If you recall, we harvested two beds – upwards of 130 pounds – of a type of meaty paste tomato called Federle.
Because the vast majority of these tomatoes were green when we harvested them just ahead of the first frost, I layered them in boxes with a banana on each layer to provide ethylene gas. This would allow them to ripen. We set these boxes on a layer of plastic (to protect the carpet) and wrapped them in mosquito netting (to keep the fruit flies out).
However I got busy during the interim while they were ripening. Among much else, I took that fast trip south to see my parents and Younger Daughter. By the time I got around to cracking open the boxes, well ... let's just say many of the tomatoes had progressed beyond ripe into rotten. Grrrr.
The top layers were in great shape.
But the farther down I went, the worse it got.
I was so mad at myself for wasting so many tomatoes. In the end, the best I could do was pluck out the tomatoes that were still usable, and put them in a tub.
As for the rest ... well, we had to use towels and tubs and other emergency procedures to get those soaked and falling-apart boxes out of the house and into the yard. I was VERY glad I had put down plastic beneath the boxes to protect the carpet, which emerged unscathed.
I spent days beating myself up for this debacle. So many tomatoes, wasted!
The rotten tomatoes went into the waste pile.
I turned my attention back to the usable tomatoes. Because so many of them had been covered in mushy tomato slime, I actually washed them all.
After washing them, I re-packed the tomatoes back into the tub, but lined it with towels to absorb moisture.
Then I had to fetch down my food strainer from where it had been stored in the barn. I haven't used the strainer in a long time – certainly not since we moved – so it was predictably filthy. I gave it a good washing.
Also – knowing I would need it – I washed a large bucket.
Then I set up the food strainer.
Part of this set-up included putting a towel on the floor beneath. I learned from experience this is critical.
Straining tomatoes is messy work.
But there's no finer way to make a beautiful purée. Here the tomatoes are in the hopper...
...and here is the resulting purée.
Periodically I dumped the container of purée into the large bucket.
By the time all the tomatoes were processed, the kitchen was a mess. Such is life.
The next step was to bag up and freeze the purée.
I filled five gallon bags with purée, though the actual volume was probably more like four gallons.
I laid the bags of purée flat in the chest freezer until they froze, and then I stacked them more neatly.
After all was said and done, my apron was a disaster. I am brutally hard on aprons.
I laid the apron flat and sprayed it thoroughly with stain remover, then washed it, which helped a lot.
The next step in the tomato journey will be to make tomato sauce out of the purée, something I usually do in January or February. This consists of putting the purée in a large pot nested double-boiler-style into a larger pot, and cooking it down into sauce (the process usually takes about three days per batch). After it's thick enough for my satisfaction, I'll can it up.
So that's a summary of my tomato disasters and successes. Let's hope I'm a little more attentive to our unripe tomatoes next year.
























This is a great example of "Life happens." I'm sorry you lost a chunk of your crop, but glad you were able to salvage some of it. Four gallons is nothing to sneeze at!
ReplyDeleteOld-Fart here:
ReplyDeleteOHHHHH My.
This reminds me of the year I decided it would be a great idea to make some homemade Ketchup.
Having harvested around 15 pounds of nice Roma Tomatoes I thought it would be a good idea to grab a few more for the local Farmers Open Market. Sooooooo while walking around the couple of dozen locals there I came across a very nice lady that had just arrived selling, guess what, Fresh picked tomatoes.
After having a taste of a random one sliced, I asked how much and the normal friendly bickering pursued, she asked how many I would like….. Her face went blank as I said “All of them”…. HAHAHA
I ended up with another 125 pounds of absolutely fantastic Mators.
Welllllll That Saturday I spent literally 11 hours making and cooking, canning, cleaning up all 140 pounds of Tomatoes into pint jars of Ketchup.
And YES, it was/IS a LOT better than that Store Bought stuff that’s filled with chemical preservatives, artificial flavoring and the likes.
My friends, that was about 7-8 years ago, and that Ketchup is good as the day I made it.
Point being, take a good look at the mess above, that looks clean to what I had LOLOL
OMG , seriously I found splattering 2 months later even on top the range hood 😊
Thank you, Ms. Lewis, for the wonderful memory awaking HAHAHAHA
The same kind of mess comes from processing elderberries, you pretty much have to have a separate room for this.
ReplyDeleteWhen I freeze bags of anything I put them on a cookie sheet to make sure they are flat and stackable.
My approach to ripening tomatoes is not deemed acceptable in any groups, but here is an approach that works for me and makes much less mess. I often end up with a couple hundred pounds of green tomatoes at the end of the year, and I don't have the space to lay them out nicely. I either gently place them in 5 gallon pails, I fill those up to the top, or I put them in your large plastic storage tubs, and fill them about half full. I don't put anything in with them or cover them, just tomatoes (no parts of the plant can remain, those will mold over time). I store them in my shed/well house that stays about 35-50 during the time of year when the tomatoes need to ripen. I keep extra pails/tubs on hand to sort out tomatoes to pull out the ripe ones. About every 5-7 days, depending on how they are ripening, I go through and pull out all the ripe ones and process them, and then I separate out others that are about halfway ripe and keep those ones together, that way I know in another 5-7 days those ones for sure will be ripe, and I go through the remaining ones and do the same thing. I am down to my last 5 gallon pail now and I need to process those up today or tomorrow. I usually only have about 10-20 tomatoes start going bad the whole time, but since I check them on a weekly basis, they don't make others rot. I've had numerous people tell me that this approach will not work, but I've done it for 10+ years now with no issues, I do live in an area with low humidity so maybe that helps, but it is what has always worked for me. I've always made sauce the same way my mom and grandma did, which is just quarter the tomatoes and throw them in a big pot, let them cook for about 30-60 minutes so the skins and everything loosens up, run them through a Foley food mill or another sauce making device, and pour it into a large pot and let it cook down over low heat for 1-2 days, never had any problems with it sticking that way. I too have a wood cook stove, so I wait until wood burning season to make my sauce. While not a sauce tomato, I love using Black Krim tomatoes for sauces and paste, takes longer to cook down, but the flavor is so rich and delicious.
ReplyDeleteOld-Fart here, again:
ReplyDeleteA hint for freezing 1-gallon bags of “stuff” flat, especially if you have several bags.
Get an old Milk Create, one of those plastic square/cube ones. Approx 12”x12”x12”
Make sure there is room in the freezer for it.
Cut pieces of medium heavy cardboard to fit inside.
Set one insert on the bottom, then layer the “goods” with a piece of cardboard between each bag.
After all are frozen you can remove and stack as wanted.
Opps.
DeleteOne last thing, Layer something atop the top bag/cardboard to get the Budge outa the top bag.
I'm different from you in that I would see the fact that I got ANY tomatoes out of that as a reason not to be disturbed about the rest of it. You made a priority of your family, among other things, and that is nothing to be ashamed of.
ReplyDelete