quality in both information and testing! Could you maybe edit the volume of the eating noises to be quieter for those of us who are bothered by them?

  • @r3dp9
    @r3dp920 күн бұрын

    I really appreciate that this guy does the experiments himself, and learns lessons while also not leaping to conclusions. It's a really good approach to life in general, not just cooking.

  • @Vavayalaaaaa
    @Vavayalaaaaa20 күн бұрын

    Man. I can't believe I spent half an hour watching Valtteri Bottas talking about tomatoes. Joking aside, thank you for an informative video. I really learned a lot today. I appreciate this so much

  • @thechugdude
    @thechugdude21 күн бұрын

    A tomato sandwich on white bread with salt, pepper, and a healthy slathering of Duke's mayo is a Southern classic.

  • @Mixxie67

    @Mixxie67

    20 күн бұрын

    It’s not just a Southern thing. I live in Rhode Island and it’s a classic here. I’ve been eating tomato sandwiches since I was kid in the ‘70’s in Swansea,Ma.

  • @thechugdude

    @thechugdude

    20 күн бұрын

    @@Mixxie67 Hell yea

  • @dayleennis7662

    @dayleennis7662

    20 күн бұрын

    You are so right. A good tomato doesn’t need bacon! But requires a good mayo!

  • @joshuawilliams6866

    @joshuawilliams6866

    20 күн бұрын

    That and banana sandwiches

  • @violetviolet888

    @violetviolet888

    20 күн бұрын

    @thechugdude: Take it to the next level. Lightly salt the tomato slices 10 minutes before putting the rest of it together. And add fresh basil leaves.

  • @drew899
    @drew89920 күн бұрын

    These ingredient deep dives are so far the only thing on KZread that has gotten me interested in actually cooking. It would be interesting to see you make a series about how to build your own rubs, seasonings, and sauces.

  • @Write-me_EthanChlebowski

    @Write-me_EthanChlebowski

    15 сағат бұрын

    ❤❤❤🎉😊

  • @Robertuns18
    @Robertuns1820 күн бұрын

    In Catalonia (Barcelona), we have our very special type of tomatoes that are use to spread over bread just like you would do with butter. It's a national dish called Pa amb Tomàquet (literally bread with tomato) and I encourage you to try it. This tomato has almost no skin at all, and all of it is juice so ideally you don't throw any of it. They are slightly larger than cherry tomatoes and then the bread is seasoned with olive oil and salt, and usually you would spread half a garlic clove before as well!

  • @Write-me_EthanChlebowski

    @Write-me_EthanChlebowski

    15 сағат бұрын

    ❤❤❤❤🎉👆

  • @Grouch3682
    @Grouch368220 күн бұрын

    Absolutely genius to have someone who GROWS the ingredients that we cook with highlighted

  • @Write-me_EthanChlebowski

    @Write-me_EthanChlebowski

    15 сағат бұрын

    ❤❤❤😊👆

  • @ColdWindPhoenix84
    @ColdWindPhoenix8420 күн бұрын

    That was an amazing plug for your second channel, I had no idea you had a second channel, and now I need to go check it out. Thank you, and fantastic work on this video.

  • @alinnn4798
    @alinnn479821 күн бұрын

    always going extra with the info and the effort in the videos! thats why i m subbed! much love we apreciate it❤

  • @ethanp1erce
    @ethanp1erce21 күн бұрын

    12:25 this flavor/temperature relationship applies to a lot of things. A classic common example is beer, in the USA beer is on average, brewed with less flavor, and meant to be drank cold. Whereas many countries brew more flavorful beer and serve it warmer to experience those flavors at peak. Typed as I sip my Columbia La Violeta Natural Processed coffee, at room temp of course. To experience and appreciate the sangria like fruitiness it provides. When hot, it tastes like coffee, with a hint of fruit. At room temp, punchy fruit juice.

  • @themarlboromandalorian

    @themarlboromandalorian

    2 күн бұрын

    Eh... Commercialised American beer. We got plenty of craft beer the country over which is pretty flavourful. But we do typically like our drinks cold. I do appreciate a beer more if it's decent at any temperature.

  • @ethanp1erce

    @ethanp1erce

    Күн бұрын

    @@themarlboromandalorian I agree! The commercial beer is what I was alluding to.

  • @rud
    @rud19 күн бұрын

    My aunt have grown the green striped tomato for 20 years(at least) in her orangery, saved the seeds every year. it is probably the only time where I am quite happy eating a tomato just by itself, perhaps with a bit on salt on.

  • @Tallie602

    @Tallie602

    11 күн бұрын

    Sounds sooo good! Add lemon too and oh my god. This comes from someone who thinks lemons overpowers the taste from dishes!

  • @JohnHausser

    @JohnHausser

    8 күн бұрын

    Your little aunty would be proud of you

  • @Kaimorai
    @Kaimorai21 күн бұрын

    I love these informational videos- I want to become a better cook but that's not easy when you can't buy all varieties of ingredients and try them! This is so helpful!

  • @叵
    @叵11 күн бұрын

    Ethan's ability to taste test such a variety in one go is impressive. 😂

  • @karminiparsan9256
    @karminiparsan925621 күн бұрын

    We here in the Caribbean do not have such large tomatoes..but we do have very sweet and juicy ones available straight from farmers at the markets. Lucky us❤❤❤

  • @qapla
    @qapla20 күн бұрын

    Good video, Ethan. Tomatoes are so versatile and can carry the meal or be the background flavor equally well. Here are a couple things you could/should try: 1) when buying grocery store tomatoes for that BLT, sear the tomato slices for a few seconds before putting them on the sandwich ... it will enhance their flavor quite a bit 2) put slices of tomatoes in between the slices of cheese when you make grilled cheese. You can do this with them cold. at room temperature or seared. Maybe you could do a video showing how to make tomato paste from fresh tomatoes.

  • @danilincks5809
    @danilincks580920 күн бұрын

    Two of my favorite creators collab! How awesome! I have learned so much from both of you

  • @Fisack_
    @Fisack_21 күн бұрын

    I've been interested in making my own tomato sauce and this helped to clarify a lot of misinformation out there. Great work!

  • @arushigupta4235
    @arushigupta423521 күн бұрын

    Seriously, you pick the best topics

  • @patrickr9716
    @patrickr971620 күн бұрын

    Cherokee Purple is hands down my favorite tomato variety. If you can find some at your farmers market they are worth a try.

  • @testingmysoup5678

    @testingmysoup5678

    3 күн бұрын

    Just made a tomato corn sweet onion salad with some feta and sumac with the Cherokees. It's a great summer salad

  • @scalzochris
    @scalzochris19 күн бұрын

    Thanks again for your videos Ethan. Great content, always very thorough and a great edit. Simple graphics, perfectly done.

  • @CoffeeStreetWC
    @CoffeeStreetWC9 күн бұрын

    I look forward to these Masterclass videos from you Ethan! I always learn so much. Thanks a million always for your content!

  • @1sthename70
    @1sthename7021 күн бұрын

    I take culinary in high school, and your videos are so amazing that my teacher would use some of your videos to demonstrate things like your omelet video

  • @Write-me_EthanChlebowski

    @Write-me_EthanChlebowski

    15 сағат бұрын

    ❤❤❤🎉👆

  • @avalerionbass
    @avalerionbass20 күн бұрын

    Fun fact: People used to think tomatoes were poisonous because plates were made out of pewter, which contained lead. The acidity of the tomato leeched the lead from the plate and caused people to get sick.

  • @Write-me_EthanChlebowski

    @Write-me_EthanChlebowski

    15 сағат бұрын

    ❤❤❤🎉😊

  • @SarahBahou
    @SarahBahou9 күн бұрын

    Hi, fellow Texan! I'm in Houston and I started my first garden this year and it's been a learning experience! I love these deep dives!!

  • @keborn6teen
    @keborn6teen14 күн бұрын

    The collab I never knew I needed. Glad to see you and Kevin in this vid!

  • @jadegeko
    @jadegeko21 күн бұрын

    lol the special I've been waiting my whole life for! fr fresh tomato on grainy toast with mayo and pepper is one of my favourite snacks! I recently brought home some campari that reminded me what tomatoes used to smell like! they were amazing!

  • @Zmac808
    @Zmac80820 күн бұрын

    As someone who has eaten grocery store, farmers market, and straight from my mom’s garden, still not a tomato fan but I really appreciated learning about them.

  • @GreenWitch1
    @GreenWitch119 күн бұрын

    I love these deep dives on ingredients!!

  • @jessieconejo8636
    @jessieconejo86369 күн бұрын

    Love the research on your video! And the knowledge yet REALNESS that hits the normal home cook.

  • @josephsmith2084
    @josephsmith208419 күн бұрын

    Knowledge is knowing tomato is a fruit. Wisdom is knowing not to put it in a fruit salad. Philosophy is wondering if ketchup is actually a smoothie

  • @skyydancer67

    @skyydancer67

    9 күн бұрын

    You have to be more specific with ketchup. Historically, it was NOT always a tomato product. 😂

  • @stevekirkby6570
    @stevekirkby657020 күн бұрын

    Nothing better than home grown and freshly picked - easy to grow in grow bags or pots, even if you have little space. I love all varieties - as long as they are from my own hand and soil. No chems! Oh god, the smell of them when you pick is just amazing.

  • @alecconrad7500
    @alecconrad750016 күн бұрын

    great video - took me a few sessions to get through it but was great info and well done

  • @Herobox-ju4zd
    @Herobox-ju4zd9 күн бұрын

    I grew Cherokee Purple tomatoes for the first time this year. It was the best tomato I ever tasted, cant wait to try some other heirlooms.

  • @moshebaum7612
    @moshebaum761221 күн бұрын

    Haven’t watched the video yet, but before I get convinced otherwise store bought tomatoes tend to taste like a basketball filled with watermelon juice texture water

  • @bridgiesue7
    @bridgiesue721 күн бұрын

    I'm eating homegrown tomatoes as we speak, and this video was posted like seconds ago. This was spooky hahaha

  • @nicoskefalas

    @nicoskefalas

    21 күн бұрын

    It’s so timely with tomato season upon us!! No more flavourless tomatoes for a couple of months!! 🎉

  • @HardCandy-d9q
    @HardCandy-d9q3 күн бұрын

    I like how you added Umami to sweet and sour as that’s the best way to describe the taste, most people just stick to sweet,sour/tart.. I agree you can’t beat a homegrown tomato and as an Italian I love making my Tomato Sauce for pasta from the garden as homegrown taste better in any use..

  • @ryancampbell2192
    @ryancampbell219220 күн бұрын

    Another massive difference between hot house & "farmer's market" tomatoes is the soil they're grown in. In the Midwest & Atlantic regions, the dark loamy soil provides a sweeter flavor than the more clay-like soil in the south which is more alkaline.

  • @Vladutz.19
    @Vladutz.1920 күн бұрын

    Bro. How many ads can you put in a friggin video? Tone it down! It disrupts the entire flow of the video.

  • @evilkillerwhale7078

    @evilkillerwhale7078

    18 күн бұрын

    I don't have ads. Get KZread premium

  • @diegofrana6137

    @diegofrana6137

    17 күн бұрын

    Use Firefox and plugins.

  • @brt5273

    @brt5273

    17 күн бұрын

    ​@@evilkillerwhale7078It's sooo nice😂😂😂

  • @m0nZt3r

    @m0nZt3r

    17 күн бұрын

    ​@@evilkillerwhale7078why would anyone do that lmao. Get revanced extended app, it's free KZread premium

  • @testingmysoup5678

    @testingmysoup5678

    3 күн бұрын

    Don't get KZread premium, just get a different browser. Brave has built in add blocking and you can play with the screen off, you just gotta look up the settings

  • @francesay8478
    @francesay847820 күн бұрын

    0:07 it's a fruit. And yeah botanical vs. culinary, blah blah blah, it's still a fruit and it's not the only fruit used in this manner. That distinction is silly.

  • @Carboncopier

    @Carboncopier

    15 күн бұрын

    Botanically speaking all fruits are vegetables. Literally all edible parts of a plant are technically vegetables. Also he goes over this like a minute more in the video. If you're going to nitpick try to be right.

  • @anthonyd4309
    @anthonyd430920 күн бұрын

    I love that you know how to take a nice big bite out of your food in your taste tests. No nibbling, just go for it!

  • @richardbernard6845
    @richardbernard684516 күн бұрын

    bravo, very well done Ethan🙂 Your deep dives are useful, informative, and uniquely differentiate you from everyone else.

  • @Dynasty1818
    @Dynasty181821 күн бұрын

    "One of the most popular vegetables" Ugh for god sake, tomato is a fruit, not a vegetable...but we USE them as vegetables.

  • @toddjenkins2561

    @toddjenkins2561

    21 күн бұрын

    There's really only a couple vegetables. So everything is treated as a vegetable for culinary purposes I guess

  • @ThornwoodDrive

    @ThornwoodDrive

    21 күн бұрын

    Watch to 2:20 seconds :)

  • @awaken6760

    @awaken6760

    21 күн бұрын

    Someone commented before watching the video

  • @baggydude7582

    @baggydude7582

    21 күн бұрын

    Watch the video first before you start complaining

  • @TheRealBlueJay

    @TheRealBlueJay

    21 күн бұрын

    Bro commented 3 seconds in without watching the video first 💀

  • @otterconnor942
    @otterconnor94220 күн бұрын

    What I think is the dumbest thing about the vegetable vs fruit debate is most people think of fruits as the plant candy, and veggies as the gross or savory parts of the plant, due to how we were raised. When it's literally fruits are the reproductive part of the plant, and veggies are everything else that is not the fruit. There can be sweet vegetables and savory fruits, and we need to disconnect how we were raised vs what reality is.

  • @arckinenso7615

    @arckinenso7615

    16 күн бұрын

    Or we can recognize that words can have multiple meanings, and it's more useful for most people to group food by flavor.

  • @howiedundat5495
    @howiedundat549520 күн бұрын

    Such a great video! Thank you for sharing. Huge tomato fan and will definitely try some of these you have shown.

  • @fariesz6786
    @fariesz678620 күн бұрын

    really nice comprehensive break-down, thanks. as a forager i would like to point out though that the fruit of _Atropa belladonna_ (deadly nightshade) do not taste bitter as you say but are in fact rather pleasantly sweet, which is what can make them particulary dangerous.

  • @TheGunnellClan
    @TheGunnellClan6 күн бұрын

    How am I subbed and only seeing this for the first time today? I feel like I usually am on top of all of your content!

  • @steev927
    @steev92720 күн бұрын

    Sungolds are my reason for believing that most people actually don't like tomatoes as much as they might claim... I've grown tomatoes for years for my family, but really don't like them that much, never did. Tomato growing got me into perennial herb gardening, which I love since I'm big into cooking and spices. The thing about Sungolds is that they were the first tomatoes I actually liked to eat, and it seems like the same story for everyone else. Grow them once, you grow them every year and they make all the pruning / watering, etc. worth it since they're like a garden treat.

  • @oliviam2580
    @oliviam258020 күн бұрын

    7:46 love that little shout out to Made With Lau, this channel and that channel keep me well fed and happy year round

  • @SarimDeLaurec
    @SarimDeLaurec20 күн бұрын

    One of the things I learned from this video: either some tomato varieties look exactly the same, but are wildly different in taste, or the location where they are grown and maybe the how has a huge impact on how they turn out. That pink variety Ethan had are the spitting image of one variety my mom grows, but how he described them does not match at all with my experience. One trick my mom uses to extend the shelf life of her garden grown tomatoes is to store them in the basement. It's a bit colder than room temperature and a good bit warmer than a fridge. When the weather forces her to harvest them before they are ripe, they can take a few months in the basement to ripen. She can use them fresh even after the growing season is over. I guess that also is somewhat dependant on the variety though.

  • @Duspende
    @Duspende21 күн бұрын

    Yet again another banger video. I really appreciate these, and I am sure many of us do. Blessings and love from Northern Europe.

  • @digitalworkbench
    @digitalworkbench20 күн бұрын

    I remember watching a video someplace where they did a taste test comparison of fridge vs counter tomatoes and tested at different time lengths. They found that non fridge was clearly superior, but it fell off quickly and the counter ones over ripened while the fridge ones stayed consistent. So really the biggest deciding factor should be how long are you going to wait before you eat them. If its going to be more than like a day, I'd put them in the fridge.

  • @kdrcolac4360
    @kdrcolac436018 күн бұрын

    Thank you so much for adjusting most of the music. When I'm learning something, I want to hear the words.😊

  • @RainbowZebra222
    @RainbowZebra2227 күн бұрын

    i just found your channel and this video is very reminiscent of unwrapped or other food documentaries of the 2000s and I love it!!!

  • @TheRealJBMcMunn
    @TheRealJBMcMunn10 күн бұрын

    I've been growing hydroponic cherry tomatoes since 2008. I made the mistake of sharing some with friends and they haven't stopped pestering me ever since. I compared my hydro with raised bed and the hydro taste and color was the hands-down winner.

  • @Nic_Holas
    @Nic_Holas19 күн бұрын

    Thank you sir for these insightful and entertaining food essays.

  • @bluecup25
    @bluecup2520 күн бұрын

    This man answers the questions we all had but never asked

  • @miinyoo
    @miinyoo18 күн бұрын

    Planted 8 tomato plants and we're just about to get our first san marzanos. Can't wait. Haven't made sauce with the real deal home grown.

  • @JackrabbitCrafts
    @JackrabbitCrafts20 күн бұрын

    Ethan I have to thank you for this video. My brother who hates tomatoes actually commented that he wants to taste some of the home grown tomatoes that come out of my garden!

  • @bro.okeddd
    @bro.okeddd9 күн бұрын

    The crossover of two of my favorite channels is a beautiful thing

  • @dannil9878
    @dannil987820 күн бұрын

    It’s funny How he says intresting: inner resting😂

  • @shiolei
    @shiolei20 күн бұрын

    What a great video! Super informative and loved the collab with Epic Gardening and shoutout to Good Eats!

  • @Eskoteric
    @Eskoteric21 күн бұрын

    This was a very informative and entertaining video. Please turn this into a series. Maybe do one about the varieties of peppers/chillies and how much they can vary in regards to taste, spiciness and appearance (some look insanely unique and distinctive in regards to shape, colour & size)

  • @elyolchie
    @elyolchie20 күн бұрын

    I’ve been following you for years. This is my favorite video you have ever made.

  • @kovial6944
    @kovial694420 күн бұрын

    One thing that wasn’t mentioned about why refrigerating tomatoes isn’t ideal: it often leads to tomatoes becoming mealy. Cooling triggers an enzyme which causes cell membranes to break down. I have found the larger the tomato, the likelier they are to be grainy, especially store bought ones (with the exception of heirloom tomatoes), to the point I opt for snacking tomato varieties 99% of the time.

  • @WhatAboutZoidberg
    @WhatAboutZoidberg21 күн бұрын

    WOW, Epic Gardening was not the crossover I expected, but is a great resource. Been following both of you for years. Grew up growing tomatoes with my grandpa and have a garden for the last few years myself. I knew there were varieties of each plant, but there are HUNDREDS of types of tomatoes. The store bought ones are, as stated here, grown for shelf stability and transportation, not for flavor. The san marzano and amish paste tomatoes are light years more flavorful than store Romas. Store bought cherry tomatoes are fairly decent and make a good quick sauce. You can tell if the tomato was picked early if it still has that white chunky bit in the middle of the tomato. It should be soft flesh the whole way through.

  • @edwardkornuszko4083
    @edwardkornuszko408320 күн бұрын

    Thank you, this was very helpful and informative. God bless you

  • @Bc232klm
    @Bc232klm19 күн бұрын

    Yo, this was amazing all around. A+ on the production

  • @PARebecca
    @PARebecca18 күн бұрын

    I really enjoy your video's and was really craving a BLT, the tomatoes are my favorite part. I have gained a better understanding of food from your channel and you have helped me be a better consumer and cook. Thank You...

  • @jessicango8572
    @jessicango857220 күн бұрын

    Omg my favourite gardener and cooking KZreadr working together ❤

  • @SOLtoo
    @SOLtoo16 күн бұрын

    I LOVE food and Ethan brings out our inner "mad scientist" with his experimentation and research. Well Done, sir!!

  • @joshuawilliams6866
    @joshuawilliams686620 күн бұрын

    I just want you to say that I love your channel!

  • @nottherealrashnar
    @nottherealrashnar21 күн бұрын

    I have a feeling this will be one of my fav Ethan Videos ever. Tomatoes are my favorite food.

  • @juiceboxbento
    @juiceboxbento20 күн бұрын

    I'm allergic to tomatoes, but Ethan's videos are always so well researched and produced that I've watched the whole thing.