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Old August 19, 2015   #1
ilex
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Default Spanish stripes

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Last edited by ilex; August 19, 2015 at 03:16 AM.
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Old August 19, 2015   #2
charline
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very nice!!!
is spanish stripes the name of the variety?
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Old August 19, 2015   #3
ilex
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Quote:
Originally Posted by charline View Post
very nice!!!
is spanish stripes the name of the variety?
No. It's an old heirloom from Spain.
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Old August 19, 2015   #4
Gerardo
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Tiene muy buena cara. ¿Cómo se ve por dentro? ¿Ácido? ¿Balanceado?

Nice looking. How's it look on the inside?
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Old August 19, 2015   #5
ilex
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In my notes I have: very good flavour, 8 brix.

Best varieties this season were 9 brix, and I don't remember it being either very acid nor low acid, so I would say balanced. I do remember it is very good.
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Old August 19, 2015   #6
carolyn137
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And I'll be sending that e-mail soon from your wonderful listing of Spanish varieties you listed in the 2015 SSE YEarbook, for SSE members only, b'c no way am I going to try and find the 73 varieties you did list to see if the one above is one of them.

Yes, I'm interersted in the colgar ones, but even more so in the large beefsteak ones and yes, I do know the red Huevos de Toro made its way to France and was renamed Couilles de Taureau, but a few years ago I know you said there were different Huevos ones of different colors.

You are a treasure of information Ilex, and don't forget that.

Carolyn, will pay your requested price, in cash, which you prefer, but can also offer you some very good US made chocolate for some Spanish chocolate. This is the place I used to order jamon and some cheeses and nougat, but now I don't see any listings for chocolate and nougat, Torrone? or several other goodies I ordered by catalog since I refuse to order anything online. Besides, the prices got too high for me anyway.

http://www.tienda.com/support/links.html
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Old August 19, 2015   #7
Salsacharley
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This tomato looks very similar to Cascade Lava and Feuerwerk.
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Old August 20, 2015   #8
carolyn137
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I think it's good to remember that when tomatoes were first distributed it was Spain to where they went first. So there's been much more time there for cross pollination to occur than probably anywhere else.

And the first ones as I recall, I could fetch the history sometime, were yellow ones, and the first ones sent to ITaly were yellow, but then as often happens, some of the yellow ones in Spain morphed into red ones, so we have to go back to about 1600 AD to when the first ones went to Spain, and that's long enough for accidental crossing, seed DNA mutations and somatic mutations to lead to a huge diversity of varieties in Spain, and that contiues.

I just remembered that the first ones in Italy were called pomme di Oro. or apple of gold.

Here you go, the best tomato history I know of other than Andy Smith's book on the history of the tomato. Enjoy!

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tomato

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Old August 20, 2015   #9
justplainmike
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Very interesting thread !
jpm
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Old August 20, 2015   #10
PhilaGardener
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Amazingly beautiful, ilex! A true Spanish legacy in so many ways!
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