Are you guys nuts? Durians taste awful! Or perhaps it's because taste relies heavily on smell...
Either way: Tomato --> fruit
Either way: Tomato --> fruit
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Tomatoes are a fruit but I don't eat it like one.
My favorite pizza is margherita pizza. Definitely tomatoes and basil.But, you're a vegetarian??
Surely you have enjoyed sun dried tomatoes on a pizza the way some enjoy pineapple.
Or even sun dried tomatoes as a snack?
I love la curtido on my papusas.Cabbage: Delicious vegetable or Weapon of mass destruction?![]()
As I've heard: "Knowledge is knowing that a tomato is a fruit. Wisdom is not using tomatoes in a fruit salad."
Teadrinker has it right:
in botanical terms, the piece of a plant that contains the seeds is a fruit; in gardening terms whether it's a fruit depends mostly on how it's used.
Seeds do not make someting 100% a fruit.
Here you go, the most confusing defination I've ever read in my lifetime but provided by Webster's English Dictionary.
fruit
1. fruit \'fru:t\ n [ME, fr. OF, fr. L fructus fruit, use, fr. fructus, pp.
of frui)] often attribX to enjoy, have the use of - more at BROOK 1a: a
product of plant growth - usu. used in pl. 1b1: the usu. edible
reproductive body of a seed plant; esp : one h aving a sweet pulp
associated with the seed 1b2: a succulent plant part used chiefly in a
dessert or sweet course 1c: a dish, quantity, or diet of fruits 1d: a
product of fertilization in a plant with its modified envelopes or ap
pendages; specif : the ripened ovary of a seed plant and its contents 2:
OFFSPRING, PROGENY 3: CONSEQUENCE, RESULT
All fruits are vegetables, but not all vegetables are fruits. Some fruits (such as tomatoes) are eaten as vegetables and some vegetables (such as rhubarb) are eaten as fruits.
This. The word "fruit" has different meanings depending on the context. The word "vegetable" has no botanical definition, only a culinary one.(Apologies to Paul, but I cannot get the multiquote to include quotes from Page 1 of the thread with his from Page 2.)
Paul is correct. It is a difference between botanical nomenclature and culinary. The culinary drives the gardening distinctions that Kuli mentioned.
As the definition states, if the food is served as a sweet dish or dessert, it becomes a fruit course.
The tamato is a variety of berry, like watermelons or tomatoes.
