Showing posts with label tomato. Show all posts
Showing posts with label tomato. Show all posts

Thursday, February 12, 2015

My Plans for 2015 - Tomatoes - Heirloom


Heirloom:

  •  Heirloom Tomato - Tangerine
    • indeterminate

    • Tangerine tomatoes, named for their attractive orange color, are plump, juicy, and slightly sweeter than everyday red tomatoes.
    • Heirloom producing intense glowing-orange, juicy slicing tomatoes, heavy for their size with mild, sweet flavor and creamy texture. The tall, sturdy vines  produce heavy yields over a long season
    • 80 days
  • Golden Jubilee Tomato Jubilee
    • Indeterminate
    • Yellow/Orange, 6-7 oz
    •  an All-America Selections winner in 1943.
    • six-generation selection from a cross between Tangerine and Rutgers tomatoes.
    • Indeterminate
    • 72 days
  •  Mortgage Lifter
    • indeterminate
    • Beefsteak, can weight more than 2 pounds
    • Regular Leaf
    • 83-90 days
  • TomateSanMarzano.jpg San Marzano
    • Indeterminate
    • Medium, Plum
    • open-pollinated variety that breeds true from generation to generation, making seed saving practical for the home gardener or farmer.
    • 85 days
  •  Red Brandywine
    • Indeterminate
    • Large
    • Potato Leaf
    • 80 - 100 days
  • Abraham Lincoln Tomato Abe Lincoln
    • indeterminate
    • grow in cluster up to 9
    • Slightly acidic
    • consistently produces huge crops of extra large, meaty fruit.
    • around 12 oz
    • pest and disease resistance
    • 70 -77 days
  •  Cherokee Purple
    • indeterminate
    • 10 - 12 oz
    • Pink - purple flesh
    • Disease Tolerant
    • originally grown by Cherokee Indians
    • Smoky, weet flavor enjoyed over 100 years
    • 82 days
  •  Black Krim
    • Indeterminate
    • Russian Heirloom from the Crimean and Black Sea Area
    • Medium-sized, very dark maroon beefsteak
    • 80 days
  • Product Image 1 Heirloom Bicolor Marvel Stripe
    • Indeterminate
    • Tomatoes weigh about 1 lb., although they often become 2 lbs. or even more
    •  originally from Oaxaca, Mexico
    • 80 - 95 days
  •  Rutgers
    • Indeterminate
    • 4 - 6 oz fruits
    • legendary Jersey tomato, introduced in 1934, is a cross between J.T.D. (an old New Jersey variety from the Campbell Soup Co.) and Marglobe
    • Fusarium resistance.
    • 74 days

How about you? Do you know which tomatoes you will  grow this season?

Thanks for dropping by,
Luiza

Monday, February 9, 2015

My Plans for 2015 - Tomatoes - Large

Large:

  • Celebrity Hybrid Tomato Seeds Celebrity
    • Semi-determined
    • 1998 All-American Selection winner. Known for good flavor.
    • Around  8 - 10 oz.
    •  resistant to, or tolerant of, the following tomato diseases: Verticillium Wilt, Fusarium Wilt races 1 and 2, Nematodes, and Tobacco Mosaic Virus. VF1F2NTASt.
    • 70 - 80 days
  •  Red October Hybrid
    • Indeterminate
    • Big 8 oz. red fruits can hang a long time on the vine without softening or losing flavor
    • Good disease resistance
    • 68  days
  • Product Details Crimson Carmello F1
    • Indeterminate
    • round, red, crack resistant fruits
    • F V N T 
    •  hybrid from France bred especially for fresh eating
    • 70 days
  •  Delicious
    • Indeterminate
    • solid scarlet fruits average 1 lb.
    • Smooth, crack-free, excellent slicer with extra delicious flavor.
    • 77 days
  •  Porterhouse Hybrid
    • Indeterminate
    • Huge Beefsteak
    • 74 days
  •  Brandy Boy Hybrid
    • Indeterminate
    • Potato leaf
    • 14-16 oz fruits
    • improved disease-resistance and bigger, earlier yields
    • pink fruits
    • 75-78 days
  •  Burpee's Big Boy Hybrid
    • indeterminate
    • 10 oz to 1 lb fruit
    • 78 days

Are you planning to plant any tomatoes for this summer? Share with us!

Thanks for dropping by,
Luiza

Sunday, February 8, 2015

My Plans for 2015 - Tomatoes - Medium Size


Medium:

  • Golden Jubilee Tomato Jubilee
    • Yellow/Orange
    • I love this tomato. I've been planting it for the last 5 years.
    •  an All-America Selections winner in 1943.
    • six-generation selection from a cross between Tangerine and Rutgers tomatoes.
    • Indeterminate
    • 72 days
  •  Honey Delight Hybrid
    • Indeterminate
    • 3-4 oz
    •  2" yellow cocktail tomatoes
    • 87 days
  •   El Fresco Hybrid
    •  Indeterminate
    • 10 oz. Red Round fruit on 6' plants  
    • 77 days

Plum

  •  Sweet Aroma Hybrid
    • Indeterminate
    • Roma type
    • 4 oz fruits
    • Disease resistant: highly wilt resistant.
    • 76 days

How about you? Do you know which tomatoes you are planning to plant this year? Share with us.

Thanks for dropping by,
Luiza


Saturday, February 7, 2015

My Plans for 2015 - Tomatoes - Small Size

Byte-Size

How about you? Do you know which tomatoes you are planning to plant this year? Share with us.

Thanks for dropping by,
Luiza

Some tomato cultivars will be marked with disease resistance codes, signifying that the plant is immune to a certain disease shown below: A — Alternaria stem canker F — Fusarium wilt FF — Fusarium races 1 and 2 FFF — Fusarium races 1, 2 and 3 N — Nematodes T — Tobacco mosaic virus St — Stemphylium gray leaf spot V — Verticillium wilt

Friday, February 6, 2015

My Plans - for 2015 - Tomatoes - Cherry


Cherry

  •  Sweet Gold
    • Indeterminate
    • F1
    • yellow cherry
    • sweeter than red cherry varieties with a fruitier taste
    • 65 days
  • Sun Gold Sungold
    • Indeterminate
    • F1
    • TMV, V.
    • Exceptionally sweet, bright tangerine-orange cherry tomatoes
    • Tendency to split precludes shipping, making these an exclusively fresh-market treat
    • 65 days

How about you? Do you know which tomatoes you are planning to plant this year? Share with us.

Thanks for dropping by,
Luiza


Sunday, June 23, 2013

My Garden

Tomatoes in my Garden

I am so happy about my garden this season. I start most of my annuals from seeds. I start the process in February. Tomatoes start first! :)

Sunset Tomatoes
 This year I am growing several types of tomatoes:

  • small tomatoes (a package from Renee's garden company
    • red (not sure what type; growing for the first time this type though)
    • yellow (same as above) - I have some already
    • sunset (orange) - planted last year, and love, love the taste) - I have some already
  • Fourth of July (growing just to have tomatoes soon)
  • Sweet Tangerine (first time I grow)
  • Mortgage Lifter - Love, love, love
  • Brandwine - Love, love, love
  • Jubilee - Love, love, love
  • San Marzano  - tried last year, but did not succeed!
Small Yellow Tomato
They look wonderful.
Small Yellow Tomato



Fourth of July
Fourth of July

Friday, October 22, 2010

Tomatoes

 
I love tomatoes, and so does my husband - my children do not like them too much, yet. I like to grow lots of varieties. I try several heirloom varieties. This year I tried Black Krim,   Brandywine, and several others that I cannot remember the name. I love Brandywine. I am sure you heard that before... I actually thought it was just marketing that people were talking so much about this tomato. But boy, was I wrong: they are so good. I have tried others, but I like Brandywine the best.

This is the way that all starts... Seeds. I plant lots of seeds around February, and take a lot of good care of them so they survive. As soon as the seed sprout, I take them outside to my mini-greenhouse. I have a new greenhouse, as my old one was really falling apart. I believe the name was flower house. After 3 years of good use, the fabric fell apart. The older one was very low, and I had to sit down in order to take care of the little plants.  This one  is vertical, with 4 shelves. It is much easier to put the plants down. However, I have to be careful to provide enough sunlight for all of them. Also, the cover is made of plastic. I am not sure how long it will last. But I am happy with it.


In the picture below, I tried to point where some of the tomatoes were. In particular the one pointed at is Black Krim, a Russian heirloom tomato. 


As I mentioned before, my tomatoes only started to mature almost at the end of August, as we did not have a hot summer in Silicon Valley, where I live. But when the heat started.... my tomatoes made me smile.


Do you see these red tomatoes? These are some Brandwines. I did not get too many of them. But, I enjoyed the ones I got.

Another tomato that I really like is Jubilee. They are yellow, big, and meaty.. I planted some this year that did not turn out very good. I wonder if these are the ones from some seeds I saved last year... They were too soft and squishy and small ... Jubilee are meaty and delicious. They are big. I did get some of the good ones. I am not saving seed this year, as they are hybrid, and I only wanted to check. I will just buy the seeds next year.


Here is a closer picture of some of the yellow ones, which I believe are Jubilee Tomatoes:

Still pretty.But most of them were small. I had to try and see if the seeds were going to turn true to the kind. But they  did not. No big deal: I always like to make experiments and take chances. Not much too loose.

Just in case something goes wrong, in terms of diseases, I always plant a big red tomato that has all the letters in the title of the seed package, describing their disease resistance LOL. This year I planted Big Boy. I think I got several of them. I also planted a very small tomato. I have to be honest that I do not even try to find them, as my eyes are acting very hungry when I go and pick the tomatoes, and I tend to pick the big ones :-)


The reality is I try to label the tomatoes, keep the names as I label the seedlings. But I plant so many together, that at the end it is a crazy, delicious mass... Lots of leaves that make it even hard to pick the tomatoes, let alone see their names. Sometimes I do not know the type I am eating, but I do not care... I only want it to be tasty.

This year I had a good weed control. When a company came to cut one of my trees, I asked that they dump their truck in my driveway. I spread the wood chips all over my yard (and yes, I did not get any help). It was very labor intensive, but save me a lot of time during the whole summer, and now during the fall, as I have very little weeding to do.


What I will do different next year? I hope I have some time to build my cages from the "cement wire".  I did that when I was living in Michigan. The cages I have are not big enough for the kind of tomatoes I am planting. Most of them are indefinite. So, they keep growing. Right now, some of the plants are growing at ground level. I do not like that, and I am not a neat freak :-)

For sure I will use my compost (I will describe in another post). I am making it at home, and it is turning beautiful. Almost time to collect the leaves so I can mix with the grass. Beautiful black stuff....


I will also try to make bigger labels, so I can read far away. Not a priority, as I can recognize the tomato that I like best: my Brandywines!!!

How about you? Which tomatoes did you grow this summer? Which ones did you like best?

Luiza