Italian tomato — /ɪtæljən təˈmatoʊ/ (say italyuhn tuh mahtoh) noun → Roma tomato …
Tomato sauce — This article is about the sauces often used with pasta. In some countries, tomato sauce is also used to refer to the condiment ketchup. A tomato sauce is any of a very large number of sauces made primarily out of tomatoes, usually to be served as … Wikipedia
Italian-American cuisine — (more simply known as Italian food in the United States) is the cuisine of Italian American immigrants and their descendents, who have modified Italian cuisine under the influence of American culture and immigration patterns of Italians to the… … Wikipedia
tomato — (n.) 1753, earlier tomate (c.1600), from Sp. tomate (mid 16c.) from Nahuatl tomatl a tomato, lit. the swelling fruit, from tomana to swell. Spelling probably influenced by potato (1565). A member of the nightshade family, which all contain… … Etymology dictionary
Italian cuisine — This article is part of the series … Wikipedia
Tomato pie — One piece of a typical tomato pie Tomato pie is commonly regarded as unique to Italian American populations. Unlike typical New York style pizza, which is closely related to Neapolitan pizza, tomato pie is derived heavily from Sicilian pizza, and … Wikipedia
Tomato — For other uses, see Tomato (disambiguation). Tomato … Wikipedia
Italian Unabomber — The Italian Unabomber ( it. Unabomber italiano) is a name given by the international media to an unknown terrorist tied to a series of booby trap bombings in northern Italy, specifically in the Veneto and Friuli Venezia Giulia region, which began … Wikipedia
Italian Argentine — Infobox Ethnic group group = flagicon|Italy Italian Argentine flagicon|Argentina Italo Argentino caption = Notable Italian Argentines Carlos Pellegrini·Arturo Frondizi·Ástor Piazzolla Luciana Pedraza·Lionel Messi·Gabriela Sabatini poptime = 20 25 … Wikipedia
tomato — /teuh may toh, mah /, n., pl. tomatoes. 1. any of several plants belonging to the genus Lycopersicon, of the nightshade family, native to Mexico and Central and South America, esp. the widely cultivated species L. lycopersicum, bearing a mildly… … Universalium