Tell Me Mummy….Why Is A Tomato A Fruit?

This week, joining in with the lovely Liz from ‘Hart of the Munchkin Patch’, we are discussing those burning questions that kiddies ask, the ones that leave you wanting to shout ‘IT JUST IS!’. Children

This week, joining in with the lovely Liz from ‘Hart of the Munchkin Patch’, we are discussing those burning questions that kiddies ask, the ones that leave you wanting to shout ‘IT JUST IS!’. Children are curious little things….and more than often they leave me wondering things too!

So Marky says to me ‘Mum, why is a Tomato a fruit when we eat it as a vegetable’, I ponder the response and say ‘It has seeds in’, I thought I had it cracked, then he tells me that apples have pips in, and his grapes last week had seeds in too…damn, stumped. So I turn to the internet, Google knows everything, right?

http://www.oxforddictionaries.com/words/is-a-tomato-a-fruit-or-a-vegetable

The confusion about ‘fruit’ and ‘vegetable’ arises because of the differences in usage between scientists and cooks. Scientifically speaking, a tomato is definitely a fruit. True fruits are developed from the ovary in the base of the flower, and contain the seeds of the plant (though cultivated forms may be seedless). Blueberries, raspberries, and oranges are true fruits, and so are many kinds of nut. Some plants have a soft part which supports the seeds and is also called a ‘fruit’, though it is not developed from the ovary: the strawberry is an example.

As far as cooking is concerned, some things which are strictly fruits, such as tomatoes or bean pods, may be called ‘vegetables’ because they are used in savoury rather than sweet cooking. The term ‘vegetable’ is more generally used of other edible parts of plants, such as cabbage leaves, celery stalks, and potato tubers, which are not strictly the fruit of the plant from which they come. Occasionally the term ‘fruit’ may be used to refer to a part of a plant which is not a fruit, but which is used in sweet cooking: rhubarb, for example.

So, the answer to the question is that a tomato is technically the fruit of the tomato plant, but it’s used as a vegetable in cooking.

 So, because it  grows off a plant, as a fruit, it’s a fruit. So I tell Marky this, when he announces that peas also grow off a plant. Sigh…..

marky_why

Tell me mummy

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.