Member discussion regarding the methods, varieties and merits of growing tomatoes.
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February 19, 2011 | #1 | ||
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: May 2009
Location: Austin, Texas
Posts: 147
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Southern Living Heirloom Tomato Article
This month's Southern Living has a nice article on heirloom tomatoes. I can't find it on their website. It is overall positive and informative. However, it starts the article naming Black Cherry as an heirloom, and then later in the article says that
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Black cherry, released in 2003, can be an heirloom, but Green Zebra, released in the 80's, is a hybrid? They then follow it up with a quoted opinion that to some an 'heirloom tomato' can just mean any tomato grown for taste, quality of fruit, unique size, or colorful flesh; as opposed to tomatoes grown commercially. I think they should have run their article by a tomato expert like Carolyn before publishing. If they understood the difference between heirloom, OP, and hybrid; that might have helped. GZ, while derived from hybridization, is NOT a hybrid. Still, the article was meant for a general audience and other than that was very good. It lauded the taste and variety of heirlooms, explained what 'open-pollinated' meant, and had lots of glossy photos of varieties like Flamme, Cherokee Purple, Black Cherry, San Marzano, etc. It avoided the 'heirlooms will die of disease!" cliche, instead quoted a person saying: Quote:
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