Growing The Best Tomatoes | What Type of Tomatoes to Grow

Ranked #6,468 in Home & Garden, #97,833 overall

Growing Tomatoes - Tomato To Your Table In 3 Days

Harvesting tomatoes, make you feel good. They smell great, they look fantastic, and you know they are going to taste divine! Nothing beats a freshly picked tomato from your home grown tomato garden. But this is where many people waste all their hard work. They pick the tomato, then stuff it in the fridge.

A tomato will start to lose that great flavor you spent your whole summer creating as soon as it falls to 55 degrees and colder, which would be the inside of your fridge. At this point, you might as well buy those tasteless grocery store tomatoes, if this is your plan.

Photo courtesy of OctopusHat

Plan Ahead For Some Great Tomato Sauce

To avoid this, you need to plan ahead. Take a look at your vines before you pick. Are there a lot of tomatoes? Can I use all these myself? If you have had a bumper crop this year, then start asking family and friends, then start planning for some great tomato sauce for the ones you will not eat fresh.

A vine ripened tomato, once picked will be at its best for three days. Tomato sauce made from fresh vine ripened tomatoes tastes fantastic, and is a welcome surprise to your taste buds come the dead of winter. Tomato sauce freezes well. There are many recipes out there for tomato sauce. Some are easier than others, so decide for yourself which way you will go, ahead of picking.

Photo courtesy of bucklava

Grow And Share Your Tomatoes

So, plan ahead, allow a day to get that sauce made, and you will always enjoy the fruits of your labor, right through the winter. If you do not like making sauce, and you don't have friends or family interested in your tomatoes, maybe you could donate them to your local foodbank. Locally grown, fresh produce is always appreciated when given from the heart, then maybe scale back next year on the amount of tomato plants you grow.

But for now, this would be a great way to meet the neighbors. If you have lots of tomatoes, head out to your neighbors, and introduce them to your great tomato garden. They will enjoy this fresh treat, and you might make a few friends on the way!
I to Eye

So Fresh, So Good 

What Type of Tomatoes to Grow

Choosing the Variety is Important

  • You need to decide what characteristics are the most important to you, as well as the climate and disease susceptibility in your area. No one variety will perform best across all planting seasons and regions. Issues such as fruit firmness, size, shape, flavor and plant growing habits need to be considered.


  • You also need to decide whether you want a 'jointed' tomato variety or not. In other words, do you want a tomato variety that retains its stalk when picked or one that comes away cleanly from its stalk when picked. Many commercial organic and gourmet tomato growers choose 'jointed' tomato varieties because the tomato with its stalk attached looks attractive to the buyer. However, most home gardeners and non-organic commercial growers choose 'jointless' varieties.


  • The next choice is whether you want a 'determinate' or 'indeterminate' variety. A determinate variety grows to a bush about 3 feet (1 meter) high. At this stage it stops growing and sets a concentrated crop of tomatoes which can be picked over a few weeks.


  • Indeterminate varieties keep growing and can reach a height of up to 15 or more feet (5 meters) when fully mature. The fruit from these can be picked over a period of 12 to 20 weeks. These varieties are frequently used by greenhouse producers. Many cherry tomato varieties are indeterminate.


  • There are also 'semi-determinate' varieties which grow to about 4 to 6 feet (1.5 to 2 meters) and set fruit over a longer period than determinate varieties. These are best suited to home gardens. They generally require staking and the tomatoes are harvested over 2 to 6 weeks.


Detailed information on hot climate and cold climate varieties as well as 100 popular varieties provided in How to Grow Juicy Tasty Tomatoes.

The Complete Guide to Growing Tomatoes

Available on Amazon.com

The Complete Guide to Growing Tomatoes: A Complete Step-by-Step Guide Including Heirloom Tomatoes (Back-To-Basics Gardening)

Amazon Price: $12.47 (as of 02/16/2012)Buy Now

Editorial Review
The average tomato farmer has more than 100 varieties of tomatoes, ranging from the sweetest, juiciest strains available to the smallest, easiest to grow options out there. Tomatoes are found in thousands of dishes across the world and they are notoriously expensive, especially in years when bad weather can destroy anywhere between 10% and 60% of the crops harvested in the United States annually. For all these reasons and more, many people have taken to growing their own tomatoes, setting up containers in their kitchens and digging plots in the back yard. But, effectively growing tomatoes is more than just a hobby for most. It is a challenge and without the right knowledge of how tomatoes grow and what they need, it can be downright frustrating. Growing tomatoes is a task anyone can accomplish and enjoy and this book strives to provide every possible resource and tip needed for you to become one of a growing legion of tomato growers.

The Web's Best Tomato Sauce Recipes

Here Are Several Sauce Recipes Utilizing Garden Fresh Tomatoes

surekatHomemade Tomato Sauce
From Sheknows.com | Food & Recipes
Fresh Tomato Sauce
From About.com | Southern Food
Fresh Tomato Sauce
From Allrecipes.com
Angel-Hair Pasta with Fresh Tomato Sauce
From Epicurious.com
Fresh Tomato Basil Sauce
From Allrecipes.com

Tomato Seeds

Available on Amazon.com

Loading

More Tomato Seeds

Available on Amazon.com

Loading

If You Like This Lens, Show It Some Love!

Growing The Best Tomatoes | What Type of Tomatoes to Grow

This module only appears with actual data when viewed on a live lens. The favorite and lensroll options will appear on a live lens if the viewer is a member of Squidoo and logged in.

Add this to your lens »

guestbook5.png


Help This Lens Grow!
Plant Your Comments Here!


Graphics Courtesy Of:Trekkiemelissa

submit

You Can Bookmark This Lens Here!

Growing The Best Tomatoes | What Type of Tomatoes to Grow

Add this to your lens »

Bookmark and Share

Official Squidoo Banner Logo
Create A Lens
It's free to join!
Click Here To Get Started!

More Gardening Products

Loading Fetching RSS feed... please stand by

Best of the Web Gardening Blogs

Downsizing makes container gardening easier
Many people don't have the need or the urge to grow eight or 10 herb plants, DiPaolo said. "Going downsized gives them a chance to grow just a couple of things they desire. Then they can free up their standard-size boxes for tomatoes and larger plants ...
Homegrown: Growing school gardens
The fourth graders are growing tomatoes, dill, basil, chives, califlower, spinach, sunflowers, cucumbers, thyme and broccoli with help from Matthew 25, which operates an urban garden in Cedar Rapids. (Cliff Jette/SourceMedia Group) School lunches have ...
Competition ignites Canberra gardeners
This year, Kirrily is entering tomatoes, chillies, pumpkins and zucchini. Josh and Jaiden are entering potatoes, tomatoes and carrots, and Jaiden is also entering the novelty vegetable section with his climbing tromboncino zucchini that can grow to 1m ...
Learning Garden: Planting the seeds of food sustainability, healthy living
Tan Holdings president Jerry Tan led company executives in launching Learning Garden at Dandan Elementary School, where three small plots will soon be home to tomatoes, onions, corn, and, possibly, other produce in the near future.

hit counter joomla

by

AnnieMorgan

more »

Feeling creative? Create a Lens!