December 16, 2009 | #16 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Dec 2007
Location: Pt. Charlotte fl
Posts: 330
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has anyone ever grown a white tomato called Bianca Grande? I bought seed from Mariseeds and grew it out and it is supposed to have a raspberry swirl in the center. It has not done very well here in Florida but I am trying one last time right now. This tomato she told me was supposed to be as sweet as cotton candy! I have my reservations. lol
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December 17, 2009 | #17 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Oct 2008
Location: Fairfax, VA Z7
Posts: 524
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Sounds like a awful high birx number to reach cotton candy sweetness. LOL
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December 21, 2009 | #18 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: Chicago Suburbs
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A woman I know tried a recipe for spaghetti sauce that her great grandmother made. The recipe told her to put in two cups of sugar, she thought it was a little much, but she put in anyway and ended up with a sickly sweet mess.
She said she felt a little better when I told her that most of the older varieties were usually tart. Another woman said she had seen her grandmother eating tomatoes with mayonnaise and sugar because the tomatoes she had grown up with were so tart. I tried a few varieties that were supposed to be very old varieties and was really underwhelmed. They were completely inedible if they weren't cooked. It is my understanding that sweetness was bred into the modern tomatoes so many of the really old varieties would not match modern tastes. LoreD
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December 21, 2009 | #19 |
Tomatoville® Moderator
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Location: Hendersonville, NC zone 7
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Actually, most of the older varieties have much more apparent sweetness 9- or are at least on a par with newer varieties.
I know that Stokes supposedly bred additional sweetness into some of their hybrids, but it was really more about ensuring that tomatoes commercially grown and picked at the break stage (just a bit beyond green) had better flavor than most of the grocery store tomatoes. I grew a few and was quite underwhelmed!
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February 9, 2010 | #20 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Feb 2010
Location: italy, tuscany, town of cortona
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i grown golden medal at home and i simply love the flawor, mom simply cant eath it because of the too sweet taste, dad simply denied to taste it because of the orange /streaked color...
but i continue to grown it! wath i dont grown aain? roma tomatoes my dad grown it because is largely commercial avaiable, but after he try an heirloom paste from an old man that live near me.... no more roma tomatoes in the patch! |
February 10, 2010 | #21 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Jul 2009
Location: NY
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Hi Cortona! Good to see you here~!
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February 14, 2010 | #22 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: Evansville, IN
Posts: 2,984
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Heirlooms I wouldn't bother with again include Nyagous, Yellow Pear, Large Red Cherry, Hillbilly Potato Leaf, Dixie Golden Giant, Shah Mikado and Dwarf Gold Champion.
There are many other more recently created varieties, either open pollinated commercial varieties or stuff masquerading as heirlooms, that I wouldn't bother with again. But the question was to which heirlooms I wouldn't repeat. |
February 14, 2010 | #23 | |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Sep 2009
Location: Alabama
Posts: 7,068
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Quote:
That's why I usually have a few Big Beefs for insurance. I have yet to have a year that they didn't make good. This may be the year that I get some heirlooms not fit to try again due to lack of taste because I'm trying nearly 50 new varieties. I'm trying Royal Hillbilly; I hope it's not the same as Hillbilly Potato Leaf. |
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February 14, 2010 | #24 | |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Jan 2009
Location: South Of The Border
Posts: 1,169
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I grew " Heart of Compassion" three years running and it sucked! So I gave some started plants to a friend who lives in Montana and guess what...it STILL SUCKED. The description was this:
Quote:
ultimate drying tomato (I hate that word "ultimate"...) I REALLY wanted that tomato...For me, it was NEVER larger than three inches, late, late, late and the flavor was humdrum. I tried new seed the second year and I planted them in an entirely different area in my garden (my garden encompasses about 2 acres, separated into different growing zones/areas.) It again gave me the finger... It is supposed to look like this: I officially HATE this tomato that is like a recalcitrant child who fails to live up to it's full potential. I none-the-less STILL WANT THIS TOMATO...uuggghhhh My Husband says it has now become a battle of wills...me and the tomato toe-to-toe...so far, the tomato is thrashing me...
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February 14, 2010 | #25 | |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: Evansville, IN
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Quote:
Royal Hillbilly is nothing like Hillbilly Potato Leaf at least in my limited experience with both. Hillbilly Potato Leaf failed to set fruit at the slightest spat of bad weather. Royal Hillbilly laughed at foul weather conditions and produced oodles of tomatoes start to finish. Some were small but most were half to 3/4 pounders. Only negative things I have to say about Royal Hillbilly is their flavor can be a little washed out in wet weather, but what tomato is not, and the outside fruit walls are a bit thinner than I like in a tomato. That can be a problem when the seeds and gel are too close to the outside and the weather stays wet. Once the weather dries out and stays hot, Royal Hillbilly developed consistently sound fruit with an outstanding, bold, old fashioned tomato flavor in a beautiful deep pink fruit. |
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February 15, 2010 | #26 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Jan 2010
Location: Greenville, SC
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So, what about tomatoes that you would never grow again because they were just too hard to grow? They needed too much babying, or for whatever reason just were too much trouble? Which varieties have been the hardest to grow for ya?
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February 15, 2010 | #27 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Dec 2009
Location: Chillicothe Ohio - left Calif July 2010
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B54red and Travis
Have you ever grown the Big Beef OP version? Dennis Last edited by mtbigfish; February 16, 2010 at 07:40 PM. |
February 16, 2010 | #28 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: May 2008
Location: DFW, Texas
Posts: 1,212
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Mr. Stripey. Bleah.
RJ - I grew Old German last year and had terrific results. It was extremely late, but still set fruit and in fact was setting fruit much further into the Texas summer heat than any of the other varieties I grew (admittedly only 6 other varieties). It got me through August when all other plants were done in July. It produced enormous (biggest was almost 2 pounds) bi-color fruit that was almost all meat and hardly any gel. My friends and family all enjoyed the taste, which was admittedly not as good as my favorites, but still very tasty, including some nuances/essences of other fruits and was unlike any tomato I've grown. In short, if you've only grown it once, maybe give it one more try in a different year and see if it does any better for you. |
February 16, 2010 | #29 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Mar 2007
Location: Michigan Zone 4b
Posts: 1,291
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I agree with Dewayne about Old German..I have been growing it for a number of years now and it is always a fav.of mine..It is a big beautiful meaty bi-color..I think it has superb taste..
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February 16, 2010 | #30 | |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: May 2006
Location: Danbury, CT
Posts: 492
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Jen |
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