Pretty Ugly
Transcription
Pretty Ugly
Pretty Ugly Florida’s Once Forbidden Fruit Packs a Tasty Punch ★ By Caroline McCoy T omato lovers who have discovered them might not like to admit it, but some of the juiciest, most flavorful tomatoes around are sitting right there in the regular supermarket produce section. They are right next to the uniformly red, perfectly round, perfectly bland, waxy tomatoes most grocers stack into wobbly pyramids that topple over at the slightest touch. They are called UglyRipes and, despite their marketing nightmare of a name, they are delicious. The UglyRipe tomato has been a labor of love for produce guru Joseph Procacci, of Procacci Brothers Sales Corp., which distributes the brand under its Florida-based 120 Garden&Gun summer 2007 Santa Sweets label. For years Procacci heard the same complaint: in the winter, there wasn't a good tomato to be found. Florida, which produces the majority of the nation’s tomato supply during the off-season, was getting a bad name among tomato consumers. So, searching for an alternative, Procacci began developing a superior-tasting garden-quality tomato. In 1999, after nearly two decades, the UglyRipe burst onto the Florida tomato scene. It wasn’t pretty: In fact, it was thinskinned, lumpy, and varied in color. But for Procacci looks aren’t everything. He named it the UglyRipe — so we daft consumers would know it was “supposed to be ugly” — and trademarked the name. The UglyRipe is derived from the Marmande, an heirloom tomato traditionally grown in southern France. As such, its looks and taste are more like those of a garden-grown heirloom than the thicker-skinned tomatoes that are commercially cultivated to withstand shipping and have a longer shelf life. The UglyRipe enjoyed three seasons in the national marketplace before the Florida Tomato Committee (FTC), a federally regulated group of growers that supervises the state’s tomato industry, cracked down. Claiming that the UglyRipe’s misshapen appearance didn’t meet its quality standards, the FTC banned distribution of the UglyRipe outside of Florida. The UglyRipe was just too ugly. The long debate that ensued cost Procacci Brothers millions in unmarketable crops of perfectly wonderful tomatoes. Finally, Procacci's persistence coupled with consumer backlash to the ban paid off in January, when the UglyRipe was pardoned for its appearance. The tomato was finally allowed to reenter the national market, and taste buds across the country got their long-awaited fix. It may not be the prettiest tomato in the supermarket, but the UglyRipe is all about taste and, boy, is it gorgeous! Photograph by Andy Anderson