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Planting, Growing, and Harvesting Tomatoes
Cooking Notes
Tomatoes are nutritious and low in calories. One medium-sized tomato provides 57% of the recommended daily allotment (RDA) of vitamin C, 25% of vitamin A, and 8% of iron, yet it has only 35 calories.
Capture the garden-fresh taste of tomatoes all year long! See this helpful post on how to can tomatoes.
Many people also love dried tomatoes, so learn how to dry your own tomatoes here.
See our Best Tomato Recipes Ever!
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Yes, you are correct. When temperatures exceed 85 to 90 F, the ripening process slows significantly or even stops. The optimum temperature for ripening tomatoes is 70 to 75F. Do not remove leaves in an effort to ripe; this will not work. The key is picking them when they are showing the first signs of ripening (no earlier) and keeping them at room temperature. Do not refrigerate, as this will absolutely destroy their flavor.
have three heirloom tomatoes in pots , only one has any blossoms ?? all look healthy but not setting blossoms ?? what is up ?
We added this information in the guide above. If no flowers form, plants may not be getting enough sun or water (too little can stop flowering). Flower drop-off could be due to high daytime temperatures (over 90掳F). Provide shade during the hottest part of the day by using row covers or shade cloth.
Ive recently started tomatoes from seeds. I started them inside on a heat mat and undergrow lights. My grow lights are small and I decided to move them out into my unheated greenhouse for more even lighting but im worried that it will be too cold at night. It get into the low 40s F. Is this too cold for tomatoes? Should I bring them inside at night? Any other advice at using a unheated greenhouse when it is still chilly spring weather? I live in northern Indiana and sadly our temperatures are about 10 degrees colder than average. Thanks for any advice!
While nighttime temps are still below 50掳F, it’s a good idea to bring the plants indoors. During the day, as long as temps hover around 50掳F or more in the greenhouse, the plants can live there. Note that you’ll still need to put them through some sort of hardening off process before putting the tomatoes outside permanently. This can be done in the greenhouse, to some extent, by exposing them to cooler temps during the day slowly over time.
I started tomato seedlings under a dome with a heated mat. About 2 weeks ago, I moved the seedlings under a grow light with a fan blowing a light breeze for a few hours a day. They were doing fine and the first 2 sets of leaves began to grow. Then one day I noticed small black dots on the leaves. Is this fungus? Is there any way to save the seedlings? Otherwise they are growing well and look healthy.
If they’ve been getting ample air flow around their leaves, fungi seems unlikely. Nevertheless, look up septoria leaf spot and see if it matches what you’re seeing. If you happened to use old soil that had been in contact with tomatoes in the past, it could’ve brought diseases with it.
Buy a roll of concrete reinforcing wire, around 50-70 some dollars, with 4-6 inch squares. You can make upwards of 25 cages that are six feet tall, by cutting the lowest ring out you can make built in stakes to support it. Easiest method yet rather than staking and tying. Use greensand, kelp, bone meal, kelp or fish meal, organic amendments in your holes, perhaps a landscape fabric and mulch. Try treating seeds and seedlings with salicylic acid for stress tolerance, humid and fulvic acid supplements for great growth. Don鈥檛 prune tomatoes, you鈥檙e only eliminating food for the growing plant, or fruiting buds. Only exception is topping a leggy plant to promote bushiness.
Thank you for a wonderful website. I have cause for thought that with all the different varieties of tomato, how can we know which have been purely hybrid, Genetically interfered with in a laboratory and injected with insecticide to produce a variety resistant to pests etc. I am wanting to be as organic and natural as possible?
Hi Steven, Good question. If you’re interested in organic tomatoes, growers must actually have a label certified by a USDA-approved state agency. The certification means that the tomatoes are produced using pest management and fertilization methods that do not include synthetic compounds. If you don’t see this certification, the plant may not be organic if even it’s claimed organic. You would need to trust the grower.
Also, we prefer buying our seeds and plants from the catalog seed companies. Then, it’s very clear in the catalog what you are ordering. Plus, ordering direct is usually less expensive. Here is a list of catalogs of both organic and non-organic seed supplies: /content/garden-seed-catalogs-mail