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Tomato

Adapted from Wikipedia · Adventurer experience

A colorful display of tomato-based dishes including a burger, pizza, and lasagna.

The tomato (US: /təˈmeɪtoʊ/, UK: /təˈmɑːtoʊ/; Solanum lycopersicum) is a plant. Its fruit is an edible berry that many people eat like a vegetable. It belongs to the nightshade family, which also includes tobacco, the potato, and chili peppers. The tomato originally came from western South America and was later brought to other parts of the world by the Spanish during the Columbian exchange in the 16th century.

Tomato plants grow as vines and usually live for one year. They can be sensitive to cold weather but sometimes live longer when grown in greenhouses. These plants make flowers that can pollinate themselves. Today, many kinds of tomatoes exist, with different sizes, colors, shapes, and tastes.

Tomatoes are loved around the world for their savory flavor. They are used in many dishes. They are a key part of sauces for pasta and pizza, soups like gazpacho and tomato soup, salads, and condiments such as salsa and ketchup. People also enjoy tomatoes as juice and in drinks like the Bloody Mary cocktail.

Naming

The word tomato comes from the Spanish tomate. This word came from the Nahuatl word tomatl. The scientific name lycopersicum means 'wolf peach'. The ancient doctor Galen used this name for a different plant, but later it became the scientific name for tomatoes.

People say tomato in different ways depending on where they live. In North American English, it is often said /təˈmeɪtoʊ/. In British English, it is often /təˈmɑːtoʊ/. This difference in pronunciation became famous in a song by Ira and George Gershwin in 1937.

History

The tomato started as a wild plant in western South America. People in Mexico and Central America grew them. The Spanish brought tomatoes to Europe in the 1500s. At first, people there thought they were just for decoration because they looked like nightshades, which some believed were poisonous.

In Mexico, tomatoes were important to the Aztecs, who called them xitomatl. The Spanish shared tomatoes with many parts of the world, including Asia and the Middle East. In Italy, tomatoes were first grown as pretty plants before they became a key part of cooking, especially in places like Naples. Over time, many different kinds of tomatoes were created for different uses, like making sauces or drying.

Tomatoes became popular in Britain and the United States after people learned they were safe to eat. Today, places like California and Florida grow lots of tomatoes for fresh eating and processing.

Botany

Tomato plants grow as vines and can get as tall as 3 meters, but smaller types stay around 100 centimeters. These plants are usually grown each year.

Tomato plants have stems that branch out. The leaves are long with many small parts and sometimes have fine hairs. The flowers are yellow and can grow without help from bees. The fruit, which we call a tomato, comes from the flower and has seeds.

Tomatoes belong to the nightshade family, which also includes potatoes and tobacco. Scientists study tomato plants to learn about how plants are related.

Plant breeding

Genetics

Researchers from 10 countries began studying the tomato’s DNA in 2004. An early version of the tomato’s DNA map was shared in 2009. The full DNA map for a special tomato type called Heinz 1706 was published in 2012. The most recent DNA map from 2021 shows it has 799 MB of information and can make about 34,384 different proteins.

The first food changed by scientists to have special DNA was a tomato named Flavr Savr. It was made to stay fresh longer. This let it ripen naturally while still staying fresh, which was thought to make it taste better. But it didn’t stay firmer than regular tomatoes, which disappointed the scientists. Because of this and other issues, it was only sold until 1997.

When people first began growing tomatoes, they picked ones that were less bitter. This change happened because a special part of the tomato changed during ripening, turning a bitter substance into something not bitter.

Commercial breeding

Modern tomatoes often don’t taste as sweet because they were bred to all turn red at the same time. This began in the middle of the last century when a special type of tomato was found that all ripened to red without a green ring around the stem. Before this, tomatoes had more sugar when they ripened, making them sweeter and tastier.

When tomatoes ripen, their green parts can make sugar through sunlight. But a special change in tomatoes makes these green parts less dense, which lowers the sugar by about 10–15%. During ripening, these green parts turn into parts that make important nutrients like lycopene.

Growers work to make tomatoes better, like making them bigger, keeping them fresh longer, and helping them resist sickness. But sometimes, these changes can make the tomatoes taste worse or have less nutrition.

To improve tomatoes, growers sometimes use wild tomato plants that have good traits, like more sugar or resistance to diseases. But using these wild traits can sometimes hurt other good qualities, like how much fruit the plant makes.

Cultivation

The tomato is grown all over the world for its edible fruits. There are many different kinds.

Tomatoes can be grown in greenhouses. This helps grow them when it is too cold outside. Small tomatoes like cherry and grape tomatoes are often grown in big greenhouses. Bigger tomatoes are usually grown by smaller farms. Tomatoes can also be grown using a method called hydroponics. This means growing them without soil.

To make transportation easier, tomatoes are sometimes picked before they are fully ripe. They are then allowed to ripen later. In big factories, machines are used to pick tomatoes.

In 2023, the world produced a lot of tomatoes. China made the most, followed by India, Turkey, and the United States.

Tomato production
2023, millions of tonnes
 China70.1
 India29.4
 Turkey13.3
 United States12.4
 Egypt6.2
 Mexico4.4
World192.3
Source: FAOSTATof the United Nations

Pests and diseases

Pests

Tomatoes can be bothered by several small creatures, such as the tomato bug, stink bugs, cutworms, tomato hornworms, and tobacco hornworms. Other pests include aphids, cabbage loopers, whiteflies, tomato fruitworms, flea beetles, red spider mite, Tuta absoluta (tomato leafminer), slugs, and Colorado potato beetles.

When attacked by insects, tomato plants make special chemicals to defend themselves.

Diseases

Different types of tomatoes have different abilities to fight off diseases. Some common tomato diseases include tobacco mosaic virus. Another serious disease is curly top, carried by the beet leafhopper. Bacterial wilt is also a common problem.

As food

Culinary

Further information: List of tomato dishes

Tomatoes are liked all over the world for their special taste. They are a big part of Mediterranean cuisine, like in pizza and pasta sauces. In Spain, people enjoy tomatoes in gazpacho soup and a special dish called pa amb tomàquet. In Middle Eastern cuisine, tomatoes are used fresh in salads, grilled with kebabs, and in sauces.

Tomatoes were brought to India by Europeans and are now used in many curries, like Kashmiri rogan josh and the British tikka masala.

Storage

Tomatoes stay fresh best when kept unwashed at room temperature away from sunlight. Placing them stem down can help them last longer. Unripe tomatoes can be kept in a paper bag to help them ripen. Tomatoes can also be kept long-term by canning, freezing, drying, or cooking them into a paste.

Nutrition

A raw tomato is mostly water—about 95%—with a little bit of carbohydrates, fat, and protein. One tomato has only about 18 calories and gives a good amount of vitamin C, but it doesn’t have many other nutrients.

Effects on health

Experts have found that eating tomatoes does not lower the chance of getting certain illnesses.

Toxins

The leaves, stem, and green parts of unripe tomatoes have small amounts of natural toxins. These can be harmful to pets like dogs if they eat a lot of them. But small parts of tomato leaves or green tomatoes can be used in cooking, like in fried green tomatoes.

Salmonella outbreaks

Sometimes, tomatoes have been linked to illnesses caused by a germ called Salmonella.

In popular culture

Celebrations

In the Walt Disney World Resort in Lake Buena Vista, Florida, there was a very large tomato plant that grew over 32,000 tomatoes.

The town of Buñol in Spain holds an annual festival called La Tomatina, where people throw tomatoes at each other.

Some U.S. states have made the tomato their official fruit or vegetable. Arkansas chose the South Arkansas Vine Ripe Pink Tomato as both its state fruit and vegetable. Ohio made the tomato its state fruit in 2009. The town of Reynoldsburg holds a yearly Tomato Festival. Finland has an annual event called Tomatkarnevalen in the town of Närpes.

Fruit or vegetable

See also: Vegetable § Terminology

Even though we cook and eat tomatoes like vegetables, scientifically they are fruits. This caused a legal debate in the United States. In 1893, the U.S. Supreme Court decided that for tax purposes, the tomato would be considered a vegetable because that’s how most people use it.

Images

An old herbarium sheet showing one of Europe's earliest known tomato specimens from the 1540s.
A San Marzano tomato, a special type of tomato often used for making sauces.
Fresh tomatoes available in a UK supermarket.
Fresh tomatoes growing in a greenhouse in Ghana.
A handful of ripe tomatoes being held by someone's hands at a farm in Hawaii.
Young tomato plants just starting to grow from their seeds in a garden.
A healthy tomato plant growing 27 days after seeds were planted, shown in a bucket under indoor lighting.
A beautiful tomato flower growing in Catalonia.
A healthy tomato plant showing both flowers and ripe fruit, grown from seeds.
A green tomato growing in a garden in Oxford, UK.
A scientific diagram showing how different types of tomatoes evolved over time through selective breeding and the introduction of new genetic traits.
Fresh tomatoes for sale at a market in France.
A colorful display of different heirloom tomato varieties, including Brandywine, Black Krim, and Green Zebra.

Related articles

This article is a child-friendly adaptation of the Wikipedia article on Tomato, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

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