Homestead 24, 80 days, determinate or semi-determinate tomato that reportedly grows in the Florida heat. The fruit is reported to set under a wide range of conditions, making it popular. The plants are large with heavy foliage and produce 7-8 oz red fruits that are meaty, firm, and uniform. It is resistant to fusarium wilt. Developed for hot humid coastal areas, especially Florida. Often grown in the Mid-Atlantic region, where it reliably sets fruit at high temperatures. Red 8 oz slightly flattened globes.
Homestead 24 was released in 1956 by the Asgrow Seed Co., New Haven, Connecticut. 'Homestead 24' is a selection of 'Homestead' whose parentage was a stabilized complex cross ((Victor, Dobbies Champion, Pan American, Rutgers).
Related info:
Homestead 24 Tomato - Heirloom, Open-Pollinated, non-Hybrid Victory Seeds® http://buff.ly/1OqOSYi
Homestead 24 Tomato 0.16 g [49121] - $2.75 : Southern Exposure Seed Exchange, Saving the Past for the Future http://buff.ly/1LRNYjI
Only one activity combines the Big Three: gentle exercise, relaxation, healthy eating. Live Better - Garden! Learn how at LiveBetterGarden.com
Showing posts with label Tomato. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tomato. Show all posts
Kewalo tomato from University of Hawaii
Kewalo is a determinate tomato plant with uniform ripening. Fruits approx. 6-8 oz. Matures in 75-80 days. It is tolerant to bacterial wilt as well as tobacco mosaic virus. Resistant to the common root knot nematode, fusarium wilt, gray leaf spot and one strain of spotted wilt virus. Kewalo is one of the few open-pollinated variety that can boast of these traits.
Available from University of Hawaii: http://www.ctahr.hawaii.edu/seed/seeds.asp#tomato
Tomato cultivars developed by UH-CTAHR horticulturists include the hybrids ‘N-5’, ‘N-52’, ‘N-63’, and ‘N-65’ and the open-pollinated cultivars ‘Anahu’, ‘Healani’, and ‘Kewalo’. The three nonhybrid cultivars are determinate — they grow to a certain height and then stop, and they tend to flower and set fruit within a relatively short period of time.
Anahu tomato was the first root knot nematode resistant variety. Kewalo tomato is considered the most important home garden variety due to bacterial wilt resistance combined with earliness. Kewalo seems to ignore hot weather.
Kewalo is a uniform ripening determinate variety bred at University of Hawaii by tomato breeder Dr. Jim Gilbert. Kewalo was named after one of his favorite fishing spots. Kewalo was bred to be resistant to bacterial wilt, mosaic virus and nematodes. 6-8 oz., red, round fruit with sweet flavor. A good choice for hot and humid climates.
References:
Agricultural Diagnostic Service Center - Seed Program http://bit.ly/1CbC16K
Home Garden Tomato http://www.ctahr.hawaii.edu/oc/freepubs/pdf/HGV-5.pdf
Honolulu Star-Bulletin Features http://bit.ly/1CbDNVs
Hawaiʻi Public Seed Initiative | Presentations | A program of The Kohala Center http://bit.ly/1CbEeiO
Overview of crop improvement projects in Hawaii (PDF, 1982) http://buff.ly/1ZyEH7r
Selecting tomatoes for the home garden in Hawaii (PDF) http://buff.ly/1LiBAad
Available from University of Hawaii: http://www.ctahr.hawaii.edu/seed/seeds.asp#tomato
Tomato cultivars developed by UH-CTAHR horticulturists include the hybrids ‘N-5’, ‘N-52’, ‘N-63’, and ‘N-65’ and the open-pollinated cultivars ‘Anahu’, ‘Healani’, and ‘Kewalo’. The three nonhybrid cultivars are determinate — they grow to a certain height and then stop, and they tend to flower and set fruit within a relatively short period of time.
Anahu tomato was the first root knot nematode resistant variety. Kewalo tomato is considered the most important home garden variety due to bacterial wilt resistance combined with earliness. Kewalo seems to ignore hot weather.
Kewalo is a uniform ripening determinate variety bred at University of Hawaii by tomato breeder Dr. Jim Gilbert. Kewalo was named after one of his favorite fishing spots. Kewalo was bred to be resistant to bacterial wilt, mosaic virus and nematodes. 6-8 oz., red, round fruit with sweet flavor. A good choice for hot and humid climates.
References:
Agricultural Diagnostic Service Center - Seed Program http://bit.ly/1CbC16K
Home Garden Tomato http://www.ctahr.hawaii.edu/oc/freepubs/pdf/HGV-5.pdf
Honolulu Star-Bulletin Features http://bit.ly/1CbDNVs
Hawaiʻi Public Seed Initiative | Presentations | A program of The Kohala Center http://bit.ly/1CbEeiO
Overview of crop improvement projects in Hawaii (PDF, 1982) http://buff.ly/1ZyEH7r
Selecting tomatoes for the home garden in Hawaii (PDF) http://buff.ly/1LiBAad
Healani tomato from Hawaii
Healani is a determinate tomato plant with uniform ripening. Fruits approx. 6-8oz. Matures in 75-80 days. Oblique fruit shape. Resistant to the common root knot nematode, fusarium wilt, gray leaf spot and one strain of spotted wilt virus. It is also tolerant to tobacco mosaic virus. Available from University of Hawaii: http://www.ctahr.hawaii.edu/seed/seeds.asp#tomato
Tomato cultivars developed by UH-CTAHR horticulturists include the hybrids ‘N-5’, ‘N-52’, ‘N-63’, and ‘N-65’ and the open-pollinated cultivars ‘Anahu’, ‘Healani’, and ‘Kewalo’. The three nonhybrid cultivars are determinate — they grow to a certain height and then stop, and they tend to flower and set fruit within a relatively short period of time.
Anahu tomato was the first root knot nematode resistant variety. Kewalo tomato is considered the most important home garden variety due to bacterial wilt resistance combined with earliness.
References:
Agricultural Diagnostic Service Center - Seed Program http://bit.ly/1CbC16K
Home Garden Tomato http://www.ctahr.hawaii.edu/oc/freepubs/pdf/HGV-5.pdf
Honolulu Star-Bulletin Features http://bit.ly/1CbDNVs
Hawaiʻi Public Seed Initiative | Presentations | A program of The Kohala Center http://bit.ly/1CbEeiO
Overview of crop improvement projects in Hawaii (PDF, 1982) http://buff.ly/1ZyEH7r
Selecting tomatoes for the home garden in Hawaii (PDF) http://buff.ly/1LiBAad
Tomato cultivars developed by UH-CTAHR horticulturists include the hybrids ‘N-5’, ‘N-52’, ‘N-63’, and ‘N-65’ and the open-pollinated cultivars ‘Anahu’, ‘Healani’, and ‘Kewalo’. The three nonhybrid cultivars are determinate — they grow to a certain height and then stop, and they tend to flower and set fruit within a relatively short period of time.
Anahu tomato was the first root knot nematode resistant variety. Kewalo tomato is considered the most important home garden variety due to bacterial wilt resistance combined with earliness.
References:
Agricultural Diagnostic Service Center - Seed Program http://bit.ly/1CbC16K
Home Garden Tomato http://www.ctahr.hawaii.edu/oc/freepubs/pdf/HGV-5.pdf
Honolulu Star-Bulletin Features http://bit.ly/1CbDNVs
Hawaiʻi Public Seed Initiative | Presentations | A program of The Kohala Center http://bit.ly/1CbEeiO
Overview of crop improvement projects in Hawaii (PDF, 1982) http://buff.ly/1ZyEH7r
Selecting tomatoes for the home garden in Hawaii (PDF) http://buff.ly/1LiBAad
How to Save Tomato Seeds - Suburban Homestead video
Learn how to save your own tomato seeds, and save money. Saving your own seeds is easy. You can even create your own new varieties, while you enjoy your organic garden.
Tomatoes adapted for South Florida
Tomatoes adapted to South Florida must have a resistance to multiple pathogens. Such varieties are available from http://www.tomatogrowers.com/Tomatoes/departments/1/
Bella Rosa VFFNA Hybrid #3709 is both heat tolerant and resistant to tomato spotted wilt virus, two very important benefits for many growers. In one Louisiana trial of virus resistant tomatoes, Bella Rosa ranked up at the top for its productivity as well as its large fruit size and great flavor. Determinate. 75 days.
http://www.tomatogrowers.com/BELLA-ROSA-VFFNA-HYBRID/productinfo/3709/
Bella Rosa VFFNA Hybrid #3709 is both heat tolerant and resistant to tomato spotted wilt virus, two very important benefits for many growers. In one Louisiana trial of virus resistant tomatoes, Bella Rosa ranked up at the top for its productivity as well as its large fruit size and great flavor. Determinate. 75 days.
http://www.tomatogrowers.com/BELLA-ROSA-VFFNA-HYBRID/productinfo/3709/
Heat tolerant tomatoes
Here are few examples of heat tolerant tomatoes:
- Heatwave II Hybrid Tomato http://bit.ly/1BZ9X40
- Bella Rosa Hybrid Tomato. (VFFAStTSWV) - A pretty name for a serious performer. Only a few tomatoes can claim both heat tolerance and resistance to tomato spotted wilt virus, a serious problem in some regions of the country. You can expect consistently high yields of big 10 to 12 ounce tomatoes from these strong, determinate plants. Fruits are bright red both outside and inside with firm, highly flavorful flesh. Great for hot, humid areas or home gardens anywhere. Source: https://jungseed.com/dp.asp?pID=00066
References:
Heat-tolerant tomato varieties - which types of tomatoes resist heat? http://bit.ly/1zH5dLt
From Amazon:
- Heatwave II Hybrid Tomato http://bit.ly/1BZ9X40
- Bella Rosa Hybrid Tomato. (VFFAStTSWV) - A pretty name for a serious performer. Only a few tomatoes can claim both heat tolerance and resistance to tomato spotted wilt virus, a serious problem in some regions of the country. You can expect consistently high yields of big 10 to 12 ounce tomatoes from these strong, determinate plants. Fruits are bright red both outside and inside with firm, highly flavorful flesh. Great for hot, humid areas or home gardens anywhere. Source: https://jungseed.com/dp.asp?pID=00066
References:
Heat-tolerant tomato varieties - which types of tomatoes resist heat? http://bit.ly/1zH5dLt
From Amazon:
Marglobe tomato
Marglobe tomato is determinate. This old variety was released by USDA in 1925 and has heavy, vigorous vines that produce high yields of large (8-10 oz.), uniform, globe-shaped fruit. It is one of the first disease-resistant varieties and has good resistance to Verticillium and Fusarium wilts; it served as a source of resistance in Rutgers tomato. Plants are determinate and fruits ripen all at once, making Marglobe a good canning tomato.
References:
Marglobe Tomato Seeds and Plants, Vegetable Gardening at Burpee.com http://bit.ly/1DWC5YT
References:
Marglobe Tomato Seeds and Plants, Vegetable Gardening at Burpee.com http://bit.ly/1DWC5YT
When and How to Feed Your Tomato and Vegetable Seedlings (video)
From Gary Pilarchik: When, What & How to Feed Your Tomato and Vegetable Seedlings: True Leaves! - The Rusted Garden 2014 - YouTube http://buff.ly/1pX25LJ
Decrease Risk of Tomato Diseases Using Aspirin (video)
From Gary Pilarchik: Why & How to Manage Tomato Diseases Using Aspirin: Beef up Defenses - TRG 2014 - YouTube http://buff.ly/1tZ3PSh -- "I've done a couple videos on aspirin and how it can be used to manage tomato diseases. I answer more questions in this video. The salicylic acid in aspirin mimics a natural hormone that tricks the tomato into initiating the SAR response or the Systemic Acquired Resistance response... which means you are turning on all your tomatoes defenses without a true attack occurring. I believe this method of management makes it harder for disease to establish themselves on tomato leaves. I use it yearly."
How to pollinate tomatoes with an electric toothbrush
How to pollinate tomatoes with an electric toothbrush. This can potentially increase your fruit yield. Please try to watch this in HD so that you an see the pollen.
Dutch Bucket Hydroponics for Tomatoes
Bobby has been building a new Dutch Bucket hydroponic system. This is a very simple recirculating hydroponics system that works great for fruiting vegetables such as tomatoes, peppers, and cucumbers. It can be set up inside a greenhouse, in your backyard, or on your porch.
For nutrient mix, he uses Masterblend 4-18-38, mixed to the manufacturers specifications. It is available online at various places, but I order from Morgan County Seeds out in Missouri. Other types of hydroponic fertilizers can be used just as well.
Here's the link to the video where I explain how to mix it: http://youtu.be/vYv9iu2NI3M
For nutrient mix, he uses Masterblend 4-18-38, mixed to the manufacturers specifications. It is available online at various places, but I order from Morgan County Seeds out in Missouri. Other types of hydroponic fertilizers can be used just as well.
Here's the link to the video where I explain how to mix it: http://youtu.be/vYv9iu2NI3M
Dutch Bucket Tomatoes - Pruning, Stringing, and Pollinating
"The Big Beef tomatoes are off to a great start. It's time to prune the early suckers and do some pollinating. And since these are going to be grown single stem, they need to be put on strings using the trellis clips."
Related:
Starting Up Hydroponic Dutch Bucket Tomatoes - YouTube http://buff.ly/1jhqVSR
Related:
Starting Up Hydroponic Dutch Bucket Tomatoes - YouTube http://buff.ly/1jhqVSR
Native Florida Wild Everglades Tomato
"Tomatoes do not grow in the summer in zone 10." The normal South Florida season is to plant seeds continuously from August through February then harvest as ready. The normal growing season is from late October until May.
However, the native Florida Wild Everglades Tomato can be grown year round in South Florida. The Everglades tomato, also known as the currant tomato, is well adapted to South Florida's scorching summers. Plants will set dime-sized fruit in about 50 days. This is a cherry-type heirloom, with a sweet, real tomato taste. It is great for hot/humid climates. They grow in clusters of 8, about the size of a penny (half inch). These supposedly grow wild in the Florida Everglades. Local gardeners refer to it as “wild tomato.” Some claimed it is native to the area but the more likely story is that it had “escaped” into the Everglades and naturalized to that environment. Wild ‘Everglades’ tomato is ideal for South Florida gardens. It produces fruit at any time of year, while most tomatoes require cool night time temperatures to set fruit.
"With modest watering, it will thrive if neglected," says Darrell Batton, a Martin County resident who writes the coastal gardening blog, FloridaHillbilly.com. "Once established, you almost cannot get rid of it."
The one drawback is that tomatoes are diminutive, about the size of a dime and usually smaller. But while the fruit is small, the taste is tremendous. This "currant" tomato is indeterminate, and can grow to 12 feet or more. Don’t expect to see Everglades tomatoes in stores any time soon — their very thin skin and tender texture mean they don’t keep well once picked.
Plants are not sold in garden centers but seeds are available for purchase from vendors online. Batton will send a free seed packet (from his home-grown fruit) if you send him a self-addressed, stamped envelope. Get details at FloridaHillbilly.com/the-everglades-tomato
Seeds are available from Southern J Ranch (West Palm Beach, Florida ) for $5 (35 Seeds), free shipping, http://www.localharvest.org/store/M42282
Here is how to grow the wild Florida Everglades tomato in pots:
1. Get a 5-gallon or 7-gallon pot and fill about 1/2 up with rich organic potting mix with coarse sand. You may also add in a calcium supplement to mix into your soil. Plant the seeds just at the depth of the seed (very shallow). Wild Florida Everglades tomato seeds will come up in about 7-10 days. As they sprout, thin to 3-5 per pot.
2. As your sprouts get taller, add more soil right up to their necks - just below the level of the top new leaves. Fill so only the top leaves are uncovered with soil. As your plants grow, continue to repeat these soil additions until you have reached 1-2 inches from the top edge of your pot. What you are doing is creating more soil for the stems to create roots. Along the entire depth of your pot your tomatoes are growing roots making this an incredibly well rooted plant able to draw nutrition from 6-8 inches of soil.
3. Feed with fish emulsion fertilizer and composted cow manure. You can mix in composted manure as part of your mix as you fill the pot. In about 50-60 days you will have many tasty cherry tomatoes. Pick and eat daily. Well cared for, these indeterminate vines will grow as much as 15 feet tall so expect to stake or trellis them for maximum fruit production.
The vines will grow, flower and fruit continuously for several months. If you live in South Florida, you can plant these native tomatoes continuously all year around and enjoy the fruit 12 months a year. In zones 9 and 10, start seeds with plans to plant your garden starting August and you can keep planting monthly until May-June. Spring-Summer plantings tend to be even better than Fall-Winter for fruit yield.
Hopkins Nursery is in western Broward County (Fort Lauderdale, Florida).
Rare Perennial Everglades Tomato Grows all Year in South Florida - YouTube http://buff.ly/1hAJDj3
Bonnie plants website lists Heat Tolerant Tomatoes http://buff.ly/1wzQm6H , among them Phoenix, cherokee purple, black prince, solar fire, black cherry, husky cherry red, and marion.
References:
Wild ‘Everglades’ tomato is ideal for South Florida gardens - Miami Herald Home & Garden http://buff.ly/1hAJvA6
Everglades Tomato is February Plant of the Month - Sun Sentinel http://buff.ly/1hALxAm
Wild Florida Everglades Tomato, article on MGonline http://buff.ly/1lqlgLX
Wild Florida Everglades Tomato at MGonline Store http://buff.ly/1lqlnai
Native Florida Tomato Wild Everglades - 10 Seeds - Fl Grown - Highly Recommended - Plants- Ethnobotanical - Plants and Seeds - Florida - Heavenly-Products http://buff.ly/1lqlwdK
Related reading:
"Currant Tomato" for hot summers https://buff.ly/2KUMg5T
However, the native Florida Wild Everglades Tomato can be grown year round in South Florida. The Everglades tomato, also known as the currant tomato, is well adapted to South Florida's scorching summers. Plants will set dime-sized fruit in about 50 days. This is a cherry-type heirloom, with a sweet, real tomato taste. It is great for hot/humid climates. They grow in clusters of 8, about the size of a penny (half inch). These supposedly grow wild in the Florida Everglades. Local gardeners refer to it as “wild tomato.” Some claimed it is native to the area but the more likely story is that it had “escaped” into the Everglades and naturalized to that environment. Wild ‘Everglades’ tomato is ideal for South Florida gardens. It produces fruit at any time of year, while most tomatoes require cool night time temperatures to set fruit.
"With modest watering, it will thrive if neglected," says Darrell Batton, a Martin County resident who writes the coastal gardening blog, FloridaHillbilly.com. "Once established, you almost cannot get rid of it."
The one drawback is that tomatoes are diminutive, about the size of a dime and usually smaller. But while the fruit is small, the taste is tremendous. This "currant" tomato is indeterminate, and can grow to 12 feet or more. Don’t expect to see Everglades tomatoes in stores any time soon — their very thin skin and tender texture mean they don’t keep well once picked.
Plants are not sold in garden centers but seeds are available for purchase from vendors online. Batton will send a free seed packet (from his home-grown fruit) if you send him a self-addressed, stamped envelope. Get details at FloridaHillbilly.com/the-everglades-tomato
Seeds are available from Southern J Ranch (West Palm Beach, Florida ) for $5 (35 Seeds), free shipping, http://www.localharvest.org/store/M42282
Here is how to grow the wild Florida Everglades tomato in pots:
1. Get a 5-gallon or 7-gallon pot and fill about 1/2 up with rich organic potting mix with coarse sand. You may also add in a calcium supplement to mix into your soil. Plant the seeds just at the depth of the seed (very shallow). Wild Florida Everglades tomato seeds will come up in about 7-10 days. As they sprout, thin to 3-5 per pot.
2. As your sprouts get taller, add more soil right up to their necks - just below the level of the top new leaves. Fill so only the top leaves are uncovered with soil. As your plants grow, continue to repeat these soil additions until you have reached 1-2 inches from the top edge of your pot. What you are doing is creating more soil for the stems to create roots. Along the entire depth of your pot your tomatoes are growing roots making this an incredibly well rooted plant able to draw nutrition from 6-8 inches of soil.
3. Feed with fish emulsion fertilizer and composted cow manure. You can mix in composted manure as part of your mix as you fill the pot. In about 50-60 days you will have many tasty cherry tomatoes. Pick and eat daily. Well cared for, these indeterminate vines will grow as much as 15 feet tall so expect to stake or trellis them for maximum fruit production.
The vines will grow, flower and fruit continuously for several months. If you live in South Florida, you can plant these native tomatoes continuously all year around and enjoy the fruit 12 months a year. In zones 9 and 10, start seeds with plans to plant your garden starting August and you can keep planting monthly until May-June. Spring-Summer plantings tend to be even better than Fall-Winter for fruit yield.
Hopkins Nursery is in western Broward County (Fort Lauderdale, Florida).
Rare Perennial Everglades Tomato Grows all Year in South Florida - YouTube http://buff.ly/1hAJDj3
Bonnie plants website lists Heat Tolerant Tomatoes http://buff.ly/1wzQm6H , among them Phoenix, cherokee purple, black prince, solar fire, black cherry, husky cherry red, and marion.
References:
Wild ‘Everglades’ tomato is ideal for South Florida gardens - Miami Herald Home & Garden http://buff.ly/1hAJvA6
Everglades Tomato is February Plant of the Month - Sun Sentinel http://buff.ly/1hALxAm
Wild Florida Everglades Tomato, article on MGonline http://buff.ly/1lqlgLX
Wild Florida Everglades Tomato at MGonline Store http://buff.ly/1lqlnai
Native Florida Tomato Wild Everglades - 10 Seeds - Fl Grown - Highly Recommended - Plants- Ethnobotanical - Plants and Seeds - Florida - Heavenly-Products http://buff.ly/1lqlwdK
Related reading:
"Currant Tomato" for hot summers https://buff.ly/2KUMg5T
How to Plant Tomato Seeds Indoors (video)
How to Plant Tomato Seeds Indoors - YouTube http://buff.ly/1ggNNvc
Determinate vs. Indeterminate Tomatoes (video)
About Tomatoes: Determinate vs. Indeterminate - YouTube http://buff.ly/1itV5iC
The advantage of determinate tomatoes:
1. Small, compact, manageable plants
2. Good producers
3. Easy to grow
Determinate tomatoes are great for a small garden. They do not get too large, can be grown in a pot, and are dependable producers. Give them a try.
The advantage of determinate tomatoes:
1. Small, compact, manageable plants
2. Good producers
3. Easy to grow
Determinate tomatoes are great for a small garden. They do not get too large, can be grown in a pot, and are dependable producers. Give them a try.
Only two things that money can't buy -- That's true love & homegrown tomatoes
Guy Clark - Homegrown Tomatoes:
Homegrown tomatoes, homegrown tomatoes
What'd life be without homegrown tomatoes
Only two things that money can't buy
That's true love & homegrown tomatoes
Related:
Homegrown Tomatoes Lyrics | Guy Clark http://bit.ly/12coZlA
True love and homegrown tomatoes – Eatocracy - CNN.com Blogs http://bit.ly/12cp8Wk
Homegrown tomatoes, homegrown tomatoes
What'd life be without homegrown tomatoes
Only two things that money can't buy
That's true love & homegrown tomatoes
Related:
Homegrown Tomatoes Lyrics | Guy Clark http://bit.ly/12coZlA
True love and homegrown tomatoes – Eatocracy - CNN.com Blogs http://bit.ly/12cp8Wk
The World's Smallest Tomato Plant: Tiny Tim
Related: Tiny Tim Tomato Plants Started In 3 Inch Net Cups - YouTube http://bit.ly/15d0aCS
Recipes with tomatoes from NYTimes
New recipe for roasting tomatoes: "I roasted them for 2 hours at a low temperature (300 degrees), which didn’t dry them out completely but intensified everything about them. I snacked on them all week, and also put them through a food mill for sauce. They will definitely become a habit, along with the fresh tomato sandwiches I’ve been eating for lunch every day. This won’t stop until September."
References:
Tomatoes Plain and Simple - NYTimes.com http://nyti.ms/1aTYdAX
Recipes for Health: Tomatoes - The New York Times http://nyti.ms/1aTYfc3
My Pain Catalan With Extra Tomatoes and Goat Cheese - NYTimes.com http://bit.ly/1aTYdRz
Amazingly Sweet Slow-Roasted Tomatoes - NYTimes.com http://bit.ly/1aTYgNi
Rainbow Trout Baked With Tomatoes — Recipes for Health - NYTimes.com http://bit.ly/1aTYh3I
Tomato, Squash and Eggplant Tian — Recipes for Health - NYTimes.com http://bit.ly/1aTYfZy
Summer’s Treasure - Tomatoes - Recipes for Health - NYTimes.com http://bit.ly/1aTYhRr
Tomato Straciatella - Recipes for Health - NYTimes.com http://bit.ly/1aTYjsk
Pizza Without the Dough - NYTimes.com http://bit.ly/13it34A
Recipes for Health - Fresh Tomato Sauce - NYTimes.com http://bit.ly/13it6gR
Recipes for Health - Scrambled Eggs à la Provençale - NYTimes.com http://bit.ly/13it3BF
Recipes for Health - Creamy Gazpacho - NYTimes.com http://bit.ly/13it7kS
References:
Tomatoes Plain and Simple - NYTimes.com http://nyti.ms/1aTYdAX
Recipes for Health: Tomatoes - The New York Times http://nyti.ms/1aTYfc3
My Pain Catalan With Extra Tomatoes and Goat Cheese - NYTimes.com http://bit.ly/1aTYdRz
Amazingly Sweet Slow-Roasted Tomatoes - NYTimes.com http://bit.ly/1aTYgNi
Rainbow Trout Baked With Tomatoes — Recipes for Health - NYTimes.com http://bit.ly/1aTYh3I
Tomato, Squash and Eggplant Tian — Recipes for Health - NYTimes.com http://bit.ly/1aTYfZy
Summer’s Treasure - Tomatoes - Recipes for Health - NYTimes.com http://bit.ly/1aTYhRr
Tomato Straciatella - Recipes for Health - NYTimes.com http://bit.ly/1aTYjsk
Pizza Without the Dough - NYTimes.com http://bit.ly/13it34A
Recipes for Health - Fresh Tomato Sauce - NYTimes.com http://bit.ly/13it6gR
Recipes for Health - Scrambled Eggs à la Provençale - NYTimes.com http://bit.ly/13it3BF
Recipes for Health - Creamy Gazpacho - NYTimes.com http://bit.ly/13it7kS
Help your tomatoes survive a summer heat wave
- install shade cloth
- mulching root zones
- water
- get ripe and nearly ripe fruit off the vine
- don't prune dead leaves
References:
Reaganite71's Garden Blog: Helping your Tomatoes Survive A Brutal Summer http://bit.ly/13b6kCy
- mulching root zones
- water
- get ripe and nearly ripe fruit off the vine
- don't prune dead leaves
References:
Reaganite71's Garden Blog: Helping your Tomatoes Survive A Brutal Summer http://bit.ly/13b6kCy
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