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  <post>
    <body>Here is what I found, apparently they are not available in the US?

From the Kumato website
http://www.kumato.eu/spip.php?rubrique12

What makes &quot;Kumato&quot;&#174; tomatoes sweeter than most tomatoes, despite the colour?

    Quality depends on many factors, of which the most important are the variety and the growing conditions, certainly not the colour. Kumato&#174; tomatoes grow from special tomato plants that naturally produces dark but extra-sweet fruits, thanks to a naturally higher &quot;brix&quot; level (fructose content) than traditional red tomatoes. And because all plants are grown and ripened under optimal climate conditions, and carefully selected before commercialization, all fruits marketed under Kumato&#174; brand guarantee the intensity of taste and the organoleptic characteristics that have made this fruit a concentration of flavour!
&lt;br&gt;
Are Kumato&#174; genetically modified products?

    Absolutely NOT! Kumato&#174; is the successful outcome of many years of effort in traditional plant breeding techniques and grown using natural methods. Originating from wild tomatoes growing spontaneously, it was subsequently adapted to tolerate the dry, salty growing conditions of the Mediterranean. Many consumers, facing for the first time unusual vegetables such Kumato&#174; tomatoes, might be induced to think that it has been obtained via futuristic genetic modification. But we can assure this is not the case, as for the vegetables sold today in the European countries, even the most unusual ones. In nature many excellent varieties exist since millions of years, and new ones can be obtained by classical cross-breeding techniques. Simply, many of them have not been broadly cultivated so far because of a variety of reasons, mostly related to the difficulties and the costs (too delicate, not very efficient, difficult to adapt to different climates, etc...). Kumato&#174; tomatoes are among them. The ultimate results of nature&#8217;s creativity that finally, thanks to today&#8217;s advanced knowledge of agronomic techniques and processes, we have been able to bring onto your table at a reasonable cost. Naturally!
&lt;br&gt;
Where can I buy Kumato&#174;?

    Currently we distribute Kumato&#174; in most Western European countries. Use our store locator to find a retailer close to your home.
&lt;br&gt;
Are any of Kumato&#174; imported from outside the EU?

    No. All our production is from Europe. We mostly grow our fruits in dedicated plantations in Spain, France, Belgium and Switzerland. The different latitudes and climatic conditions of our locations enable us to provide the consumers with the freshest, tastiest and consistently highest quality produce possible, at any time of the year. And thanks to our rigorous protocols and strict quality selection standards, we are able to always guarantee just the same quality whatever the field.
</body>
    <created-at type="datetime">2009-07-09T08:15:40+10:00</created-at>
    <delta type="boolean">false</delta>
    <id type="integer">11684</id>
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    <topic-id type="integer">2537</topic-id>
    <updated-at type="datetime">2009-07-09T08:16:46+10:00</updated-at>
    <user-id type="integer">3100</user-id>
  </post>
  <post>
    <body>They've recently started selling them in Canada, and I suspect they're growing here as well.</body>
    <created-at type="datetime">2009-07-09T11:33:52+10:00</created-at>
    <delta type="boolean">false</delta>
    <id type="integer">11685</id>
    <photo-id type="integer" nil="true"></photo-id>
    <topic-id type="integer">2537</topic-id>
    <updated-at type="datetime">2009-07-09T11:33:52+10:00</updated-at>
    <user-id type="integer">886</user-id>
  </post>
  <post>
    <body>I've recently read that Kumato tomatoes will be sold in the US under the name Rosso Bruno but don't know when or where they'll be available.</body>
    <created-at type="datetime">2009-07-09T13:13:25+10:00</created-at>
    <delta type="boolean">false</delta>
    <id type="integer">11686</id>
    <photo-id type="integer" nil="true"></photo-id>
    <topic-id type="integer">2537</topic-id>
    <updated-at type="datetime">2009-07-09T13:13:25+10:00</updated-at>
    <user-id type="integer">6214</user-id>
  </post>
  <post>
    <body>So it's a wild tomato, or it's a variety of a tomato?  There seems to be a lot of not very specific information in that product website.

</body>
    <created-at type="datetime">2009-07-10T02:25:58+10:00</created-at>
    <delta type="boolean">false</delta>
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    <topic-id type="integer">2537</topic-id>
    <updated-at type="datetime">2009-07-10T02:25:58+10:00</updated-at>
    <user-id type="integer">12</user-id>
  </post>
  <post>
    <body>Wow, I have never heard of cross breeding tomatoes before. I thought that was too hard.</body>
    <created-at type="datetime">2009-09-20T11:50:02+10:00</created-at>
    <delta type="boolean">false</delta>
    <id type="integer">12753</id>
    <photo-id type="integer" nil="true"></photo-id>
    <topic-id type="integer">2537</topic-id>
    <updated-at type="datetime">2009-09-20T11:50:02+10:00</updated-at>
    <user-id type="integer">5072</user-id>
  </post>
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