| Product Details
Paperback: 150 pages
Publisher: Ten Speed Press
(July, 1999)
Language: English
ISBN: 1580080480
Product Dimensions: 10.3
x 4.6 x 0.6 inches
Price: $10.17
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Spotlight Reviews from Amazon.com
.
13 of 14 people found the
following review helpful:
Tomato culture and recipes
for those who want to grow them, September 4, 2002
Reviewer: Joanna Daneman
(Middletown, DE USA)
This was sold as a companion
book to Carolyn Male's "100 Heirloom Tomatoes." Dr. Male's book is pretty
complete for a home tomato grower, but this book has extra tips for growing
those love apples, and a lot of recipes, too.
So I am reviewing this primarily
as a cookbook, though it is half cookbook, half gardening guide. The recipes
range from soups to desserts such as a tomato granita (frozen sorbet.)
There are of course spaghetti sauces. And here's where the book surprised
me. The recipe for Bolognese sauce (tomato and ground beef gravy) is excellent,
in fact, one of the best I have used. At home I have a taster who compares
all things Italian to "Ma's". (Ma was born in Sicily, lived to be 100 and
routinely cooked for a crowd of invading Visigoths on a Sunday.) The sauce
lived up (almost) to Ma's unachievable heights. It was meaty, but balanced
with plenty of fresh tomato and bolstered by canned sauce and paste. The
addition of carrot and celery provided natural sweetness to offset the
acid of the fresh tomatoes. No sugar was needed. We used farmstand plum
tomatoes (my homegrown were dwarfed by the draught.)The directions for
peeling them (bowl of boiling water, bowl of ice water) worked well. In
no time, I had the fresh tomatoes peeled and seeded. A handful of fresh
opal basil was substituted for some of the dried herbs. The proportions
in this recipe are what makes it work so well. A huge, huge success.
The tomato growing tips add
more information and lore than in Dr. Male's book. If you are deeply into
growing tomatoes, I still would recommend "100 Heirlooms" but this book
is stands alone for useful recipes and great hints.
3 of 5 people found the following
review helpful:
Gary Ibsen has done it
again!, October 18, 2000
Reviewer: Joseph H Pierre
"Joe Pierre" (Salem, OR USA)
This is a beautifully illustrated,
beautifully presented book depicting the tomato in all its glory. Much
of the full-color photography was done by the author himself, who, among
other things was the editor and publisher of a high-quality slick magazine
in the Monterey, California, area, when I lived there.
Gary Ibsen was a good customer
of my commercial art business, and we were friends, back in the 1970s.
But, this book is not about Gary. It's hero is the tomato (Fruit, or vegetable?)
in all its forms and varieties.
The book contains tips on
planting and growing tomatoes, as well as an education on the differences
between the varieties, and recipes from notable chefs on how to use them
and enjoy them. And, of course, it is replete with a great many fine full-color
photographs, all well-presented and illustrative of the fruit, for the
tomato is a fruit--the U.S. Supreme Court's decision to the contrary notwithstanding.
Well done, Gary Ibsen!
Joe Pierre
former owner of Publisher's
Art Service
Customer Reviews
5 of 5 people found the following
review helpful:
Good overview - would
have liked yield and maturity info, January 10, 2005
Reviewer: M. Walton (Chicago,
IL USA) - See all my reviews
This is a beautiful book.
The pictures show many varieties of lush tomatoes. The recipies look delicious
as well and I look forward to trying many of them this coming Summer. The
author's general descriptions on certain varieties is nice as an overview.
The book is really an overview of tomatoes and growing methods and fertilizers
and offers specific recipies.
If the author would have
included tomato info on time to maturity for each of his tomato descriptions,
then the book would have been more helpful to those trying to plan out
what varities to grow to space out harvesting. Now I have to bop between
the book's tomato descriptions and some seed web-sites to figure out what
to plant to get a relatively spaced harvesting, which I have to do often
since the tomatoes described in the look comprise a long list. Also, it
would have been nice to know which varieties were hybrids and which were
heirlooms. I'm surprised the author didn't mention Red Brandywine in his
list as the flavor is the same with a better yield and some say it's easier
to grow than the pink variety.
The chapter of "Tomato Fest"
could have been eliminated. I wasn't sure as it's purpose other than noting
that the author liked to set up tastings.
The chapter on favorite soil
amendments can be summarized as a description of the soil amendment (typically
organic which is great) and then the use "apply to soil prior planting."
Again, this was an overview and I would have liked to know why to use one
over the other, how to use, etc.
If you're looking for a beautiful
overview book on tomatoes, then this is it.
But if you've become passionate
about tomatoes and not only want an overview, but also require better instructions
on the "how to" of growing and seeding and access to to more specific info
on the varieties themselves then check out "100 Heirloom Tomatoes for the
American Garden" which is beautiful as well.
Great Tomato Lover Book,
February 18, 2003
Reviewer: A. Giannini "angelagiannini"
(San Francisco, CA USA)
I thought this book was
a great general book. You get a little o everything. I love the part where
Gary is talking about his favorite tomatoes. The information on the festival
is inspirational!
4 of 4 people found the following
review helpful:
Great overall book,
May 16, 2001
Reviewer: c e wetherington
(concord, ca USA)
Great book to learn which
ones to grow and what soil should be ammended w/. Best all around tomato
book i have and i have 15.
Price: $10.17
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