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  2. How To Save Tomato Seeds So You Can Plant Them Next Year - AOL

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    Skip buying the seed packet next year.

  3. Too much tomato, zucchini in your garden? Here's what to do ...

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    What to do with too many tomatoes in your garden. First things first. There is nothing, and I repeat, nothing, you can do to make any kind of canned, preserved, pressed, dried, or otherwise ...

  4. Heirloom tomato - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heirloom_tomato

    These seeds should be mixed at the end of the growing season. [4] There are two main ways to save heirloom tomato seeds. The first method is to let the tomato ripen completely, even to the point of beginning to rot, and then remove the seeds with a spoon and spread them on a piece of cloth or paper to dry.

  5. What to Plant with Tomatoes: The 25 Best Companions to Try ...

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    2. Thyme. The same study found that thyme had a similar effect. It’s a perennial so it will return for many years. But because you should rotate where you plant tomatoes each year (to prevent ...

  6. Scuppernong - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scuppernong

    In the movie The Bad Seed, Rhoda Penmark talks about the "Scuppernong arbor" in the family's yard. In William Faulkner's novel Absalom, Absalom!, Thomas Sutpen, and Wash Jones drink whiskey and laugh together in the Scuppernong arbor on Sutpen's estate. Scuppernongs are mentioned in Chapter 25 of MacKinlay Kantor's Civil War novel Andersonville.

  7. Seed saving - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seed_saving

    Partially shelled popcorn seed saved for planting. In agriculture and gardening, seed saving (sometimes known as brown bagging) [1] is the practice of saving seeds or other reproductive material (e.g. tubers, scions, cuttings) from vegetables, grain, herbs, and flowers for use from year to year for annuals and nuts, tree fruits, and berries for perennials and trees. [2]

  8. Tomato seed oil - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tomato_seed_oil

    Tomato seeds. Tomato seed oil is a vegetable oil extracted from the seeds of tomatoes. The possibility of extracting oil from tomato seeds was studied in the United States in 1915. Seeds were obtained from a variety of locations and bred and pressed to produce oil. This was refined using an alkali and then clarified with fuller's earth.

  9. L.A. Times readers share their favorite guacamole recipes ...

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    "Avocado, lime juice, chopped onion, small amount of tomatoes but only the flesh and skin — no juice and no seeds — knife-shredded romaine lettuce, sliced black olives, dab of medium salsa ...