Category Archives: Tomatoes

Remembering the Tomato Fest

I’ve been thinking about the trips we’ve taken in the past to the Carmel Tomato Fest, which hasn’t been offered for awhile now.

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Those Tomato Fests were terrific. Where else could you taste 200 varieties of heirloom tomatoes? Or watch the faces of kids trying them, and based on their reactions say, “Let’s grow that one?”

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I wrote about the 2007 Tomato Fest here on the blog. In Carmel that year, we went south down the Pacific Coast Highway to visit our friend Judy Lundberg at Babe Farms in Santa Maria. I told June about when I was stationed at Fort Ord and how I loved to fly down that road when I was young and invincible.

Good memories.

Tomato Tomato Tomato, & More

June and I went to the Leeward Community College culinary gala L’Ulu this past Saturday night. It was a fundraiser for the college’s culinary students, and each chef was paired with a farmer. We were paired with Chef Alan Wong.

Alan and june

Here’s Chef Alan, making sure his farmer is properly supplied with a glass of Reisling, and below, June stands with a display of Hamakua Springs tomatoes.

Hamakua springs display

Chef Alans crew making tomato 3 ways

Chef Alan selected “Tomato, Tomato, Tomato” as the dish he would prepare for samples. That is a two-colored, cold tomato soup made from yellow and red tomatoes. In the center is a scoop of tomato sorbet with li hing mui dressing. On the side are two roasted grape tomatoes – one red and one yellow. The taste combination is incredible.

Tomato tomato tomato

His “Tomato, Tomato, Tomato” recipe can be found in his new, award-winning cookbook The Blue Tomato. Read about the cookbook’s recent Ka Palapala Po’okela award.

Nishimoto

This woman, Mrs. Ishimoto, told us she was a great fan of Hamakua Springs tomatoes. It turned out she is the grandmother of Brian Clay, the Olympic athlete. We were thrilled to meet her even before we found that out.

June and I enjoyed talking to the people there. We felt the strongest sentiment of supporting local farmers that we ever have anywhere.

Out Of Business


Tomatoes

Farming is a challenging business, and getting more challenging every day. That this tomato company in Southern California just halted operations is a good example of that.

Oceanside Pole Tomato Sales Inc., the marketing arm of Harry Singh & Sons, is one of the country’s largest tomato suppliers, packing and selling 4.5 to 5 million cartons of tomatoes a year. Harry Singh & Sons was one of nine companies that make up a Fresno-based cooperative that grows about 90 percent of the country’s fresh tomatoes.

It’s noteworthy that they had to shut down operations so suddenly. According to the article in The Packer, it was due to a “perfect storm of issues,” including labor and water costs, competition from Mexico, California’s regulatory climate and urban encroachment.

As I have often said, “If the farmer makes money, the farmer will farm.” As oil prices rise, I am curious to see if other mainland farmers are feeling economic pressures as well.

From The Packer:

Oceanside focuses on 2012 return with tomatoes

Published on 04/14/2011 06:40PM

Southern California’s Oceanside Pole Tomato Sales Inc., one of the nation’s largest suppliers to retail of vine ripe tomatoes, abruptly halted operations April 12, as did grower Harry Singh & Sons because of “a perfect storm of issues” related to costs.

Barbara Metz, a spokeswoman for Harry Singh & Sons, said April 14 that the company had not gone bankrupt. She said “a perfect storm of issues” including costs of labor and water, competition from Mexico, California’s regulatory climate and urban encroachment had caused the shutdown.

“I’ll be closing down the company in the next few weeks,” said Bill Wilber, Oceanside Pole president, on April 13.

Krishna Singh, general manager of the growing company and grandson of its founder, sent a message to that firm’s employees the same day, explaining that the company would not be operating for the 2011 season.

“I regret to inform you that effective immediately, Harry Singh and Sons Farming Partnership will not be in operation for the 2011 season. … We will work diligently and explore all options in our efforts to reorganize and resume farming operations for 2012,” according to the e-mail message.

The closures of Oceanside Pole and Singh’s growing operation could put a dent in the upcoming season’s vine-ripe category.

Read the rest

Dinner at Alan Wong’s

Richard, June, daughter Tracy and her husband Kimo (who is also the farm’s manager) and Tracy and Kimo’s daughter, Kimberly, recently flew to Honolulu for dinner at Alan Wong’s.

It was one of Alan Wong’s Farmers Series dinners, where he features a certain grower whose products he serves. It was the first dinner of the current series, and Chef Alan was featuring Hamakua Springs.

Alan wong

“It was a real honor,” June told me. “It’s the second time they’ve done that, and they are so welcoming. They treat us like we’re celebrities there.”

Richard said that Chef Alan asked them to speak to his staff before the dinner. “I introduced ourselves,” he said, “and talked about where we came from, what we do and why it’s important, what they do and how they support it. He let me talk about energy and geothermal; it was interesting to talk about that and how food security and energy is related. Now his staff has a better understanding of who we are and what we do.”

Richard said they were very impressed with Alan Wong’s staff. “They are very very knowledgeable and attentive. They really do know who grows their produce. I spent almost an hour talking to them before the dinner.”

As customers were seated, the staff took them over to the tables and introduced them. “We talked to the customers, told them what we do,” said Richard, “and invariably, everybody told us how much they support local agriculture. Every single one. It was pretty striking.”

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For the first course, Chef Alan demonstrated the difference between fresh grown Hamakua Springs tomatoes, and those from a can. He made soup from canned tomatoes, and soup from Hamakua Springs tomatoes, and let people do a taste test. Hamakua Springs was preferred in the blind taste test, hands down.

He also made stewed tomatoes, both canned and fresh, and served them in saimin spoons. “The one made with canned tomatoes was  dark red, and the one with our tomatoes was lighter. The other one had an aftertaste, like canned tomatoes do,” said June. You could really taste the difference, Richard said, and everybody commented about it.

If you have read Richard’s blog much, or heard him speak, you’ll get a kick out of what Chef Alan called this tasting: “Not No Can…Can!” Tomatoes.

June’s favorite course was the ravioli lobster. “That was the best,” she said. “It was about a two-inch ravioli stuffed with lobster pieces and a buttery corn sauce on top.”

June said that some customers asked if they worked with other chefs and restaurants in that way. “We said, No, Alan is the only one that does this. I was telling his staff we are proud to work for a company that has their produce in Alan’s restaurant.”

Richard pointed out that because Alan does that – makes sure the farmers and restaurant staff know and respect each other – the farmers feel more responsible for the product of our work. “Instead of leaving it at the loading dock and not thinking about it, we are responsible for it until it’s on the plate in front of the customer,” he said. “He depends on us to produce it for him, and not only the family but everybody on the farm feels that way.”

He was also glad to be there at Alan Wong’s Restaurant with Kimo, Tracy and Kimberly, he said. “They are the next generation, and it’s so important for them to be able to have the same feelings that we had. That was really valuable. It’s really unusual, to make the farmers and others feel important like Alan does.”

The Word on Tomatoes

Tomatoes_vine

Tomatoes are one of the most popular commodities in the produce department. This year, tomatoes were the third most-popular vegetable, down from the No. 2 spot last year. Overall, tomatoes were the fifth most-popular item of all commodities studied in Fresh Trends 2010.  Purchases increased five percentage points in the past year and were up ten percentage points from Fresh Trends 2009.

For the fourth consecutive year, the likelihood of purchase increased according to income, with consumers earning more than $100,000 annually being the most likely to buy tomatoes. Consumers with kids living at home were slightly more likely to buy tomatoes, at 90 percent, than those without kids, at 86 percent. Consumers in the lowest income bracket, and single shoppers, were the least likely to buy the red vegetable.

Current Tomato Trends

The Packer is a national produce newsletter. Here’s how they describe their publication:

There’s no argument that The Packer is the fresh fruit and vegetable industry’s leading source for news, information and analysis. The Packer has been reporting every week on the produce industry since 1893. ThePacker.com serves fresh fruit and vegetable growers, packers, and shippers; produce retailers; foodservice distributors; fresh-cut processors; wholesale produce distributors, and allied product and service providers.

Every year, The Packer does research on fruits and vegetables, and I will periodically post some of the reports. Here is its 2010 tomato report.

Fresh Trends 2010

Tomatoes are one of the most popular commodities in the produce department. This year tomatoes were the third most-popular vegetable, down from the No. 2 spot last year. Overall, tomatoes were the fifth most-popular item of all commodities studied in Fresh Trends 2010.  Purchases increased five percentage points in the past year and were up 10 percentage points from Fresh Trends 2009.

For the fourth consecutive year, the likelihood of purchase increased according to income, with consumers earning more than $100,000 annually being the most likely to buy tomatoes. Consumers with kids living at home were slightly more likely to buy tomatoes, at 90%, than those without kids, at 86%. Consumers in the lowest income bracket, and single shoppers, were the least likely to buy the red vegetable.

Field-grown beefsteak tomatoes remain the most popular variety. In fact, purchases of the slicers climbed 12 percentage points from Fresh Trends 2009. Preference for romas, consumers’ next favorite, slipped seven percentage points in the past year. Preference for cherry tomatoes fell more than 50% from Fresh Trends 2009, while most other varieties remained relatively steady.

Shoppers are comfortable with tomatoes, as 81% of those surveyed said they felt at ease selecting ripe tomatoes for immediate consumption. For example, consumers said they were more comfortable selecting ripe tomatoes than they were selecting ripe bananas. Sixty-seven percent of consumers said they knew how to ripen tomatoes once they got them home.

Tomatoes top many salads around the country, as more than 80% of consumers said they use the vegetable in salads. Shoppers also buy tomatoes to add to their favorite recipes or to use as a side dish.

Last year organic tomato purchases reached new heights – this year organic lost all it had gained the previous year, and more. However, tomatoes were still one of the most popular items that consumers purchased organic at least some of the time. Tomatoes were the No. 2 vegetable and the No. 3 commodity overall that consumers said they purchased as organic periodically. This year, 17% of tomato consumers said they bought organic at least some of the time. The likelihood of an organic-only purchase fell 66% from Fresh Trends 2009 and dropped 50% from Fresh Trends 2008. Seventy-one percent of organic tomato buyers said they bought organic less than 25% of the time. Single shoppers were most likely to buy organic tomatoes exclusively.

More of The Packer’s Fresh Trends articles here.

Iron Chef Morimoto Visits the Farm

It was a busy week. After Governor Lingle dropped by, our friend Tisha Uehara, who is vice president of Armstrong Produce, called and asked if she could bring Iron Chef Morimoto by to visit.

Chef Morimoto is opening a restaurant in Waikiki soon and wanted to introduce himself to the farmers. Of course we told her we would love to see him.

They came in like a whirlwind. Chef Morimoto really focused in on the grape and beef tomatoes.

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He looked really carefully at the tomatoes and then he just bit into one. And took several more bites.

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Then he said he wanted it in his restaurant, saying that the flavor was excellent and pointing out that the thickness of the skin was just right.

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Chef Morimoto autographed some items, gave me an autographed copy of his cookbook and they were gone. All of us were in a good mood.

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Tomato Yellow Leaf Curl Virus

The dangerous Tomato Yellow Leaf Curl Virus has been discovered in tomatoes on the Kona side of the Big Island. This is a very destructive virus that can destroy whole crops of tomatoes.

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Fortunately, there are resistant varieties of tomatoes.We’ve been planting resistant varieties since the virus was first discovered in Hawai‘i.

Here is a College of Tropical Ag and Human Resources (CTAHR) publication about Tomato Yellow Leaf Curl Virus. (The above photos are by CTAHR.)

I was copied in on this email from Mike Melzer to Brian Bushe at CTAHR:

———- Forwarded message ———-
From: Michael John Melzer
Date: Mon, Apr 5, 2010 at 3:32 PM
Subject: tylcv
Hi Brian,

I was able to test the two tomato samples from Kailua-Kona using the tissue-blot hybridization assay.  Both samples were positive for tomato yellow leaf curl virus.  I will do PCR on the samples as a confirmation, as well as to see how similar this virus is to the strains found on Maui and Oahu.  However, I think today’s results, combined with the observed symptoms, are strong evidence TYLCV is on the Big Island.

Could you please give notice to the appropriate extension personnel over there?

Take care,
Mike.

And then this one:

Gentlemen,

More bad news, see Mike Melzer’s comments below (thanks Mike).  The tomato sample was collected from a home-gardener in Kona at 800′ elevation (kudos to her for recognizing the symptoms).  Please relay to your clients and help them learn to recognize symptoms.

http://www.ctahr.hawaii.edu/oc/freepubs/pdf/PD-70.pdf

Resistant/tolerant cultivars appear to be available.

Mahalo, Brian

Brian C. Bushe
University of Hawaii at Manoa
College of Tropical Agriculture and Human Resources
Agricultural Diagnostic Service Center – Hawaii County

Foodland Farms & Hamakua Tomato Salsa

Several weeks ago June and I went to O‘ahu to see the new Foodland Farms store in Aina Haina.

Tony the tiger

Tony the Tiger was in the house. Kids ran up to get hugs.

It’s a beautiful store. We were so impressed that they put the local produce front and center! And that they had photos of local farmers all around.

Beautiful local produce

A couple of months earlier, June and I had lunch with Jenai Walls, President of Foodland; Abel Porter, Foodland’s CEO, and Simon Cutts, who is the produce buyer. Jenai asked us if we had tried the Hamakua Tomato Salsa and we had to admit that we didn’t know there was such a thing. Foodland produces it in their corporate kitchens and distributes it through its stores statewide.

Hamakua tomato salsa

Containers of Hamakua Tomato salsa in the foreground. In the background, photo of me and Chef Alan Wong.

We had to try it. It is really good! Way better than any tomato salsa I have ever had; I think because it is fresh, and made from vine-ripened tomatoes.

June & jon kawamura

June with our friend, Jon Kawamura from Armstrong Produce. We enjoyed his company

We decided to demo the Hamakua Tomato Salsa with Tostido Scoops to demonstrate our tomatoes, and it went over really well. Many people bought the Hamakua Salsa as well as the fresh Hamakua Springs tomatoes.

Tomato display
The display was full of our beef tomatoes as well as our award winning cocktail tomatoes

A group of seven firefighters came by and tried the salsa. We all know that firefighters are all gourmet cooks, and we were happy to see one of the firefighters pick up a container.

For us, that was the ultimate validation of Hamakua Tomato Salsa.

Honolulu Magazine Article Singles Out Hamakua Springs Tomato

For your reading pleasure, an article about Alan Wong’s Restaurant in Honolulu that opens with “one perfect red tomato from Richard Ha’s Hamakua Springs Farm on the Big Island.”

Read the Honolulu magazine article here.

Learn more about Alan Wong’s Restaurant here. (Hey, Richard’s picture with Chef Alan is on the home page now! That’s new since last I looked.)

Review how Richard got named “Uncle Tomato.” (Call him that at your own risk if you are more than 2 years old. Well, 5-1/2 now; that’s an old post.)