My neighbors might be catching on that living near a
gardener is a good thing. Sure, there
are a few quirks to put up with, like earsplitting shrieks when squirrel damage
is noticed on pumpkins or alarming noises as I rise up from crouching to
weed. But these small eccentricities
fade once harvest sets in, because they know I’ll start sharing the bounty with
those who wander by.
As they stroll past with their pets, I call them into the
garden with friendly invitations like “you, with the Shih-Tzu, want some
beans?” or “Hey, parrot-walking man!
I’ve got plenty of kale to share!”
I've contemplated tying bags of produce to cats' collars so they take them home with them, but those rascals are harder to catch than the dogs are. Most neighbors have gotten produce from me before and accept it with smiles, even though they know I’ll toss in a zucchini for good measure. Right now the beans are coming in like there’s no tomorrow, but fast on their heels is a bumper crop of tomatoes. And once they start, everyone in the neighborhood gets love apples.
Big, little, red, yellow, purple, and orange – we’re entering tomato season with its wealth of rainbow colors. Cherry tomatoes like Green Doctors, Isis, Sungold, and Jasper may be little in size but big in flavor. Each of these tasty morsels is sweet enough to woo new devotees to growing them. Matt’s Wild Cherry, a currant type, is a tiny, prolific tomato about the size of a pea.
Salad tomatoes that shake your kitchen up with new flavors
and colors are Green Zebra, Lemon Boy, or Japanese Black trifele. Each has bold enough flavor to stand on their
own, but combined in a colorful Caprese salad, they shine.
I’m experimenting with paste tomatoes this year, because I
sauce a lot of them and an Italian-American friend told me, proudly, that for
real Italian sauces, you need San Marzano tomatoes. But I love the flavor of Amish Paste and you
can’t beat Roma for performance.
Although I’m a tomato geek and love them big and small, I
will admit that when the beefsteaks come in, it’s my favorite part of the summer. Huge, brightly colored, and heavy with the
promise of outstanding taste, the beefsteaks are the late season love apples
that finish summer with a bang.
Of the big ones, it’s hard to beat Brandywine, but Pineapple,
Amana Orange, Black Krim, Cherokee Purple, and Paul Robeson give it a run for
the money. Sweet and balanced with acid,
Pineapple is a large yellow tomato streaked with red.
Gardeners, if you’ve wondered what those tempting tomatoes
taste like, but don’t have room to grow them all, head out to the Taste of
Tomato in Boulder. Sponsored by
Harlequin’s Gardens and Colorado State University Extension in Boulder County,
the Taste of Tomato is an opportunity to sample the love apple in its many
forms - stripes, color, shape, and size.
Scheduled for Saturday, August 27, 10 am to 1 p.m. at
Gateway Park 4800 N. 28th St. in Boulder, the Taste of Tomato is where
gardeners can bring their tomatoes for others to try and sample the products
others are growing. Each year, tomato
enthusiasts gather to taste nearly 100 varieties and vote on the tastiest of
the lot.
Entry is free if you bring three or more medium to large
tomatoes or 10 cherry tomatoes of one kind, with the variety name on a card, to
donate to the tasting. All entries must be home-grown. If you have no tomatoes to bring, there will
be a $5 entrance fee.
I grow my own delicious Celebrity tomatoes and if I need more I buy Honeyacre, pestecide-free tomatoes at the Fort Collins Farmers Market.http://www.honeyacre.com/ - they grow great tomatoes in Wiggins!!!
ReplyDeleteWOW Carol I have never heard them referred to as love apples...! I am novice when it comes to tomatoes but a willing learner with a small yard. What a great article, especially about catching cats...I'm a cat person so I totally get it��...enjoy the weekend in your garden��
ReplyDeleteI laughed out loud (is there an abbreviation for this) at the echolocation excitement. We put them our not free range squashes in "squashwire" cages.
ReplyDeleteMy three kids love tomatoes, are they require to bring 3 tomatoes as well, or is that requirement for adult? My garden tomatoes are still green :-(
ReplyDelete