The Cottage Smallholder


stumbling self sufficiency in a small space

Tomatoes for breakfast

tomatoes ripening on the vineI harvest our tomatoes in the evening, when I water them. They are collected in the fold of my jumper and transferred to a bowl on the kitchen worktop to be admired and eaten.

The harvest is just three or four a day at the moment and most mornings the bowl is bare.
“Where are the tomatoes?”
“I ate them for breakfast. You told me I could eat some.”
Danny quite often gets up at four to start work. But tomatoes for breakfast Yuk!

If I want to eat our tomatoes I have to hide them in a dark spot in the fridge or my secret hiding place (beneath the lid of the old fashioned cheese dish).

Yesterday I got up early to finish the previous night’s article and potter a bit on other blogs. I wandered over to Little Foodies, one of my favourite fun food blogs. Amanda’s post on Pan con tomate, bread with tomato, olive oil and garlic seduced me completely. She describes food, and her life around food, so exquisitely that she could persuade me to eat grass.

I glanced into the bowl on the worktop. There were three cherry tomatoes left. I ate pan con tomate feeling very dashing and continental and it was delicious. Danny’s tomatoes for breakfast at four in the morning will now have to be a negotiated treat.


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5 Comments

  1. Fiona Nevile

    Hi Amanda,

    I am going to make D tomate con pan one day this week for breakfast. Much better than just a handful of tomatoes on their own.

    Yes, Joanna, there is something magical about harvesting your own tomatoes. Especially after all the problems we have had with blight. I love looking at them almost as much as eating them.

    Hi Pat,

    The sunny weather has helped the toms ripen well. I like the look of tomato vines. They grow along the front wall of the cottage.

    Hi Sara,

    Collecting into the fold of my jumper is so much more convenient than a basket!

  2. farmingfriends

    I love the way you collect them in your jumper. That is how I collect my guinea fowl eggs.
    sara from farmingfriends

  3. Fiona, those tomatoes look really lovely!!!! I agree Amanda could tempt me to eat just about anything.

  4. I particularly like the idea that your tomatoes have to be admired before they can be eaten … mine too! Sounds as if you need a new hiding place

    Joanna

  5. Hi Fiona, Thank you so much. A lovely thing to read first thing on a Saturday morning. It has set me up for the day with a big smile on my face. A x

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