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Old September 1, 2010   #1
doublehelix
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Default Yuck! Spitters 2010

I only had one variety that made me choke and spit.

My spitter for 2010 is Nyagous. Quarter sized, brick orange(not black), mealy and sour beyond edible. I feel lucky that I didn't get more than 7 or 8 from the two plants I grew.

Your turn.

Which tomatoes won't be coming back to your garden next year?
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Old September 1, 2010   #2
nctomatoman
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From my paltry harvest...

not quite a spitter, but not really fond - Green Doctor's (too firm, insufficient flavor - I liked it better than Green Grape, but...)

Silvery Fir Tree - no surprise, always a spitter for me, just wanted to grow it out for seed.

A few from the Dwarf project were just awful - the worst being a white cherry tomato from the Snowy cross (one of the most awful tomatoes ever tasted!), another being one from the Porky line (not the tomato's fault inherently, more the stressed nature of the plant, methinks).

So, relatively few tomatoes meant relatively few spitters (but also relatively few winners!)
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Old September 1, 2010   #3
Lee
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Zleovo and Big Sungold Select were a couple of spitters for
me this year.

Don't know why, as they both looked good.... could've been
the pots they were in.....

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Old September 1, 2010   #4
piegirl
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Raad Red is a total spitter and ranked right at the bottom for Midwest Tomato Fest. Also Chocolate Cherry - not quite a spitter but pretty darn close. Both going in the garbage can tonight. piegirl
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Old September 2, 2010   #5
habitat_gardener
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Quote:
Originally Posted by piegirl View Post
... Also Chocolate Cherry - not quite a spitter but pretty darn close.
That doesn't sound like the Chocolate Cherry I grew last year -- my two plants didn't produce as much as other cherries, but they were a bit sweeter than Black Cherry.
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Old September 2, 2010   #6
piegirl
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Habitat - nothing sweet about them - really bland, tasteless. Heavy production here. The plant is in the garbage can along with Raad Red and Super Sweet 100. SS100 is nicely sweet but just took over the space - several spaces. piegirl

Last edited by piegirl; September 2, 2010 at 01:59 AM. Reason: addition
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Old September 2, 2010   #7
frogwash
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Chocolate Cherry was nasty for me. The first ripes ones for the first two weeks tasted good--provided they weren't under or over-ripe. Everything else since then has had a foul taste to them, even to the point of leaving a disgusting after taste.

Over-ripe Black Krim gets close to being a spitter, but otherwise a really nice tomato.
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Old September 1, 2010   #8
Idahowoman
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A terrible flavorless one for me is named Vilma. It is small one that you grow in a pot from Thompson and Morgan. Maybe its so flavorless because after great heirloom tomatoes that I've tried this year now I know what tasteless is.
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Old September 1, 2010   #9
doublehelix
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I forgot about one that I didn't grow but did buy at a farmers market. Sunny Goliath. Neither sweet or sour. I could just barely tell that I was eating a tomato. Sort of like the pathetic things found on fast food burgers in January.
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Old September 1, 2010   #10
puzzley
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Orange Fleshed Purple Smudge. Worst tomato I ever raised by far. Insipid taste, large hard cores, mealy. Awful. I gave a plant to a friend, and when the frist ripe one showed up, his wife grabbed it, exclaiming "oh, I love orange tomatoes!" She took it into the house with some other tomatoes for salads that night. Apparently, she tasted the ofps as she was preparing the salads, because all of the orange tomato ended up in his salad...
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Old September 1, 2010   #11
Suze
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Orange Fleshed Purple Smudge
Yep. You know, I was thinking I didn't really have any true spitters this year, but I'd forgotten about that one.

Very insipid and bland, a fair amount of core, mealy texture. I grew two plants, seed from two different sources for each plant (wanted to compare), and was definitely not impressed. Not to mention that the anthocyanin expression was rather poor. It was there to some degree (mostly on the shoulders), but not nearly to the degree I've seen in several pictures - not even close. Both of the plants were in a good location and received plenty of sunlight, so it wasn't that.

Makes me wonder if this variety is still segregating / isn't quite stable.

OTOH, my P20 fruits colored up rather nicely, other than a few that got completely buried under lots of foliage from other plants close by.
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Old September 1, 2010   #12
fortyonenorth
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Dr. Carolyn is the tomato that perplexed me this year (with due respect to Carolyn, I won't call it a spitter). I picked it ripe, over-ripe, under-ripe - tried everything, but couldn't coax a bit of flavor from it no matter how hard I tried. It was my first time growing it, so I'll chalk it up to growing conditions.
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Old September 1, 2010   #13
TZ-OH6
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A cross between Lime Green Salad and Green Gaint, F2 growouts of nearly 30 plants, 80% were horrid. Too bad they were super productive.
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Old September 1, 2010   #14
remy
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Quote:
Originally Posted by original View Post
I only had one variety that made me choke and spit.

My spitter for 2010 is Nyagous. Quarter sized, brick orange(not black), mealy and sour beyond edible. I feel lucky that I didn't get more than 7 or 8 from the two plants I grew.

Your turn.

Which tomatoes won't be coming back to your garden next year?
What ever you grew was not Nyagous. Nyagous is decidedly black and it makes a lot of fruit. Maybe you got some crossed seed because I can't imagine anyone growing what you describe on purpose.
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Old September 2, 2010   #15
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While I didn't even try to taste all of the varieties we cut up at my tasting day (about 75), 1 that I did try, Russo Bruno F-2, was particularly tasteless. Especially for a brown / black tomato.

it wasn't a spitter, it was just very blah / bland. Considering it's a highly touted grocery store variety I was expecting more from it. i can't see it tasting any better in winter than any of the other tasteless cardboard store tomatoes.

Carolyn is right about people's perceptions of taste being different and what each person LIKES is also different.

At my farmers markets I always get asked " what is the best (cherry) tomato?" (often cherries are the only type i take to market) I always tell them "what I like may not be what you like" and then tell them to try a few to see which they like best. Letting them do that is what sells a lot of strange looking varieties. Strange to people that only know a small red cherry like Sweet Million and haven't a clue about other colors let alone striped or green when ripe tomatoes.

Carol
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