Pulsegleaner
Garden Master
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- Apr 18, 2014
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On a more general tomato point (since I have no tomatoes to show, there being none produced for me this year). What does anyone think about the likelihood of creating a green when ripe sauce tomato?
Note I say "sauce tomato" NOT paste tomato. Making a green paste is not only possible, it has already be done at least one (Tom Wagner's Green Sausage). But that is only culinarily usable if you are making a raw tomato product, like salsa or bruschetta. For cooking it suffers from the same problem that, as far as I can tell ALL green when ripe tomatoes suffer from; when heated, the green turns an ugly shade of brownish khaki.
As far as I can tell the problem is that all current green tomatoes appear actually be green/yellow tomatoes. That is they have yellow pigments as well as green ones (in much the way that many "blacks" are pink or red pigments mixed with green, or "browns" are orange mixed with green)
Genetically, a "true" green tomato SHOULD be possible, one where there is ONLY chlorophyll present (if there are true "white" tomatoes which contain no yellow, there should be green with no yellow as well) But I have yet to see one.
I is also possible that such a tomato would have some problems. It would be REALLY hard to tell if it was ripe without touching it (since there would be no yellow cast). And it STLL wouldn't look great cooked (presumably it would be the same sort of green as cooked spinach or another green.) But it would be an improvement.
Note I say "sauce tomato" NOT paste tomato. Making a green paste is not only possible, it has already be done at least one (Tom Wagner's Green Sausage). But that is only culinarily usable if you are making a raw tomato product, like salsa or bruschetta. For cooking it suffers from the same problem that, as far as I can tell ALL green when ripe tomatoes suffer from; when heated, the green turns an ugly shade of brownish khaki.
As far as I can tell the problem is that all current green tomatoes appear actually be green/yellow tomatoes. That is they have yellow pigments as well as green ones (in much the way that many "blacks" are pink or red pigments mixed with green, or "browns" are orange mixed with green)
Genetically, a "true" green tomato SHOULD be possible, one where there is ONLY chlorophyll present (if there are true "white" tomatoes which contain no yellow, there should be green with no yellow as well) But I have yet to see one.
I is also possible that such a tomato would have some problems. It would be REALLY hard to tell if it was ripe without touching it (since there would be no yellow cast). And it STLL wouldn't look great cooked (presumably it would be the same sort of green as cooked spinach or another green.) But it would be an improvement.