They're both. The term vegetable can mean either a part of a plant that people eat, or in a culinary sense it can refer to savory plant based foods that excludes things like grains, legumes, nuts, etc. In either case tomatoes, being both an edible part of a plant and savory gets to be a vegetable.
On a different level, botanically, not only is it a fruit, but it is a true berry.
So yeah, it can be, and is both things depending on the how you're looking at it.
I don't even know what "savory" means. What does that mean. I see it all the time but it means nothing to me.
It has 2 general meanings:
English synonym for umami
Any food that's not sweet
Savory is the English term for the fifth flavor, often called umami. Savory foods have a distinct flavor different from salt, sour, bitter, and sweet. Sometimes described as "meaty." Other high umami foods include soy-based foods and mushrooms.
One definition: food “belonging to the category that is salty or spicy rather than sweet.”
It’s a bit of an odd definition but it gets the gist across. An example of using savory: differentiating between pies with savory filling (meats, vegetables, etc) and sweet filling (fruits, custard).
To add to the other explanations, if you've ever had MSG it is literally THE savory flavor distilled. If you've ever had Cool ranch Doritos, the aftertaste is kind of savory.
Time to add a longer tail to the right side of the meme with your post on it with the transcendent "nuanced and complete position" wojak.
Carrots are pretty sweet
At those times I'm really glad that Portuguese distinguishes between fruta (culinary fruit) and fruto (botanical fruit; also posh word for yield, output). It means that the underlying false dichotomy doesn't even work in the language.
Knowledge is knowing that a tomato is a fruit; wisdom is not putting it in a fruit salad.
CHA is selling tomato fruit salad by calling it salsa
They're both. The term vegetable can mean either a part of a plant that people eat, or in a culinary sense it can refer to savory plant based foods that excludes things like grains, legumes, nuts, etc. In either case tomatoes, being both an edible part of a plant and savory gets to be a vegetable.
On a different level, botanically, not only is it a fruit, but it is a true berry.
So yeah, it can be, and is both things depending on the how you're looking at it.
I don't even know what "savory" means. What does that mean. I see it all the time but it means nothing to me.
It has 2 general meanings:
Savory is the English term for the fifth flavor, often called umami. Savory foods have a distinct flavor different from salt, sour, bitter, and sweet. Sometimes described as "meaty." Other high umami foods include soy-based foods and mushrooms.
One definition: food “belonging to the category that is salty or spicy rather than sweet.”
It’s a bit of an odd definition but it gets the gist across. An example of using savory: differentiating between pies with savory filling (meats, vegetables, etc) and sweet filling (fruits, custard).
To add to the other explanations, if you've ever had MSG it is literally THE savory flavor distilled. If you've ever had Cool ranch Doritos, the aftertaste is kind of savory.
Time to add a longer tail to the right side of the meme with your post on it with the transcendent "nuanced and complete position" wojak.
Carrots are pretty sweet
At those times I'm really glad that Portuguese distinguishes between fruta (culinary fruit) and fruto (botanical fruit; also posh word for yield, output). It means that the underlying false dichotomy doesn't even work in the language.
Knowledge is knowing that a tomato is a fruit; wisdom is not putting it in a fruit salad.
CHA is selling tomato fruit salad by calling it salsa
Are we all supposed to know what CHA is?
Charisma. It comes from this https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Quotes/TheSixStats
Botany: tomatoes are fruits. But apples aren't!
Culinary: tomatoes are the key to a BLT.
Oklahoma: watermelons are vegetables