Not exact matches
If you use a
fruit baller, your melon balls will end up being the
size of cherry
tomatoes (and the shape, too!)
If you are looking for more home - made bite
size party snack ideas check out those recipes: Baileys Fudge, Chicken Skin Popcorn & Olive Penguins from Foodie Quine, Spicy Roasted Chick Peas from Citrus Spice, Parmesan Cheese Savoury Biscuits from The Petite Cook, Home - Baked Honey Parsnip Crisps from Tinned
Tomatoes, Spicy Roasted Cashew Nuts from Recipe From A Pantry, Top with Cinnamon's Sweet & Spicy Roasted Chickpeas from Fab Food 4 All, Cheese &
Fruit Hedgehog, Grandma Nina's Pischinger or Mini Party Sandwiches I made while ago.
And finally,
fruit that doesn't match the
size needed to make diced
tomatoes is rerouted to another production line to make
tomato concentrate.
I am finding that he seems to be more likely to eat if everything is cut into bite -
sized pieces — i.e. a PB&J sandwich cut into tiny squares; small chunks of
fruit as well as grapes or cherry
tomatoes or mini carrots; small crackers; etc..
But the large, plump, ruddy
tomatoes available year - round in grocery stores taste much different than the small, multihued, berry -
sized fruits that evolved more than 50 million years ago near Antarctica and were first domesticated in Central and South America some 2500 years ago.
Most of these genes have only small effects on
tomato size and shape, but last May in Nature Genetics Tanksley and his colleagues reported that they found a gene they dubbed fasciated that bumps up
fruit size by 50 percent.
The acerola cherry is a large, edible,
tomato sized fruit which grows in South America, and is extraordinarily rich in vitamin C, with 1677 mg per 100 grams according to one analysis, compared to just 53 mg in the widely hailed orange.
This means that
tomato plants will not ripen, and many a gourd garden will have gnome -
sized fruit.