🌞 dried tomatoes
byu/KULR_Mooning inKitchenConfidential



by KULR_Mooning

23 Comments

  1. cringecelebrator

    Sun dried tomatoes in the open? I didn’t know you could do that. I’d have thought this would cause rot.

    Neat post

  2. What keeps the birds and insects from getting to them?

  3. SickestNinjaInjury

    Leaving tomatoes outside like this is generally done in hot, arid regions without many bugs or birds.

  4. ending_act

    What a stunning sight! Probably smells amazing too. I love dried tomatoes so much and make them at home, in the balcony.

  5. SelarDorr

    wow those tomatoes look so good. are they actually that vibrant or is the color digitally enhanced?

  6. Very-very-sleepy

    I am shocked. I cannot see 1 fly in the video.

    how is this possible?

  7. Nadsworth

    Gorgeous. Clearly not the same garbage we order from shitty Sysco.

  8. Warm-Iron-1222

    What keeps animals and insects from eating them? I’m assuming the salt would deter a bit? Maybe the abundance has a lot to do with it? I mean, they can’t eat em all when it’s like 100 pounds of Roma tomatoes, right?

  9. KULR_Mooning

    Sliced Roma to the middle, keeping it whole. Sun dried for hours with a generous amount of salt. Once dried workers are able to rip them apart.

  10. BannedMyName

    Sun roasted tomatoes is one of my all time ingredients, holy fuck does it raise a pasta dish to the next level.

  11. OkOutlandishness1370

    We need more of this content on this sub

  12. standardtissue

    I always assumed “sun dried” was just more marketing lies. I’m genuinely impressed now.

  13. I’ve never even liked sun-dried tomatoes. I don’t hate them, just indifferent to them. Over-used, under-whelming.

    But, these look amazing. I would try these on a lot of things. A nice grilled fish, maybe. Or a wood fired pizza.

Write A Comment