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San Marzano - King Tomato

Sarno SA, Italia ★★★★☆ 201 views
Teresa Colella
Sarno
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About San Marzano - King Tomato

San Marzano - King Tomato - Sarno | Secret World Trip Planner

It tells of the long and troubled journey of the tomato, which, from across the ocean, from the mountains of Gua-temala landed, along with other tubers and spices, in Padania after traveling in the holds of the galleons of Herman Cortés conqueror of the Aztec empire. Received in truth with great distrust by rulers, scientists and clergymen, who, unaware of the tomato's strong vitamin content, branded it an evil fruit. The beginning of its fortune dates back to the 1600s, thanks to the Este family, the dukes of Parma, who had its seeds distributed free of charge to farmers. The latter, before transplanting in open fields, heated in old buckets among the hay in the heat of the stables. And, when Europe was agitated by the French Revolution, the red berry was already blushing among the green vegetable gardens of the Parma hills. In the book " The Tomato: An Ancient Wisdom," however, it is claimed that, only in 1902, in Fiano, a locality between Nocera, San Marzano, and Sarno did the "Pomme d'amour" become San Marzano. Delight of gourmets, pro-smoke of the Sundays of the rich and the poor. Commanded feasts punctuated by the red of the sauce that covered like an intoxicating lava the white of the pasta from the mills of Gragnano and Torre Annunziata. Cared for, pampered like a child by the peasant families who raised it in the characteristic rows, held suspended with stakes and supported by canes or iron wires, among rich foliage, which protected the red fruits from the sun's rays. Crucial to the extraordinary biodiversity of the S. Marzano Tomato were the hot soils of Vesuvius. In essence, King Tomato could boast of such a name only when it became S. Marzano. It was born from the admirable crossbreeding of three varieties that, then, in the early twentieth century were widespread in Sarno and Agro: the Fiascona, the Fiaschella and the Re Umberto. After forty years, this summer, we had one of the greatest satisfactions right in the field. Farmers Sabato Sirica and Eugenio Napoletano, from San Valentino Torio, a stone's throw from Fiano, showed us among the green rows laden with red gold, some San Marzano found next to the water from the Santa Marina spring. This water from the Lavorate basin, pure and cold as it once was, irrigated the tomato seedlings, planted in those same soils, where San Marzano had been born a century earlier. After recognition of the Protected Designation of Origin (PDO) in 1996 by the European Union, the S. Marzano Consortium was established (June 1999).

San Marzano - King Tomato - Sarno | Secret World Trip Planner
San Marzano - King Tomato - Sarno | Secret World Trip Planner
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    San Marzano - King Tomato
    📍 Sarno
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Frequently Asked Questions

The San Marzano tomato earned its legendary status in 1902 in Fiano, a locality between Nocera, San Marzano, and Sarno in the Campania region. It was created through the crossbreeding of three varieties—Fiascona, Fiaschella, and Re Umberto—that were widespread in the Sarno and Agro areas during the early twentieth century.
The hot soils of Vesuvius were crucial to the extraordinary biodiversity and unique quality of the San Marzano tomato variety. This volcanic terroir gives the tomatoes their distinctive characteristics that made them worthy of their 'King Tomato' designation.
Tomatoes traveled across the Atlantic from the mountains of Guatemala in the galleons of Hernán Cortés after the conquest of the Aztec empire, arriving in the Padania region. Rulers, scientists, and clergymen initially rejected them as an 'evil fruit,' unaware of their strong vitamin content, until the Este family, dukes of Parma, began distributing seeds to farmers in the 1600s.
Peasant families cultivated San Marzano tomatoes with meticulous care, arranging them in characteristic rows suspended with stakes and supported by canes or iron wires. The rich foliage was carefully maintained to protect the red fruits from the sun's harsh rays, treating each plant as delicately as a child.
San Marzano tomatoes became the signature ingredient in pasta dishes, particularly paired with pasta from the renowned mills of Gragnano and Torre Annunziata, creating the iconic red sauce that covered the white pasta. The tomato became a delicacy for both wealthy and poor families, becoming a centerpiece of Sunday feasts throughout the region.