TBDonnelly said:
Well..............today,
I harvested,
I envisioned Euel Gibbons

,
then, I ate the raw okra pod.
Would not recommend it.
Of course, if I was Bear Grills of 'Man vs.wild', I'd say, "Not bad".
Don
Let Donny try it. He'll eat anything...
No, I never ate raw okra. It's too darn fuzzy for my texture sensitive tongue. Besides, I normally have to wear gloves when picking it to keep my hands from itching. That just doesn't encourage me to munch.
The okra bloom sure is pretty. Last year I posted a picture of one in my garden thread and asked if anyone could identify it. I don't remember who did, but it didn't take long. It was like the $100 dollar question on "Who Wants to be a Millionaire?"
You don't have a big patch of okra, Don. I only have about half of what I planted left. I keep thinking I'll take a picture of the disease that kills my mature plants, but I haven't done it yet. Even with all the dying plants, we still get lots of okra. It loves hot weather and it is plenty hot here now.
Tdog: I can't believe you are asking for an okra and tomato recipe. You are in the middle of Cajun country where gumbo is more common than mashed tators. Is that what you are talking about? My wife makes a great gumbo that only has veggies. I personally never met a bowl of gumbo I didn't like. Here's a recipe I googled up that can be cooked without fish or meat. It also lists how you can add meat at the bottom.
Ingredients:
6-8 slices bacon
1 large onion, chopped
1 bell pepper, chopped
2 or 3 cloves garlic, minced
1# frozen cut okra (or use fresh if available in your area)
2 28-oz cans whole or sliced tomatoes
salt, pepper and cayenne to taste
file powder (optional)
Seafood: 1# shrimp, cleaned and deveined, 1# firm fillets (such as sole, cod, roughy), 1/2# crabmeat... or whatever is available
OR... use a couple pounds of boneless chicken
Directions:
Cook the bacon in a large pot. Remove, crumble, and set aside. Leave about 2 tablespoons of bacon grease in the pot, and saute onion, garlic, pepper and okra. The okra will get nice and gooey, serving as thickening agent for the gumbo. Add tomatoes, seasoning and the cooked bacon. Simmer, covered, for at least a half hour, but can cook a couple hours.
Add seafood or chicken and cook until done. Add file powder if you want a thicker stew. Serve over rice.