Why are Grocery Store Tomatoes so Inferior?

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Peter Peachfuzz

Can't Leave
Nov 23, 2019
307
602
Central Ohio
Tomatoes grown at home are bursting with flavor. There's no way to get that flavor from some that you bought. Even farm stand tomatoes are less than homegrowns.

I'm not talking about subtle differences, these are two different animals. Why is this?

Here's a box with a few we just picked, the good ones.

- Old Macdonald Funkerhouser

View attachment 324244
Most never see real sunlight
 

rakovsky

Starting to Get Obsessed
Nov 28, 2024
146
172
Tomatoes grown at home are bursting with flavor. There's no way to get that flavor from some that you bought. Even farm stand tomatoes are less than homegrowns.

View attachment 324244
There's going to be a couple good reasons for the difference. One is that with your home tomatos you can carefully water and treat them so that they grow well, whereas the field that a store gets them from can have a giant number and thus it can be harder giving them that indiviual care. Another is that the store ones might have more pesticides than you might use.

But actually occasionally I get home-grown ones that aren't great either. So at least with the store there's supposed to be at least some level of quality control that throws out the bad ones.
 

Servant King

Lifer
Nov 27, 2020
4,815
28,042
39
Frazier Park, CA
www.thechembow.com
@Servant King you still got tomatoes?
Nope, nighttime temps dropped precipitously starting around mid-October, killed off all the plants. We were eating the last of our harvest into the first week of November, however. Probably ended up with a few hundred tomatoes when all was said and done. Granted, they were all quite small; probably the biggest of the lot were only racquetball sized. Still, it felt incredibly prolific as it was happening. During the peak of the harvest, we gave away a big bag of 'em to two separate neighbors, and my in-laws (should've experimented on this batch with a strychnine soak).
 
Dec 6, 2019
5,158
23,703
Dixieland
Nope, nighttime temps dropped precipitously starting around mid-October, killed off all the plants. We were eating the last of our harvest into the first week of November, however. Probably ended up with a few hundred tomatoes when all was said and done. Granted, they were all quite small; probably the biggest of the lot were only racquetball sized. Still, it felt incredibly prolific as it was happening. During the peak of the harvest, we gave away a big bag of 'em to two separate neighbors, and my in-laws (should've experimented on this batch with a strychnine soak).

Always good to have plans for next year.
 
Dec 6, 2019
5,158
23,703
Dixieland
Most of the store bought tomatoes here ( Pa ) are from either Mexico or Canada. We don't grow tomatoes in the USA?

Quite a few grown in Slocomb, Alabama, in the southern part of the state, and Sand Mountain tomatoes, grown in northern Alabama.

I don't know where those all go, maybe they make it up to you... But to me they're just run of the mill grocery store tomatoes. People around here do rave about 'em... I think it's just marketing.
 
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woodsroad

Lifer
Oct 10, 2013
12,912
21,599
SE PA USA
When I lived in latvia, I ate seasonally. Made most fruits and vegetables taste better. We don't do that in the USA and it shows.
I’m a little late to the game, but this missive needs correcting. It’s a mighty broad brush you’re painting with.

There are plenty of people here in the US who “eat seasonally”, at least to the extent that it’s possible. A lot of them are farmers, but there are also many folks who only buy local or only buy what’s fresh. Many states have farmer’s market programs for inner city food stamp recipients, bringing seasonal produce to neighborhoods that often don’t have a supermarket.

We mostly eat with the seasons, not out of ideology, but because we like buying fresh food from the many farm stands nearby. That and I know how crops are grown and harvested in many other countries.