Ideas for a large, short-season, juicing, red tomato?

HotPepperQueen

Deeply Rooted
Joined
Jan 4, 2012
Messages
588
Reaction score
202
Points
167
Location
Central MN, Zone 3/4 Border
I have never had good luck finding a high-yielding red tomato for juicing and slicing. I live on the zone 3/4 border and usually the tomatoes don't get very big or don't produce very many. Any ideas? I usually plant the last weekend in May and harvest through September.
 

catjac1975

Garden Master
Joined
Jul 22, 2010
Messages
9,019
Reaction score
9,144
Points
397
Location
Mattapoisett, Massachusetts
I love bull's heart, pink cadillac, and the Steak types. I don't know how they do in your zone. I have tried many ways to get the earliest tomatoes without much more than an extra week early. I have grown giant plants in the greenhouse, where when I put them out there are already red tomatoes on them. Fun, but the tomatoes are not that great and then the plant seems stunted. Warming the soil with black plastic, a few weeks before putting out your plants may help as they love warm soil. I do this in order to get northern sweet potatoes to grow for me. I would look for a more local seed supplier that has strains meant for your zone.
 

TheSeedObsesser

Deeply Rooted
Joined
Sep 17, 2013
Messages
1,521
Reaction score
683
Points
193
Location
Central Ohio, zone 5b
Are you OK with a pink variety? Goose Creek might be a good one, although I think that the tomatoes are more of medium-sized. I think that it's fairly early. I haven't tried them for myself, so couldn't confirm.
 

baymule

Garden Master
Joined
Mar 20, 2011
Messages
18,766
Reaction score
36,682
Points
457
Location
Trinity County Texas
Homestead tomatoes did well for me last year. They didn't get very big, but they were in the back yard and were shaded half the day. But they did produce lots of tomatoes. I posted pics in the 2014 tomato picture thread. I think if I had them in a better place, I would have gotten bigger tomatoes.

http://www.theeasygarden.com/threads/tomato-pictures-2014.15554/

@so lucky started a thread last year on heritage tomatoes, @Carol Dee grew some bodacious Mortgage Lifters. Lots of people chimed in on this thread, posted pictures and reviews.

http://www.theeasygarden.com/threads/lets-talk-about-heirloom-tomatoes.15536/
 

Lavender2

Garden Addicted
Joined
Sep 22, 2009
Messages
1,414
Reaction score
1,144
Points
257
Location
MN. Zone 4/5
Last year was possibly my worst for tomatoes in 20 years, 2 months of rain made the season even shorter than normal. My best producers were Parks Whopper, Big Beef, and Early Girl, all hybrid indeterminates of course. I did get a fair harvest and a good bit of canning done.

For heirlooms/OP, have you tried many determinate types? Legend and Bush Beefsteak are on my list to try. In my slightly limited experience at growing some of the bigger heirlooms, it may also take a bigger season, nice big green fruit in Sept. makes ya want to cry.

I have mulched and not mulched, in my garden mulching with newspaper and leaves/grass clippings boosted size and yield.
 

so lucky

Garden Master
Joined
Mar 5, 2011
Messages
8,342
Reaction score
4,963
Points
397
Location
SE Missouri, Zone 6
Like Lavender2, I had a horrible tomato season last year. But in the past, Big Beef and Celebrity have done well for me. Both are hybrids.
Someone on here was asking if they should leave their plant lights on 24/7 while growing tomato starts. I did last year, and blame some of my problems on that. Not sure if I have valid reasons for doing so...but I have to blame something. It surely couldn't have been "operator error." :hide
 

Latest posts

Top