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Jeremy Dore, founder of GrowVeg.com

Jeremy Dore is the founder of GrowVeg.com and loves loves growing vegetables in his garden in Northern England. His interests include organic gardening, computer programming, permaculture and cooking.

Barbara Pleasant, writer for GrowVeg.com

Barbara Pleasant is our American horticultural expert and an award-winning garden writer. She is a contributing editor for Mother Earth News and has written more than a dozen gardening books.

Comments are welcomed on this blog.

Best Tomato Varieties

Friday, September 19, 2008 by Jeremy Dore - Categories: vegetable tomato variety
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So many wonderful tomato varieties to choose from - which ones are best?  These are Gardeners Delight.Over the past two months we have been conducting a survey of the best tomato varieties that gardeners using GrowVeg.com would recommend to others.  It can be tricky choosing which tomatoes to grow since most seed catalogues contain a wider variety of them than any other fruit or vegetable.  It would be quite possible to spend a lifetime working through each kind to find the best and still not have tried them all.  So what do real gardeners like you and I recommend as the top varieties?

Tomatoes always get the best place in my garden.  Over half my greenhouse is given over to tomato plants and I usually grow several others outside.  It’s not just because tomatoes taste so much better when freshly picked and ripened on the vine.  Nor is it just that they are a high-value crop as they keep producing for almost two months of the year.  It’s also because of the interesting types I can grow – so much more than what is available in the shops.  This year I grew five different varieties, three of which I had never grown before and I was particularly interested to see whether others recommend them in our survey.

About 51% of those who voted recommended standard shape tomatoes and a further 46% recommended cherry-type ones.  Far fewer recommended the larger beefsteak  and plum types which certainly ties in with my experience that they can be hard to get good results from.  This year for the first time I thinned out my big tomatoes, removing half the fruit as you would thin a fruit tree in order to get a better crop over the wet and overcast summer we experienced in the UK.  I will certainly be repeating this in the future, as getting good numbers of beef type tomatoes to ripen away from sunny climates can be a tricky business.

Of the regular shaped tomatoes, the traditional Moneymaker was top of the bunch with 18% growing it.  Other well known favourites were Alicante and the F1 type Shirley.  A few people recommended heirloom types, whilst others went for the ultra-early Tigerella or the blight-resistant Ferline F1.

Cherry type tomatoes were headed up by the ever popular Gardeners Delight at 23% – the only variety of tomato that I have grown every year without fail due to its reliable sweet fruit that are produced over a long season.  Other interesting small tomatoes were Sungold, a yellow-orange variety and Tumbling Tom which can be grown in hanging baskets.

Of the beefsteak and plum types, no strong winners emerged with Brandywine being the only one that more than one gardener recommended.  The rest were largely Italian types but with a great range in the varieties chosen.

So next year, I’ll still be growing Gardeners Delight but I’ll add a few of the above to my list.  I prefer the texture of Sub Artic Plenty to Moneymaker and I’d like to see if I can grow it late and harvest tomatoes near Christmas by bringing a plant indoors – unfortunately blight wiped out my chances of doing that this year.  But I will definitely be trying Sungold and I want to get some early season Tigerella growing too.  At least, that’s what I’m planning now.  I’m sure those hundreds of varieties in the seed catalogues will tempt me into a few more come the new year  So do add your own favourites and comments below and perhaps I’ll end up growing your recommendations as well!



Comments

Thnaks for offering up the above best tomatoes. Where can i go to ask questions and get advice please
Comment by: Lynne on Sunday, September 21, 2008

Lynne, if it's about the same subject as one of these blog articles then just post a question here. Otherwise, email us using the contact page.
Comment by: Jeremy Dore on Sunday, September 21, 2008

For the past two years I have lost all my tomato crops, when in my first allotment year I had a bumper crop. I had Tigrella, Sungold,and a very large variety that i cant recall the name of and some cherry ones. Unfortunately I dont have a greenhouse so advise on best ones to grow outside would be helpful
Comment by: Dee on Friday, October 03, 2008

I grew a variety called Latah this year. They're quite weird looking plants, but really easy to grow - they don't need any pinching out, grew well in pots (outdoors)and in the garden in both sunny and a really shady spot where I just shoved in a spare plant to see what happened rather than throw it out when too many germinated. I sowed seed indoors in a propagator in January, planted them out in early April (south coast area) and they were cropping by May and continued until late September early October and no disease. My sub-arctic plenty tomato plants were very poor in comparison. Admittedly I sowed them later but from two plants I got a total of 3 tomatoes before the plants succumbed to disease. Don't think I'll bother with these again.
Comment by: grannyj on Monday, October 13, 2008

Thanks for the tip about the Latah variety. I've just looked them up and the Real Seed Company do them (who I've ordered from this year and been very happy with the results) so I may just give them a go. Everyone seems to rate them highly.
Comment by: Jeremy Dore on Sunday, October 19, 2008

I have grown Ferline tomatoes from seed for the last 4 years. They are brilliant.I have had no problems at all.
Comment by: george worby on Wednesday, January 28, 2009

please can anyone tell me a variety that are as hard as golf balls hardly any fleash and are very sweet with green seeds please my fav food but can never find what i want
Comment by: sandra mckeown on Tuesday, March 03, 2009

I've grown Brandy wine for several years now both in the UK and in France and although they look terrible - the tops tend to be very cracked - they do taste superb and make great puree and soup. I too grow gardener's delight every year, and last year grew a heart shaped tomtato called German Strawberry. It had very few pips, looked a lot better than the Brandy wine and was great for cooking with. Admittedly the weather is better here in France for growing tomatoes but we have had terrible problems with blight for the last 2 years - interestingly the Gardeners Delight secumbed last of all.
Comment by: Jane Le Maux on Friday, March 06, 2009

Hi, Are the Gardeners Delight cherry tomatoes and the tumbling Tom and The Latah tomatoes suited to grow in the US desert of Las Vegas, NV 89118. When and would I put them in full sun or partial shade? Would you suggest a variety better suited to the 89118 area code US.
Comment by: Marjorie on Friday, March 06, 2009

Marjorie, I can't advise on the best varieties for LA but I can tell you that our new system of planting dates that went 'live' this week, allows you to split your growing season into spring and fall (see the Set Frost Dates link on the Members' Area page) which will give you correct times. They will need to be shielded from full sun. Good luck!
Comment by: Jeremy Dore on Friday, March 06, 2009

Marjorie, you would be in USDA hardiness zone 8A. Most seed companies will list the zones where each of the varieties they sell can grow. Also, you might consider a trip (or a phonecall) to a nearby nursery/greenhouse to see what they have and ask for advice. Most are quite happy to help you find something specific for your garden! Sandra, You didn't offer much info: what color, size, and type were these? Where were they grown? You'll most likely have to go back to the source--where did you first taste these? It may be quite difficult without a name to locate them--and keep in mind, it may have been a family variety that isn't commercially available. Tomatoes as hard as golf balls? Are you sure you weren't just eating them before they had ripened? :-)
Comment by: Amy on Saturday, March 07, 2009

Hi, I have been growing tomatoes from seeds taken from previous crops and have been very successful. Last year I successfully grew Cherokee Heirloom and some grape tomatoes from some seeds from a crop from Chile. However, I notice that the skins on these tomatoes are quite tough and I was wondering if somebody had some suggestions on what variety of tomatoes would have softer skins. I am in Toronto, Canada and I believe my zone corresponds to your zones 5-6.
Comment by: Carole on Sunday, March 15, 2009

Carole, are you looking for thinner skin, or softer flesh? I believe Black Krim is a thin-skinned variety, and I know it will grow in zone 5. (I have not grown it myself yet, but got some seed for this year's garden from a nearby friend.) There are many heirloom/OP varieties that have thinner skin and/or softer flesh. I'd call a seed company or a local nursery for recommendations. :-)
Comment by: Amy on Monday, March 16, 2009

I live in Oregon and have always selected "greenhouse" tomato varieties to plant in my greenhouse. Is it okay to plant any variety of tomato in a greenhouse?
Comment by: Bev on Friday, March 20, 2009

Pretty much any variety of tomato will grow well in a greenhouse as long as they don't dry out. In very hot summers they benefit from a little shading as well. By 'greenhouse tomatoes' I think they are simply being labelled as not suitable for outside growing, whereas other tomatoes are suitable for both.
Comment by: Jeremy Dore on Friday, March 20, 2009

I am planting four varieties of tomatoes in my garden this year. Is it okay to plant these varieties in the same bed or two beds, or will they cross-pollinate and create wierd hybrids?
Comment by: Meredith on Sunday, April 05, 2009

Meredith, interesting question! I have often grown different varieties together and had no problems - they always seem to grow true to the original seed, so I would say don't worry about it.
Comment by: Jeremy Dore on Monday, April 06, 2009

Meredith, it depends on your particular growing conditions. Tomatoes do not easily cross, but they CAN cross. If you are not seed-saving, it doesn't matter--you'll get the variety you plant. If you are seed-saving, then it's a good idea to bag a few blooms to collect seeds from, to prevent crossing. HTH!
Comment by: Amy on Monday, April 06, 2009

Yes, those comments help, thank you! I'm not seed-saving yet, so I'll go ahead and plant them in the same bed. That makes things a lot easier!
Comment by: Meredith on Tuesday, April 07, 2009

hi, could someone pls email me regarding a place where I could find different variety of tomato plants. I want to plant all kinds this year in my garden..I would be grateful if any one could send me some info. I leave in Toronto, Canada.
Comment by: Parisa on Wednesday, April 15, 2009

Parisa, Veseys stock a wide variety of tomato plant seeds suitable for the Canadian climate at http://www.veseys.com/ca/en/store/vegetables/tomato.
Comment by: Jeremy Dore on Friday, April 17, 2009

I live in Pennsylvania (zone 6) and purchased Early Girl and Better Boy plants a couple of weeks ago. I did not put them in the ground yet, but have kept them watered. They are drooping, and I beleive I will lose them all. Any idea as to why they would not have survived? They were stored outside prior to my purchasing them, and I kept them in my basement which was cool, but not freezing. I did put them outside on sunny warmer days. Thanks.
Comment by: April on Wednesday, April 22, 2009

I would ease one out of the container it is in and look at its roots. If they are overcrowded then you should repot them into some good potting soil in a larger container - this will also help them if they have run out of nutrients (a problem with purchased plants which are raised with the minimum of soil and shipped when they reach their peak). The only other factor is whether your basement has enough light - they must be kept where they can get good strong natural light. I hope this helps
Comment by: Jeremy Dore on Thursday, April 23, 2009

Barbara tomatoes are the best drying tomatoes I have grown. I have not been able to find any seed for two years. Could someone please let me know of a Barbara tomato source. Thanks.
Comment by: Peggy on Saturday, May 02, 2009

To Parisa and anyone else looking for variety in their tomato patch. I chanced upon http://www.tomatofest.com this year and was thrilled with both their variety and service. They have more kinds of different heirloom tomatoes then you could ever grow. I live in northern Germany and was delighted to find special groups of "short season" and "cool weather" varieties. They even sent me extra packets of seeds to try when it turned out that postage would be less than expected, because they just enclosed them in envelopes instead of boxes to speed the travel time as it was a bit late. Obviously, it's a bit late for seeds this year, but I'd heartily recommend them to all home gardeners!!
Comment by: Marsha on Thursday, May 21, 2009

Have grown, from seed, 11 new tom varieties this year, all obtained from an American company. They are all doing well in the greenhouse but the one that is outstanding is one called Early Wonder. It is early and it is wonderous! I gave a plant to our neighbour and hers is also stupendous. Big (but not beefsteak) tomoatoes. They are still green so the proof will be in the eating of course but I wondered if anyone else has grown this variety?
Comment by: Polly on Wednesday, July 08, 2009

Hello, this is my first year at greenhouse gardening and am growing several varieties of tomato including tigerella with which I am very impressed. The only disaster I've had is that the plants (even though on canes ) have collapsed onto one another into a giant knot resembling a jungle. There are plenty of fruits forming up, nevertheless. The only concern that I have is whether fruits in the middle of this jungle of foilage will ripen up? Any suggestions on that please?
Comment by: Paul on Thursday, July 23, 2009

Paul, I have grown tomatoes in my greenhouse for many years now and my experience is that the fruits do ripen well even in the foliage. However, if you are concerned about this you may wish to take a look at our article on 'Should You Thin Your Tomato Fruits' at http://www.growveg.com/growblogpost.aspx?id=94
Comment by: Jeremy Dore on Friday, July 24, 2009

This is really great advice. Thought I'd pass this on, I grow Sweet Basil in my garden area where Tomatoes are planted and it makes them taste sweeter. Have any of you tried this? It worked real well for me. I had 36 tomato plants and 4 basil staggered throughout the area. The basil can also be planted in pots and placed around the tomatoes.
Comment by: Curtis Bloodworth on Saturday, October 10, 2009

I love growing tomatoes and try several new varieties each year. I grew some Black Prince toms this year...a "black" (very dark crimson) tomatoe and they were delicious. Also Suncherry (the red one rather than the yellow one) which were much sweeter than Gardeners Delight. To deter greenfly in the greenhouse I grow marigolds around them. These attract the hover flies which feed on the greenfly and I haven't had any trouble with the latter little blighters since I started doing this.
Comment by: Polly, Shropshire UK on Saturday, October 10, 2009

Thanks for the companion planting advice. I regularly grow basil and marigolds around my tomatoes to attract beneficial insects but I didn't know the basil could make tomatoes taste sweeter, so I'll watch out for that next year.
Comment by: Jeremy Dore on Wednesday, October 14, 2009

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