flowerbug
Garden Master
picked two more buckets, but i could have done another had i known the rain was going to hold off long enough. that's ok. two buckets is enough to keep me busy for a while canning tonight.
Well heirloomgal, I'm going to utilize your method of freezing cherry (currant) tomatoes in a baggie. The harvest is exploding! I will never eat my way through these ripening fruits, so it's into the freezer with the excess, to be made into spaghetti sauce at a more convenient time later this fall.My primary method of preserving tomatoes is freezing them. The taste is so perfectly intact it's incredible, smells like they're fresh from the garden. I love it. No burnt fingers from scalding and peeling, no work just pop em in a ziploc and slide it closed.
Well heirloomgal, I'm going to utilize your method of freezing cherry (currant) tomatoes in a baggie. The harvest is exploding! I will never eat my way through these ripening fruits, so it's into the freezer with the excess, to be made into spaghetti sauce at a more convenient time later this fall.
I can't complain about production from my two little raised beds this summer. A bunch of yellow summer squash appeared this past week, so I can forgive the early thefts by deer, since there was plenty left for me. The bush beans in my tiny round bed provided a few handfuls of green beans, but the tomatoes outshone everything.
i think i have a few Baby Blue Hubbard squash out there that are going to come in about 10-20lbs each. so much for Baby.
Those are some BIG babies!
That's a big plus in my book. With the rainy weather here, my land is crawling with slugs and snails, but at least the raised beds seem to discourage them. Those are some fine-looking tomatoes.The upside of all the dry weather is almost no snails.
I roast and freeze my tomatoes and peppers. Then when I have enough I can them into salsa. I don't have enough garlic so going to Costco today for some. Tomorrow will be canning day.Some of my tomatoes are finally ripening. Only oxhearts and paste tomatoes this year - and the grape tomato I grow every year. No slicers this year, but the bigger oxhearts work well for that.
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Santa Maria, average weight over 8 ounces.
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Sunray Farm Paste, average weight over 5 ounces. Very meaty.
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Orange Beef Heart, average weight over 13 ounces.
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Japanese, average weight 6 ounces.
So far, only minimal damage, and most of that was sunscald from the hot days. The upside of all the dry weather is almost no snails. The mouse damage has so far been minimal (only tomatoes touching the ground) but I pick just before fully ripe just in case. I need to get my traps out though to be proactive.
The problem is that the main reason for the paste tomatoes is for canned salsa, and my peppers are behind schedule... only a few starting to ripen. Hopefully the change to cooler weather will kick start the ripening process. Until then, I'll be giving a lot of tomatoes away.