I'm not so much into organic as I am local agriculture. I've gotten the tastiest produce from small local farmers who either cannot afford pursuing the USDA Organic label or just tend to think the "organic" label has been co-opted by Big Agri anyway. Plus, organic labeling is applied in some very odd places. I've seen "organic" oreo-type cookies. What does that mean? That they'll kill you with a more sustainable and eco-conscious heart attack? Organic junk food is still junk food. It was already killing people before the organic label. But I digress...
Supermarket tomatoes are an expensive way to transport and buy water. Because the flavor isn't there. I worked in Big Agri at one time in a fruit-vegetable packing shed. They pick tomatoes green and ripen them with gas. The garlic grown for the supermarket is not the best-tasting. Far from it. Most of the world that loves garlic eats what's known as a Hardneck garlic. But the U.S. growers selected the Softneck garlic sold here because it stores longer. Hardneck garlic has more flavor.
As far as tomatoes go, a person has not lived until they've eaten a Cherokee Purple tomato.
Supermarket tomatoes are an expensive way to transport and buy water. Because the flavor isn't there. I worked in Big Agri at one time in a fruit-vegetable packing shed. They pick tomatoes green and ripen them with gas. The garlic grown for the supermarket is not the best-tasting. Far from it. Most of the world that loves garlic eats what's known as a Hardneck garlic. But the U.S. growers selected the Softneck garlic sold here because it stores longer. Hardneck garlic has more flavor.
As far as tomatoes go, a person has not lived until they've eaten a Cherokee Purple tomato.