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Tomatillo: Tart Green Husk Tomato with 32 kcal & 12 mg Vitamin C per 100 g

These paper-lantern fruits give salsa verde its bright zing and offer pectin fiber plus unique withanolide antioxidants.

Tomatillo: Tart Green Husk Tomato with 32 kcal & 12 mg Vitamin C per 100 g

What Is a Tomatillo?

Small green (or purple) fruits of **_Physalis philadelphica_**, wrapped in a sticky, papery husk. Native to Mexico; nicknamed *”miltomate”*.

Nutrition (100 g raw)

|Calories|Carbs|Fiber|Sugars|Protein|Fat|Vitamin C| |---|---|---|---|---|---|---| |32 kcal|5.8 g|1.9 g|3.9 g|1.0 g|1.0 g|11.7 mg (13 %)|

Benefits

- **Withanolides & phenolic acids** act as antioxidants and may inhibit inflammation. - Natural **pectin** helps thicken sauces and supports gut health. - Modest potassium (268 mg/100 g) aids electrolyte balance with very few calories.

Drawbacks

- Sticky husk residue needs washing; wear gloves if sensitive. - Unripe, very green tomatillos can contain higher glyco-alkaloids—cook or choose fully filled husks. - Tartness (pH ≈ 3.9) may aggravate reflux in large amounts.

Flavour & Texture

**Citrus-herbal tartness with hint of green apple**; flesh remains firm after simmering, making sauces bright not mushy.

Culinary Uses & Storage

- Roast or boil with chile & cilantro for **salsa verde**. - Dice raw into guacamole for extra acidity. - Simmer with pork, chicken or beans (*chile verde*). - Refrigerate husked fruits in paper bag up to 2 weeks; freeze roasted halves 6 months.
  • 1. Tomatillo