Kumato Salad
By: My Cooking Hut
Published: Thursday, February 25, 2010 - 12:00pm

Ingredients




Kumato tomato, 4-5

Red onions (sliced), 1/4

Cherry tomato (for garnishing, quartered), 2-4

tablespoon Fish sauce, 1
tablespoon Sugar, 1
tablespoon Lime juice, 2
Garlic (chopped), 1 clove

tablespoon Roasted unsalted peanuts, 1-2

Preparation

1 Quartered kumato tomatoes. Put in a salad bowl and set aside. Also quartered some cherry tomatoes for garnishing. 2 In a bowl, mix in fish sauce, sugar, lime juice and finely chopped garlic. Stir until the sugar dissolves. 3 Thinly slice the red onions and mix with kumato tomatoes. 4 Pour in the dressings and give it a good toss. 5 Serve in individual bowls and garnish with some cherry tomatoes if you wish. Sprinkle some toasted unsalted peanuts before serving.

About


During summer days, I like light and simple dish like salad. Last week, I made Tuna Vegetable Couscous salad. This weeks, it looks like my love for salad continues. So, 2 weeks in a row I am sharing with you guys salad recipes. I hope you will like them!
What is Kumato? Have you heard of it? What does it taste like? Is there any difference between Kumato and Tomato? I actually came across Kumato in one of the food magazines. When I first laid my eyes on this new fruit, I thought, it looks kind of special and I was intrigued by it!
Kumato is a variety of tomato. It originates from a ‘lost’ wild tomato and has been developed through ten years of cross-breeding by plant specialists Syngenta. The colour of kumato ranges from dark brown to golden green. For the first glance, it may look like unripe tomato and may not taste sweet at all. All I can say is don’t judge kumato by its appearance! This is the natural look of kumato – tomato with a tan!  If you wish to know more, click here.
I bought a box of kumatoes and I can tell you that they taste sweet and they are just like the normal tomatoes! It is said that it contains higher sweetness than usual tomatoes. Kumato is widely grown in Spain, France, Belgium and Switzerland. It is ripened under optimum climatic conditions in order to achieve the highest levels of fructose.
Kumato has really firm texture and juicy. Thus, kumato is perfect for salads! I think it also gives a brand new look to normal tomato salad, what do you think? I made a real simple salad with kumato. This Asian-style komato salad is great for summer days when you want to have light lunch. It is also suitable to be served as starter!