This is a print preview of "Summer Scramble Eggs" recipe.

Summer Scramble Eggs Recipe
by Christine Lamb

The

tomato, fabulous nutritious fruit known as a vegetable. It's hard to believe

that such a widely used food source was once considered deadly poisonous.

Available year round in fresh and preserved forms, there is no shortage of uses

for this versatile "vegetable."

The

tomato is native to western South America and Central America. In 1519, Cortez

discovered tomatoes growing in Montezuma's gardens and brought seeds back to

Europe where they were planted as ornamental curiosities, but not eaten.

Most

likely the first variety to reach Europe was yellow in color, since in Spain

and Italy they were known as pomi

d'oro, meaning yellow apples. Italy was the first to embrace and

cultivate the tomato outside South America.

The

French referred to the tomato as pommes

d'amour, or love apples, as they thought them to have stimulating

aphrodisiacal properties.

In 1897, soup mogul, Joesph Campbell came out with condensed tomato soup, a move that set the company on the road to wealth as well as further endearing the tomato to the public.

Campbell may have made the tomato soup popular, but the first recipe is credited to Maria Parloa whose 1872 book The Appledore Cook Book describes her tomato chowder.

The high acidic content of the tomato makes it a prime candidate for canning which is one main reasons tomato was canned more than any other fruit or vegetable by the end on 19th century.

Research Source: About

No

need to skip breakfast with this quick and easy recipe for Summer Scramble

Eggs.

Summer

Scramble Eggs

Copyrighted

2013, Christine’s Pantry. All rights reserved.

Ingredients:

2

to taste

Directions:

In

a medium size bowl, beat eggs and crushed red pepper. Then add basil, cheese

and tomatoes, do not stir.

Using

nonstick frying pan, melt butter and cook eggs over low heat, stirring

occasionally. Cook until desired consistency. Enjoy!