• @[email protected]
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    12 hours ago

    Fun fact potato berries are poisonous . They look just like black nightshade weeds which grows everywhere

  • @yesman
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    1 day ago

    Tomatoes, peppers, and potatoes are native to the Americas. That means that before Transatlantic trade, there were no hot peppers in China, no potatoes in Ireland, and not tomatoes in Italy.

    • @[email protected]
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      2918 hours ago

      Imagine many common Indian dishes without tomatoes or chilis. How about the popular trope of a Native American on horseback? Horses went extinct in the US many thousands of years before Europeans arrived with a different kind. It’s amazing how quickly the cultural exchange happened so long ago.

      • @[email protected]
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        58 hours ago

        Tangential fact: syphillis originated in the Americas, likely from llamas. It’s the only instance of a transmittable disease to be imported to the old world.

        This also makes me a bit annoyed at the show 'Apothecary Diaries" as it depicts syphillis existing in China in the 700AD

    • Psaldorn
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      371 day ago

      That’s why if you ask someone in Bologna how much tomato to add to your Bolognese they will chase you out of town with a kitchen knife.

        • @[email protected]
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          411 hours ago

          That’s documented serving. You don’t seriously believe that a slow stew on the basis of meat, wine and misofritto only appeared in the 19th century?

          • @[email protected]
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            610 hours ago

            No, but at what point would you start calling it bolognese then? It’s every meat/wine stew from Bologna bolognese?

            • @[email protected]
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              29 hours ago

              When do you call something a continent? Just vibes, I guess. All I am saying is that the dish has a much longer history than 200 years.

      • @Maggoty
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        723 hours ago

        What did they use instead?

  • @[email protected]
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    421 day ago

    People always look at you weird when you call Salsa a “concoction of nightshade fruits”.

    • M137
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      313 hours ago

      A pouch of snus is called a “prilla” in Swedish, and one of my friends named their cat that.

  • @[email protected]
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    722 hours ago

    I can see a deadly link for nightshade for a few of them (like when potatoes turn green) but I’ve never heard of poisonous tomato facts… Are there any?

    • @ben_dover
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      11 hours ago

      any of the green parts of the tomato (even just the small bits inside the fruit) can kill small pets like hamsters or mice

    • @[email protected]
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      917 hours ago

      Many parts of the tomato plant are deadly to pets. Same goes for all nightshade members.

    • MrsDoyle
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      513 hours ago

      Potatoes have fruits as well - they look like little dark green tomatoes. Toxic of course, because nightshade.

    • @[email protected]
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      17 hours ago

      There is more to a plant than just the fruit, you know. It just happens that the species (cultivar?) of nightshade that we grow for potatoes has tasty, starchy roots, while others have tasty, zesty fruits, and then one of them is eggplant.

      • @Narauko
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        311 hours ago

        Eggplant out here catching strays.

    • @[email protected]
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      14 hours ago

      Get this, they’re so closely related that botanists created a plant that grows tomatoes above ground and potatoes below.

    • @chuckleslord
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      223 hours ago

      … what? No, they’re all nightshade plants. Not the same plant, mind, but still the same family.