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The eggplant isn’t the only one to be producing blossoms a little late.  Remember I mentioned that we were nearly despairing of seeing a Costoluto Genovese ripen, and that I suspected these Italian heirlooms despised our hot & humid Southern summer?

Well, we’ve now had about a dozen of them.  They were not as spectacular as advertised — or perhaps not as spectacular as I’d been building them up to be in my imagination, all through the long, hot months.  They were also much smaller than I’d envisioned, which would have been fine if there were lots and lots of them.  To make some spaghetti sauce from these tomatoes alone, I’d have had to grow about 40 plants — of just Costoluto Genovese.

Although I must admit, I still love their scalloped, girly shape.  I took some lovely photos of them, used as the base for a platter of Caprese Salad, and I’ll probably share that during the dull winter months when me and all my gardening pals are obsessing over the garden catalogs.  Just to remind us all to buy extra basil seed… and if you’re in a more northerly clime, maybe to try out the Costoluto Genovese where it might feel more at home.

More proof, if any were needed, that this plant would do well in more chilly temps, in the above photo.  All of my Costoluto plants have started putting out masses of new blooms… now, when it’s impossible they would ripen before first frost.

I do plan to take the advice I found earlier this summer over at a blog called Your Small Kitchen Garden and pull all the green tomatoes when it starts getting cold, bring them inside and see if they will ripen for me.  Daniel contends that the much advertised “vine-ripened” taste is basically a fat marketing lie, and I enjoyed reading his article — even if, when there was still sun, I continued to ripen my tomatoes to red alert level outside, on the plants.  (And I’m still doing so, even if our night temperatures have plunged into the 60s.)

Part of that stubborn resistance, I suspect, is my underlying philosophy of gardening rearing its head.  Or what I’ve got to substitute for one so far.  Anyway, I’m too inexperienced to have a fully developed philosophy yet.  But what I do have is a short list of How Gardening Works For Me that goes something like this:

1) Observe the way it happens in the natural world without my input.

2) Get all joyful and mystical and spend hours in blissful, enlightened contemplation as a result of Number 1.

3) Come back to earth briefly and copy Nature’s processes as closely as I can as I do the “work.”

4) Interject myself as little as possible — so there’s less “work” and so I don’t waste time reinventing the trowel, which seems to me an insulting way to treat Mother Nature.  Also, so I’ll have more time for Numbers 1 and 2 on this list.

5) If my garden needs serious intervention to make something happen that should be automatic (i.e., attracting pollinators), go back to 1 and repeat.

Yeah, that sounds about right.

(By the way, in case you haven’t guessed, this is Yellow in my series of unofficial responses to Capturing Beauty‘s Rainbow challenge.  There was a lot to choose from.  Yellow is actually a really common flower color in the Victory garden.  Vegetables and herbs often bloom yellow.  It must be a succesful evolutionary strategy.  Just a little information garnered from following #1 on my list above.)

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The lovely Costoluto Genovese, an Italian heirloom, supposedly well-known in the cuisine of that region and responsible for some heavenly tomato sauces, as it has small seed cavities and lots of meat.  (Although when I mentioned this to an Italian couple over for dinner, they had never heard of it.  I tried to pantomime the shape of the fruit in the air — the plants had not even bloomed back then in early June — assuming that their fluted shape would be unmistakable.  Still got blank looks.)

I love their unusual shape.  Reminds me of the slightly flattened, scalloped pumpkin Cinderella’s coach was made of.  Yet I’m despairing of getting any ripe fruits at all from these plants.

I have six plants.  One has still not bloomed.  The others have tomatoes in various sizes on their vines.  Some of the vines are fantastically developed and overflowing.  Some are weaklings and easily flop over if they are not staked every six inches along their way – little prima donnas.  Well, they are Italian.  The tomatoes are not very large, in general, and the plants are certainly not prolific.  If every single fruit ripened simultaneously on all the plants I have, I might have enough to make spaghetti sauce for two.

Heirlooms are unpredictable.  Yeah, yeah, I’ve heard it before.  But Cherokee Purple is doing amazingly well, putting out enormous tomatoes of unparalleled rich, complex taste, with consistently meaty flesh.  The Rutgers are pumping out tons of mid-sized globes that are a perfect balance of acid and sugar, the true summer tomato taste I know and love.  Roma has just taken a wee pause for the first time since early June, and has been the backbone of our tomatoes-for-cooking supply for over two straight months, steady and dependable.  I think the question is whether the heirloom likes your soil and weather conditions — and poor Costoluto is unhappy here.

F. comes from a spot in Europe not very far from Genoa, and he positively wilts in the summer heat and humidity, even though he’s been here over four years now.  I’m still adjusting to my new life here.  It’s been almost eight months now, but it was a huge transition for me to move to this small semi-rural community from bustling midtown Atlanta.

I think this tomato is just trying its best, but feeling overwhelmed by the hot sun and heavy air.  Upstate South Carolina is a different world from northern Italy.  Sometimes our local conditions don’t suit us… or are not conducive to our best performance.  That can happen whether we are transplants or natives.

Oh, well.  Live and learn.

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