Member discussion regarding the methods, varieties and merits of growing tomatoes.
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September 11, 2015 | #16 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Jul 2015
Location: Southeastern Pennsylvania
Posts: 1,069
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I've actually been doing a lot of research on tomato fruit abscission recently. It seems it's not true that tomatoes no longer receive anything from the plant once it blushes. There's no "membrane" that seals off the fruit as one reads commonly around the internet. An abscission zone forms as the fruit develops and matures, but all that means is that the plant is preparing a point at which cells can grow or shrink on one side of the zone more quickly than on the other side so that the leaf, flower, or fruit can break off at that point. The xylem (carries mostly just water) atrophies in the pedicel throughout the tomato maturation process, but the phloem (carries nutrients, etc.) increases in cross sectional diameter, and phloem can continue to carry both water and nutrients into the fruit until you pick it.
My guess is that larger tomatoes have enough mass accumulated in "active materials" inside the fruit that depriving the fruit of the final few days of whatever's coming up in the phloem has no detectable effect on the end result for the average person. But cherry tomatoes could be small enough that the average person may be able to taste the difference between cherries ripened on the vine vs. off the vine. At least, that's my understanding up to this point. The understanding of this isn't settled, though--I don't think science has a definitive answer to how much interaction there is between the fruit and the plant later in ripening, but we do know that the pedicel and the abscission zone remain green and juicy even when we wait to pick a tomato until it's perfectly ripe. And since we know that tomatoes can crack even late in ripening if there's a heavy rain, we know that water is being transported into the fruit until the very end, and since we also know that that water is getting there via the phloem, which transports nutrients and other dry matter, there's clearly still something besides just water being transported to the fruit at that point even late in ripening. |
September 12, 2015 | #17 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Jun 2013
Location: Somis, Ca
Posts: 649
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"JLJ" stated:
"2) Ethylene gassing a tomato by enclosing it, enclosing it with other ripe fruit that are vigorous gas producers, or using other means to supply the gas, is a technique that many advocate. But it doesn't really hasten the full ripening process. (In my view -- as it's usually practiced -- what it primarily does is make a green tomato change color.) When you make a tomato look ripe by intensifying the level of ethylene gas around it, you're using the same technique that gives us grocery store tomatoes, so use your own judgement as to whether that is your objective. ... Well, as you stated...it is important to be careful of where you get your info. I have grown avocados for over 40 years, and it is well documented how gases released by fruit (placed in a bag) hastens the ripening process. I have read many posts/opinions about picking tomatoes at "blush". I understand why some folks have to do this. It just seems to me that once the fruit is picked...the decaying process starts. I do agree with LJL however...in that it might be best to vine-ripen if you are lucky enough NOT to be plagued with "issues". Last edited by Ed of Somis; September 12, 2015 at 12:35 AM. |
September 12, 2015 | #18 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Jun 2013
Location: Somis, Ca
Posts: 649
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PS I still maintain that all of you who grow in zones like 5B...are much more skillful growers than folks like me! If I can't grow some kind of edible fruit where I live...I am pretty pathetic!
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