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An Ex-Expatriate

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An Ex-Expatriate

Tag Archives: Food

The World’s Most Expensive Tomatoes

14 Thursday May 2026

Posted by farfalle1 in gardening, Uncategorized

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

Arizona garden pests, Food, garden, gardening, Gardening in Arizona, Growing tomatoes, nature, vegetables

Would you pay $46.80 for a tomato? For a smallish Roma tomato? I, too, would have answered “No,” not so long ago. That was before I wandered into Costco a month or so ago and saw this:

Oh all right, that’s not exactly what I saw. I saw a stack of flat boxes with images like the one above on the outside. It inflamed my imagination. Tomatoes! Fresh, homegrown tomatoes like we had in Connecticut and later in Italy. Big, succulent, sweet, juicy tomatoes. Caprese salad! BLTs!! Yay!!! So I humped one of the big boxes into my cart and brought it home.

I love to assemble things – some have called me the Queen of Ikea – and this planter went together like a dream (Costco sold it for considerably less, just in case you think I’ve completely lost my mind). All the pieces were there and they all fit together exactly as they should. So far, a total win. There followed an online order for potting soil (so many choices!) so I wouldn’t have to carry the heavy bags to the car; all that was lacking was plants. Speedy went off to… somewhere… and returned with 3 Big Boy plants, 3 Roma plants and a pepper plant. When I inquired what type of pepper it is, he replied, ‘hot,’ which is good – our favorite kind.

It was loads of fun to assemble everything and to plant our garden. The above item has a nifty watering system. There is a plastic reservoir – you can just see its black plastic bottom under the cedar box in the photo above – and there is a funnel that sticks up above the dirt and delivers added water to the reservoir below. A cheerful plastic flower floats in the funnel, when the flower sinks, it’s time to add more water.

Then began the hard part – waiting. I bought a pound of bacon in anticipation of delicious BLTs in the not-too-distant future. Amazingly, everything went as we hoped. The plants all survived, grew and flowered. Little tomatoes formed and became larger tomatoes, and began to blush. Oh boy.

Here’s something I didn’t know, because it was never a problem in our former gardens. Birds like to peck almost-ripe tomatoes, and once they do, the tomato is pretty much ruined. That happened. I left the victim on the bush:

ugh. But there’s a solution to every problem, right? This one was a net house to keep the birds off the rest of our crop.

You can rest assured that if there’s a gardening mistake to be made, I will make it. This net is exactly what I wanted, but only 5′ tall. I am 5′ 7″ tall, so I have to crouch to get into the little house, and stay crouched while inside. Which is not the end of the world, but not ideal. Why did I not get a taller one, you ask? They were all too long for the space I had designated for the garden. Nonetheless, our precious crop was now safe from birds.

Have you ever heard of the tomato hornworm? I had not, but made the acquaintance of one the day after assembling and installing the net house over our garden. These critters (they are kind of appealing in a disturbing way, aren’t they?) come out of the soil, so thank you bags of soil. I’m glad I got only one, because one worm can denude an entire plant in just one night. That’s what happened to this plant:

It doesn’t look so awful here, but it was pretty shocking to go out in the morning to admire our unpecked fruit and find one of the plants leafless on the top half. It didn’t take long to find and remove the culprit – I put him, and his stem and some leaves, under a bush. I think a bird ate him, although he can move at 9 mph so maybe he got a whiff of someone else’s tomato plant and headed in that direction. What would he have become?

A five-spotted hawkmoth, that’s what. You can see where he gets his name. Evidently he is an important pollinator, sometimes mistaken for a hummingbird due to his large size (2-4″). I don’t care; he can’t have our tomatoes.

Then things kind of stalled while we waited for the remaining 20 tomatoes to mature (11 Roma, 9 Big Boys, of which 3 are medium Boys and 6 are very small Boys). We have waited in vain for even one pepper, in spite of numerous flowers. The tomatoes have produced more flowers, too, but none of those have made fruit. Turns out tomatoes are a bit fussy. To pollinate successfully they prefer temperatures at 60-75 F at night, and 60-90 F during the day. Our day temperatures are already higher than that.

The University of Arizona Extension Service recommends transplanting tomatoes from February-April. We were just at the tail end of that range, which probably affected our production. Peppers are on the same schedule and, like tomatoes, are in the nightshade family, so I haven’t a clue why we haven’t gotten a single one. Maybe the plant is lonely? I got wondering if pollinators could get into the garden with the netting in place, so every morning I open up the side of the netting away from where the birds gather. I also take a soft paintbrush and, making appropriate buzzing noises, go from flower to flower in an effort to assist pollination. No joy.

Like pretty much everything else, having a garden in Arizona is a completely different practice than having one in New England or Italy, those relatively humid, cool places. The schedule is different and the plants require more attention. It’s a challenge, but a fun one. I suspect planting cherry-sized tomatoes (next year! The gardener’s annual cry!) will be more successful.

So why do I think our tomatoes are so expensive, and are they worth it? I took the cost of the planter box, the dirt, the plants and the netting and divided it by the 5 tomatoes we have harvested thus far. If the other 20 survive and we can eat them, that will cut down the price per tomato by quite a bit. It’s still a better deal to buy them at the grocery store, but not nearly as much fun. To be honest, the taste has not been noteworthy, but store-bought have no flavor at all, so we are incrementally ahead, and yes, at the end of the day they are worth every penny.

Growing tomatoes in Italy:

Growing tomatoes in Arizona

Fun at the Ranch Market

17 Tuesday Jun 2025

Posted by farfalle1 in Food, Mexican food, Uncategorized

≈ 6 Comments

Tags

Cardenas Ranch Market, Food, Los Altos Ranch Market, mexican, Mexican Markets, Mexican Restaurants, Tortilla making

It’s been many years since the Captain and I visited this terrific market on Southern and Stapley in Mesa, which specializes in Mexican foods and products. The original Los Altos market chain of seven markets was acquired by Cardenas in 2017, which I think must account for the lighter, brighter and yes, cleaner, store Demonstration Buddy and I found yesterday, and the fact that the sign no longer says Los Altos Ranch Market. We will always think of it as Los Altos, though.

We stopped by the market for a look-see and for a delicious taco lunch. It definitely all looked a lot fresher and tidier than the last time Cappy and I dropped by. It differs from our usual markets in oh so many ways. For instance, you want dried peppers? Take a look at this whole wall of different kinds of peppers!

You need some herbs and spices for taco night that you might not find in your regular grocery? Check out this wall:

Not only do you get a fair amount of what you’re buying, the prices are more reasonable than the McCormick bottles you’ll find in the big chain store.

Some of the items are things we know well with their names in Spanish – cinnamon sticks, little packets of tomato flavored pasta (?!), cardamom seeds; but some are things we don’t recognize, either by sight or name. Fun!

We enjoyed seeing meat that was displayed without being all packed up on plastic trays with plastic wrap. And where else are you going to find chicken feet (Patas de pollo)? (Well, probably at Lee Lee, but that’s for another post sometime.)

We were kind of amused by the fish display. Demo Buddy has eaten these upside down fish in Mexico and reports they are bony, oily, and are neither delicious nor much fun to eat. But someone sure must like them – or knows how to prepare them better than the person who cooked them for DB. Poor guys look like they’re trying to hide. Too late! Too late!

Please excuse the poor quality of this greatly enlarged photo below which I stole from the interwebs and which shows the cafeteria-style lunch counter at Los Altos. Here you can get fresh-made juices and all manner of Mexican prepared food. We opted for tacos, and were delighted to see our tortillas plucked off a board and cooked to order, then made with our requested filling (chicken, please, and for toppings: todo!). We couldn’t resist sides of refried beans (yum), fried bananas, and guac (note to chef: way too salty, have brought home to add more avocados and some sour cream). Sitting at the long picnic tables and dining with strangers is loads of fun, as is seeing what other people are eating – sometimes recognizable, sometimes not. It was the perfect luncheon for hot and weary ladies of a certain age.

We were able to resist the bakery section – seen below in a 2021 photo from Yelp (thank you, other photographer). We both have always found the colors and the amount of sugar in these baked goods a bit alarming. We are so boring.

There are all the usual supermarket items in the aisles, and loads of fresh fruits and veggies. You could certainly do all shopping here and be more than happy. I haven’t included photos of these aisles because, well, supermarket aisles. meh. The fruits and veggies are beautifully displayed; here’s a photo from the store’s website.

I’ve saved the most fun for last. Los Altos has what can only be described as a Rube Goldberg tortilla maker, that was feverishly pounding out corn tortillas as we watched. It goes so quickly it takes three people to handle the output. Just after making the video you can see here, one of the gents waved us over and gave us hot-off-the-press tortillas. Very delicious.

If you have a chance, check out the Cardenas/Los Altos Ranch Markets. There are nine locations, (only the one I’ve written about here is in the East Valley; the rest are to the West). You won’t be disappointed.

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