Tomato Of The Year
- Tormahto
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Tomato Of The Year
I'm thinking we should start a "tomato of the year" poll, since we're almost at the end of this one. Tomato candidates could be "new" varieties widely released in perhaps just the previous 2-3 years. An example could be Girl Girl's Weird Thing, while released earlier, was very widely known and trialed in 2017 and 2018.
- Nan6b
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Re: Tomato Of The Year
Dotson's Lebanese Heart (rel. 2016-17)
Post Office Spoonful (rel. 2017)
Wild Tiger (F6 now, but available from jandlgardens.com)
Post Office Spoonful (rel. 2017)
Wild Tiger (F6 now, but available from jandlgardens.com)
- MissS
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Re: Tomato Of The Year
Elbonian Mud Ball
Scarlet O'hara in the Kitchen with a Knife
Purple Calabash
Scarlet O'hara in the Kitchen with a Knife
Purple Calabash
~ Patti ~
AKA ~ Hooper
AKA ~ Hooper
- Nico
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Re: Tomato Of The Year
-Verde de las landas
-Rosao de ayerbe
-Rosa Melillero-
-Rosao de ayerbe
-Rosa Melillero-
Plants have, like animals, in the degree and almost in the form, the sensitivity, that essential attribute of life.
- Paulf
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Re: Tomato Of The Year
For the several years the Mid-West Tomato Fest was in operation there were at least seventy tomato varieties to taste and between 40 and 70 tasters depending on the year. We had a vote every year to determine the best variety. It was "pick your top three" and votes were counted. Guess what? Every year there seemed to be a ten way tie and the "best" changed every year. I think the Tomato of the Year would most likely end up just like that.
Spitter of the year was easy: Purple Calabash five years in a row.
Spitter of the year was easy: Purple Calabash five years in a row.
- Tormahto
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- Tormahto
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- asmx92
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Re: Tomato Of The Year
Robledillo de la Jara
Rosado de Ayerbe
Kansas Depression
Rosado de Ayerbe
Kansas Depression
- worth1
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Re: Tomato Of The Year
I liked Purple Calabash.
The deer didn't.
The deer didn't.
Worth
25 miles southeast of Waterloo Texas.
You can't argue with a closed mind.
You might as well be arguing with a cat.
25 miles southeast of Waterloo Texas.
You can't argue with a closed mind.
You might as well be arguing with a cat.
- bower
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Re: Tomato Of The Year
This is awesome... everybody has their own three besties!
Good luck with that poll, Cap'n.




AgCan Zone 5a/USDA zone 4
temperate marine climate
yearly precip 61 inches/1550 mm
temperate marine climate
yearly precip 61 inches/1550 mm
- Shule
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Re: Tomato Of The Year
[mention]worth1[/mention]
I hope I like Purple Calabash. It sounds like a prolific tomato that might be a good canner. People have different tastes, and tomatoes taste different in different gardens, sometimes. So, hopefully I'll see. Sometimes I like to grow tomatoes that other people hate. It seems as easy to find favorites that way as growing other people's favorites, especially when you like sour tomatoes, and many others prefer them mild.
[mention]Tormato[/mention]
What is this Elbonian Mud Ball I keep hearing about? I thought you made that up as a joke the first few times you mentioned it, but now I'm convinced it's real. Do you have pictures?
I don't mind a tomato of the year poll. I'm not sure what I would add to it from this year, though, since most of the varieties I've grown weren't brand new.
I hope I like Purple Calabash. It sounds like a prolific tomato that might be a good canner. People have different tastes, and tomatoes taste different in different gardens, sometimes. So, hopefully I'll see. Sometimes I like to grow tomatoes that other people hate. It seems as easy to find favorites that way as growing other people's favorites, especially when you like sour tomatoes, and many others prefer them mild.
[mention]Tormato[/mention]
What is this Elbonian Mud Ball I keep hearing about? I thought you made that up as a joke the first few times you mentioned it, but now I'm convinced it's real. Do you have pictures?
I don't mind a tomato of the year poll. I'm not sure what I would add to it from this year, though, since most of the varieties I've grown weren't brand new.
Location: SW Idaho, USA
Climate: BSk
USDA hardiness zone: 6
Elevation: 2,260 feet
Climate: BSk
USDA hardiness zone: 6
Elevation: 2,260 feet
- Nico
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Re: Tomato Of The Year
Of course Tormato, I would be happy to send you seeds
Plants have, like animals, in the degree and almost in the form, the sensitivity, that essential attribute of life.
- Remy
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Re: Tomato Of The Year
Erdie Family Oxheart. It is not new, but it is unknown to most. It was excellent this year, huge, and early and tasty too.
- Labradors
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Re: Tomato Of The Year
For a new variety I liked "Taste" from Artisan Seeds. It's not available this year, but "Taste Patio" is (same thing, but more compact).
Linda
Linda
Last edited by Labradors on Mon Dec 30, 2019 3:58 pm, edited 1 time in total.
- Tormahto
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Re: Tomato Of The Year
Eardie Family Oxheart - my seed inventory shows I have a pack dated 2007. It's good to know that someone is keeping it going. 

- Paulf
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Re: Tomato Of The Year
Sounds like I need to find Eardie for 2020.
- Shule
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Re: Tomato Of The Year
[mention]Tormato[/mention] [mention]worth1[/mention]
Okay, the verdict is in. I've finally tasted Purple Calabash. I grew two plants, each from a different source. I tasted at least two fruits of each.
The first one to ripen was red; so, it was a cross (that explains the leaves being different). I tasted it a while ago. Here's my description of the cross first:
* It wasn't acidic. It was kind of bland, and tasted like dirt and mold. No sugar. I was not impressed, but it could be an acquired taste. Most of the off-putting taste came from the blossom scar. One of the fruits didn't have the moldy taste, but still tasted dirty. Edit: Future fruits tasted and looked much better; it produced very well, and I'll probably actually grow some F2s (perhaps in 2022). The fruits were a very nice deep red.
Here's my description of the other Purple Calabash, which was purple and probably was the real thing; I ate it not long before I started writing this post:
* At first, it just tasted like a decently good sour tomato, which astonished me. The blossom scar tasted earthy in a good way, actually. Later, the blossom scar had a bitter aftertaste, like mild Tylenol. I ate a second fruit: This one was sour kind of like the first, but it had a very acrid aftertaste, and there was some of the same dirt/mold flavor (in the blossom scar and similar tissues) that I had tasted in the cross-pollinated one.
My conclusion is that Purple Calabash might taste like a normal tomato if it were smooth and round, or if it were properly pollinated, without issues. Most of the strange flavor seems to come from the blossom scar. That acrid taste was pretty interesting; it could easily be an acquired taste, but I imagine many would find it unpleasant. I wouldn't describe it as lime-like, but it is sour. So, I liked the biggest fruit, except for the bitter aftertaste. I have mixed feelings about the acrid aftertaste of the second fruit, but I'm not a big fan of the dirty/moldy taste, currently.
Here are the two I ate today (the purple ones; I didn't eat the fully unripe portions of the smaller fruit):
Okay, the verdict is in. I've finally tasted Purple Calabash. I grew two plants, each from a different source. I tasted at least two fruits of each.
The first one to ripen was red; so, it was a cross (that explains the leaves being different). I tasted it a while ago. Here's my description of the cross first:
* It wasn't acidic. It was kind of bland, and tasted like dirt and mold. No sugar. I was not impressed, but it could be an acquired taste. Most of the off-putting taste came from the blossom scar. One of the fruits didn't have the moldy taste, but still tasted dirty. Edit: Future fruits tasted and looked much better; it produced very well, and I'll probably actually grow some F2s (perhaps in 2022). The fruits were a very nice deep red.
Here's my description of the other Purple Calabash, which was purple and probably was the real thing; I ate it not long before I started writing this post:
* At first, it just tasted like a decently good sour tomato, which astonished me. The blossom scar tasted earthy in a good way, actually. Later, the blossom scar had a bitter aftertaste, like mild Tylenol. I ate a second fruit: This one was sour kind of like the first, but it had a very acrid aftertaste, and there was some of the same dirt/mold flavor (in the blossom scar and similar tissues) that I had tasted in the cross-pollinated one.
My conclusion is that Purple Calabash might taste like a normal tomato if it were smooth and round, or if it were properly pollinated, without issues. Most of the strange flavor seems to come from the blossom scar. That acrid taste was pretty interesting; it could easily be an acquired taste, but I imagine many would find it unpleasant. I wouldn't describe it as lime-like, but it is sour. So, I liked the biggest fruit, except for the bitter aftertaste. I have mixed feelings about the acrid aftertaste of the second fruit, but I'm not a big fan of the dirty/moldy taste, currently.
Here are the two I ate today (the purple ones; I didn't eat the fully unripe portions of the smaller fruit):
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Location: SW Idaho, USA
Climate: BSk
USDA hardiness zone: 6
Elevation: 2,260 feet
Climate: BSk
USDA hardiness zone: 6
Elevation: 2,260 feet
- wykvlvr
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Re: Tomato Of The Year
Wry grin since I have not even had my first ripe tomato here it seems a bit early to start posting tomato of the year....
Wyoming
Zone 5
Elevation : 6,063 ft
Climate : semi-arid
Avg annual rainfall = 16 inches
Zone 5
Elevation : 6,063 ft
Climate : semi-arid
Avg annual rainfall = 16 inches
- Shule
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Re: Tomato Of The Year
So far, here are my 2020 tomatoes of the year:
For taste, so far, my tomatoes of the year are Yellow Plum (fresh), and Bloody Butcher from my firmer, many-loculed fruit (for culinary purposes; it doesn't taste like the regular Bloody Butcher did last year, nor like the fruit I grew it from).
For production, so far, I'd say my Galapagos Island volunteers, and one of my Napoli crosses, as well as the aforementioned Bloody Butcher, etc.
For enormous amounts of flowers, I'd say my Jim Dandy offtype.
For 2019, it was my Tart Brandy Boy cross with Marion coming in second. Also, Galapagos Island.
For taste, so far, my tomatoes of the year are Yellow Plum (fresh), and Bloody Butcher from my firmer, many-loculed fruit (for culinary purposes; it doesn't taste like the regular Bloody Butcher did last year, nor like the fruit I grew it from).
For production, so far, I'd say my Galapagos Island volunteers, and one of my Napoli crosses, as well as the aforementioned Bloody Butcher, etc.
For enormous amounts of flowers, I'd say my Jim Dandy offtype.
For 2019, it was my Tart Brandy Boy cross with Marion coming in second. Also, Galapagos Island.
Location: SW Idaho, USA
Climate: BSk
USDA hardiness zone: 6
Elevation: 2,260 feet
Climate: BSk
USDA hardiness zone: 6
Elevation: 2,260 feet