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Old May 26, 2015   #1
coronabarb
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Default Amish Gold Slicer

I was given a couple of plants of this variety and I'm not familiar with it. Not finding much in a search here and wondering if anyone has experience with it? Worth a spot in my garden? (I have a pretty big garden)
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Old May 26, 2015   #2
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I would plant them just to see how they was . Life is an adventure so go for it
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Old May 26, 2015   #3
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We are growing one Amish Paste that we have found very interesting. I don't know if it is anything like Amish Gold Slicer though. If I removed the supports and let it sprawl, it would span at least 8 feet.

Here are two pictures that might spark some interest
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Old May 26, 2015   #4
carolyn137
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Here you go Barb:

https://www.google.com/?gws_rd=ssl#q...+slicer+tomato

Carolyn, who has not grown it.
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Old May 26, 2015   #5
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Thanks Carolyn. Reported to be a cross between Amish Paste and Sungold. Might be interesting. I'll see if I have the round variety or the oblong shape as both are in the reports. Came across this gal's blog and she decried people growing "Purple Cherokee", a commercial variety. She says people can do better by growing heirlooms. O.o

https://gardenofgoodandevil.wordpres...h-gold-tomato/
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Old May 26, 2015   #6
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Quote:
Originally Posted by coronabarb View Post
Thanks Carolyn. Reported to be a cross between Amish Paste and Sungold. Might be interesting. I'll see if I have the round variety or the oblong shape as both are in the reports. Came across this gal's blog and she decried people growing "Purple Cherokee", a commercial variety. She says people can do better by growing heirlooms. O.o

https://gardenofgoodandevil.wordpres...h-gold-tomato/
That's why I posted the pictures above. Amish Gold is supposed to be a cross of Amish Paste and Sungold too. I wonder if some of the tomatoes that came from the cross were round slicers and others are paste tomato shaped.

Now I wonder if they taste the same?
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Old May 26, 2015   #7
carolyn137
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Quote:
Originally Posted by coronabarb View Post
Thanks Carolyn. Reported to be a cross between Amish Paste and Sungold. Might be interesting. I'll see if I have the round variety or the oblong shape as both are in the reports. Came across this gal's blog and she decried people growing "Purple Cherokee", a commercial variety. She says people can do better by growing heirlooms. O.o

https://gardenofgoodandevil.wordpres...h-gold-tomato/
If she called it Purple Cherokee and not the correct reverse, I know who distributed the seeds with the reversed name and sent seeds of same to several seed vendors.

My my, what does she call an heirloom variety?

I quickly read the link and gave up, just too many varieties not spelled correctly and other misinformation as well.

Carolyn
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Old June 10, 2015   #8
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coronabarb, We tasted the Amish Gold today. It has a good refreshing taste for us.
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Old June 11, 2015   #9
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Wow, you are way ahead of us here in Oregon Hoping mine will be good too.
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Old June 11, 2015   #10
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How can you cross an open pollinated tomato and a Hybrid like sungold and expect to get stable seeds.

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Old June 11, 2015   #11
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Dumb Question Alert: Why are some tomatoes called Amish this or that? Because the Amish bred them or grew them for many years or both or what?
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Old June 11, 2015   #12
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Deborah View Post
Dumb Question Alert: Why are some tomatoes called Amish this or that? Because the Amish bred them or grew them for many years or both or what?
No its not a dumb question.
In many cases it adds value to a product to get people to buy it.
Often times having nothing to do with the Amish at all but a cheap ripoff.
And in others it was actually grown by the Amish but not necessarily bred by them.

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Old June 11, 2015   #13
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Worth,

You wouldn't get stable seeds from any cross. Using a hybrid as one of the parents would increase the diversity of what you'd get in the F2, I'd think. I don't know the background on this variety but it takes a lot of growing out and selecting to finally get a stable variety. Sounds like the shape is still not stable. We will see
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Old June 11, 2015   #14
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I've been thinking of this over the past couple weeks. I think that Amish Gold Slicer and Amish Gold came from the same cross years ago.
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Old June 11, 2015   #15
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I got these as free seeds from totally tomatoes this year. It was advertised as an open pollinated variety. I have one that I am going to plant. The germination on them was terrible, so I am lucky to have this one.
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