TOMATO. Fruit or Vegetable?
The tomato fruit is consumed in
diverse ways, including raw, as an ingredient in many dishes and sauces, and in
drinks. While it is botanically known as a fruit it is considered a vegetable
for culinary purposes. The fruit is rich
in vitamin C and known as healthy diet which may have beneficial health
effects.
The tomato belongs to the family of
nightshade fruits. The plants typically grow to 3–5 feet in height and have a
weak stem that often sprawls over the ground and vines over other plants
Its leaves are more or less hairy,
strongly odorous, pinnate compound, and grow up to 45 cm long. The flowers are
yellow, 2 cm across, pendant, and clustered. Fruits vary in diameter from 1.5
to 7.5 cm or more and are usually red, scarlet, or yellow; they vary in shape
from almost spherical through oval and elongate to pear-shaped. The fruit is a
soft, succulent berry, containing two to many cells of small seeds surrounded
by jellylike pulp. Most of the tomato's vitamin C is found in this pulp. The
tomato is used raw in salads, served as a cooked vegetable, used as an
ingredient of various prepared dishes, and pickled.
The tomato was introduced to Europe by the Dutch merchants
taken with them from India in the 16th century. In Indian sub-continent,
Indians have been the first people to
adopt it as a food, it has remained a staple of Indian cuisine.
It subsequently traveled to Italy where it grew in
plenty on account of favourable climate for its growth. The Italians called the
tomato pomodoro, golden apple, which has
given rise to speculation that the first tomatoes known to Europeans were
yellow; similarly, it has been suggested that the French called it pomme
d'amour love apple because it was thought to have aphrodisiacal properties.
Some scholars assert, however, that the tomato was
at first taken to be a kind of eggplant, of which it is a close relative. The
eggplant was called pomme des Mours
apple of the Moors because it was a favourite vegetable of the Arabs,
pomodoro and pomme d'amour may be corruptions of this name.
In France and northern Europe the tomato was at
first grown as an ornamental plant. Since botanists recognized it as a
relative of the poisons belladonna and deadly nightshade, it was regarded with
suspicion as a food. The roots and leaves of the tomato plant are in fact
poisonous; they contain the neurotoxin solanine. A large percentage of the
world's tomato crop is used for processing; products include canned tomatoes,
tomato juice, catchup, puree, paste, and "sun-dried" tomatoes or
dehydrated pulp. China, USA, Turkey, India and Italy are chief tomato producing
countries. The world production of tomatoes was around 200 million tons in the year 2011.
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