G'day Everyone, someone (Adam & Charlotte) asked me yesterday what my favourite food was to grow, and without thinking very much, I said tomatoes. It's true! Tomatoes are my favourite "fruitable" fruit/veg to grow, and all the rest have a long way to ketchup. Thanks to your support, our Channel has had a great start to the year with a heap of views and a ton more subscribers. These achievements are not possible without your help and generosity so thank you very much... Cheers :)
Another good tip is to pick tomatoes early in the morning. Harvesting first thing in the morning (after a night of no rain) before you water or the heat of the day gets high, means that the flavors will be more concentrated. I've tested this and, by far, the tomatoes taste much better than if you picked them midday or late evening.
Grew up in a family that grew tons of tomatoes for sauce and still growing as an adult. Nothing compares to that strong scent left on your hands and wrists after working with tomatoes
I haven't had much success growing tomatoes ( inconsistent watering I think) but one time I threw some tomatoes into the garden as kitchen scraps to my surprise a plant grew with a few real tasty and lovely smelling fruit.
National treasure is a weird thing to call someone when youre (likely) sitting in a different nation lol Internet celebrities are international sensations
Nothing beats a fresh homegrown tomato plucked from the vine, still warm from the sun. Can't wait to sow this year's batch - I got some fancy varieties I want to try, as well as some proven performers, and this year I've moved out to the countryside, so I can take care of them everyday instead of only on weekends.
I work in a grocery store refrigerated warehouse and we go through extra steps for tomatos. The general warehouse is kept at 35F but the tomatoes ( and several other sensitive fruits) are kept in a 55F area. When you finish the pallets we wrap a giant plastic bag over it to hold in the warmer air while it gets shipped. Of course Murphy's law means late shipments getting too cold
The saucers sauce on the saucer was saused by a flying saucer for an unknown sauce. It was called the specie sauce, and the secret ingredient was not sauce.
As a kid, I always hated tomatoes. Even into adulthood a little bit. Eventually I found that I really liked cherry tomatoes and I thought that that was interesting. As time went on I ended up being able to try some home grown tomatoes instead of store bought. Wow! What difference! All that to say that we often select genetics for larger and better looking food, but that doesn't mean it tastes better.
There are LOTS of heirloom varieties of all different sizes. They are better to begin with but they still also need to be grown care-fully and picked when they are ripe. I've had some incredible tomatoes that you'll never see in the super-markets, but farmers markets and roadside stands yes.
I was lucky enough to be introduced to home grown tomatoes as a kid, and it shook me to my core when I went to a buffet one time and tried their salad bar tomatoes and they tasted like.....bad spit? It was gross. I was so upset. It was that day that I understood why some people hate tomatoes. They never got to try the good stuff, and probably never will now that they've been that badly burned.
Living in Vietnam, Ive had this same discussion with a buddy. He complained that Vietnam grows the blandest tomatoes on earth. I said well mostly its because most dishes here call for sour tomato flavors. But sadly, even the newer varieties available here are tasteless. Your video explains why this is the case. Thanks!
@@Mike_in_Thailand I have to agree with you. There are tomatoes sold in max value grown in Japan. They are about the best I have found but still nothing like home grown.
Back in the 70's my Dad grew quasi-hydroponic tomatoes, in soil and in a greenhouse and they were sooooo good. Funny how the stores would only take the perfect ones so we had a huge supply to eat and give to friends. Yes, refrigeration stops the ripening process. Glad you did this video because a lot of people don't know, especially grocery stores, not to cold store them. 😁👍👍
Right before the first freeze we harvest multiple huge bowls of green tomatoes. We leave some out on counter to ripen, but put rest in fridge to slow down ripening. We eat tomatoes for months this way. All other times keep them out of fridge
The first time I grew tomatoes myself, when I ate them, I thought 'these taste like tomatoes did when I was a kid'! So yummy and flavourful, juicy, delicious. No need to add anything. The stuff from the supermarket, I like to call 'plastic tomatoes', they have their uses but there is nothing better than a sun-warmed ripe tomato you grew yourself. Bliss!
South Mississippi zone 8 here. I have grown for years now, a local heirloom beefsteak variety tomato that I got from a friend, who had grown them so many years they forgot the original name of them lol. After those years of adaptation, the plants consistently produce more, bigger, and better tasting tomatoes than any 'early girl' or 'better boy' hybrid I can buy in the stores. It is definitely worth a few seasons of growing and collecting and planting that seed, to allow for adaptation to your local environment. If you've the patience, the plant won't fail you, and your taste buds will be forever thankful! Thanks for another great video, Mark!
Any sauce with a label that says refrigerate after opening goes in fridge. -- after watching this I'm keeping all my tomatoes out of the fridge. Thanks Marc
Great video, my wife walked up as I was watching you talk about not putting tomatoes in the fridge, you instantly converted her to no fridge tomato storage, our current crop is just starting to ripen and wont be put in the fridge, the tomato's and cheese on toast won us over as well.
Australia has a nice weather to grow ;3 and he knows how to make compost... if u know how to make compost u know half the things to grow a beautiful garden
Honestly even a homegrown tomato without flavor is better than a supermarket tomato... I swear those supermarket things are just red squishy balls of water
I canned some average tomatoes last fall and just made white beans and tomatoes with them, I was stunned by the delectable rich tomato flavor. The store canned ones were redder and held their shape better than mine, but the ones I canned myself had matchless flavor. I'll take flavor over appearance any day! 🍅
@@pablovegas743 If they sold them the tomatoes would be tomato sauce by the time we got them! I love them when they get almost squishy on the vine with some salt
@@JackPitmanNica I think the variety of the tomatoes that are sold in the store have some sort of a gene or something that keeps them that way, because when I pick a green tomato from my garden it eventually becomes softer as it ripens. But I also like soft, squishy tomatoes with some salt or brined cheese.
Thank you for the tip about heirloom tomatoes having that green part at the top when fully ripe. I had let my tomatoes get over ripe and wondered what I did wrong.
Love snacking on little tomatoes in the garden and all the little huckleberries ripen daily get me up early to see how things are growing. Thanks for the tips Mark!
Good morning Mark, You cracked me up when saying the meaning of Tomato and then looking at your stomach. I get it Bud, I’m in my late 50s and my young chest has fallen to my stomach 😢
The Heinz Ketchup bottle I buy says to refrigerate after opening on the back of it. So I usually do. That being said I don’t refrigerate my homegrown tomatoes.
Lol, I've always kept my ketchup in the fridge. Grew up with it in the fridge, but I wouldn't be afraid to use ketchup that was stored in the pantry. After all it is a vingar based sauce and would keep just fine on the shelf. I just prefer my ketchup cold as that's how I've always had it. NO fresh tomatoes in the fridge though, they are so nasty cold!🍅
I think this is a US thing verses other countries. Lol. I never thought of putting, catsup, mustard, etc in the pantry, they were always in the fridge when I was a kid. Makes sense tho. However, I’ve known for YEARS that tomatoes in the fridge are GROSS! I NEVER put mine there. And store bought tomatoes leave a lot to be desired except when I have to have one during the off season! Even then I buy the mixed color cherry tomatoes. They taste better!
@@1MSally1965 Maybe it is, lol! Never thought about that, but most of my condiments are in the fridge once they are opened. I'm the same with store bought tomatoes, the little cherry ones are actually pretty good and sweet!
I live in a tropical country and always put everything that has been opened in the fridge. We also always put tomatoes in the fridge (because they will get rotten in a day or two if not and attract countless fruit flies into the house), I learned it from my mother, she learned it from hers. I finally understand why I dislike tomatoes since I was a kid... I missed so much and I'm already in my 40s now. Thanks to Mark and people in this comment section, maybe this year I will eat a great tasted tomato directly from my yard...and finally able to love the real tomato taste. 🥲
I didn't think much of this video because of the thumbnail, but the sheer information and effort you put into making this video makes it amazing! My hat is off to you good sir!
Great advice. I have been growing tomatoes for 35 years and I favor the small varieties ( sweet 100's, cherry Roma, etc) for sauces and for freezing for winter use. I grow medium, Ace, Celebrity etc for slicers in the summer. I think my region ( 9b Sacramento, Ca) is too hot for beefsteak varieties, they tend to split in the heat. Thanks Mark, love your humor and your videos.
Try Grosse Lisse. I haven't grown them myself but Dad grew them for years. I am sure they sell them in the US. They are a fairly large fruit but Dad didn't have a lot of trouble. He mainly grew them for juice but the family ate some too. He would build a moat around each plant (in heavy clay soil) and pierce holes in soup tins and bury them inside the edge of the moats. He would use a slow-running hose to fill the cans and flood the moats without splashing the plants. He would do it after work which, in mid-summer, isn't ideal for the plants but worked for him. Mum said that doing that for over two dozen plants relaxed him. Tommy Toe is a small tomato that is highly praised for its taste. I guess that you are coming into your growing season soon. Best of luck.
Im not a fan of cherry tomatoes. They are too sweet for my taste. Here in S Spain they grow huge tomatoes as well as normal, pear and cherry. I suspect the big tomatoes are used for gazpacho. The family run shops arent picky about looks though so as long as the produce is sound no one bothers about the odd split or blemish The supermarkets dont seem to have as much variety as the greengrocers. The various fruits and veg they sell are amazing. Some imported stuff like kiwis and dragon fruit but many family run shops also have their own fincas. Plus living here where so much of the fruit and salad stuff is grown for export to Northern europe we are close to the source.
USA Ohio almost time to start indoor seedlings man did your burgers look great Best tasting Thornbury Terracotta and great early slicers and productive 😋 I'm guilty of never adding fertilizer later as fruit had developed Thanks for inspiring 🙏
Hey Mark! Have you tried growing Cherokee purple tomatoes yet? I grew them last year along with some other mostly heirloom varieties, but the Cherokee truly stood out with such a rich depth of flavor! I highly recommend trying them if you're able to get some seeds!
If you want big good tasting tomatoes grow the pineapple tomato, i had some that were 1kg and still tasted good. For the smaller ones there are many good varieties, but blush tiger and the mexican honey tomato are some very good ones. None of them are hybrids so you can take seeds and regrow them.
My ketchup and fermented salsa goes in the fridge. My Romas go into the freezer until I get around to making sauce. The breaded green tomatoes are stored in the freezer. Fresh eating tomatoes always hang out on the counter👍 If a couple of weeks I'm sowing a chocolate cherry, romas, german Johnson and 🤔 heirloom variety of the teacher tomatoe. I can't remember the name at the moment. 🤷♀️ excellent video 👍
Ive never tried this. I only get strawberries from the market. When do you keep they dont get liquid/juice in the table through the container? When i keep strawberries at least one goes bad and gets juice on the fridge.
hey Mark, could we get a shirt in the shop like the one you have, where it says the moto along the lines of “you don’t have to be completely self sufficient, just be self sufficient in something..” thanks a lot! have a wonderful day :)
I just found you a few weeks ago and I love everything you've put out so far! I can't wait to move on to my little acre of land and start growing! Good on ya Mate! You're amazing!
I recently started plant cherry tomatoes and was so surprised there are very sweet tomatoes 🍅. My son love to eat them when they ripe straight from the plant. The taste sooo fresh & yes much much better & sweeter than store bought. 🍅❤️🥰
We usually have to pick the tomatoes before they are ripe, because we have short summers and cold springs. The key to picking early and still getting acceptable fruit is to leave thm on the vine. If you are picking before a frost, cut the plant off at ground level (or even dig up some of the root), and bring it into your pump house or wherever you are going to keep them warm. Not quite as good as leaving them outside in the ground, but far better than picking them off the vine early.
Have you heard about the Italian and Spanish ' winter tomatoes ' ? There are some sorts ( like ' piennolo') that are meant to be ripening on cut branches, just as you do .👍🏼
Thanks for being you and sharing your life. It's so comforting to watch your videos, I not only learn but feel as if I'm learning from a friend. Thanks, again.
In answer to your question about how we keep our opened bottles of sauces: I always keep mine in the fridge, mostly because there is an all-capitals "warning" on the bottles that says, "KEEP REFRIGERATED AFTER OPENING". I always thought that if I didn't do that, the sauces would go bad and moldy. Not wanting to waste money, or worse, get sick, I follow those instructions. Maybe I should do a home experiment and try keeping some of them at room temp. Curious to see what others say in the comments. Great video, Mark, Thank You!
General rule of thumb, acidic (with🍋/🍅), salty, very sugary, spicy and/or oily sauces don't need refregiration. Every sauce with uncooked eggs or dairy (🥛/🥚) might grow bacteria in unhealthy quantities if no chemicals are mixed to prevent their growth, so _fridge_ them after opening.
Once it's been processed I don't think the coldness thing applies. You've already broken down the cell structure of the tomato once you've cooked it!. Please keep your opened, processed products refrigerated!
@@andanssas But the restaurants might be going through those sauces fast enough that it doesn't matter, that probably won't be the case at home. I always refrigerate sauces after opening myself.
@@mbern4530 true, but I went to restaurants where some sauces bottles do not seem to be used for months: in any case, even when refrigerated it's better to check their expiry date, ingredients and LST them (look, smell & taste) before: the worse it can happen is 🤮😅
I agree with the comment about the flavor of smaller tomatoes. I think Sungold tomatoes are the best. I usually grow only Sungold and Juliet, the latter being dependable but, now that I think about it, not that flavorful.
Yes agree completely! Our local farmers market and grocery store always have tomatoes stored unrefrigerated! Tomatoes and all tomato products are our most used products in our house! 👍❤️🙏
Mark, I absolutely love your humor and your channel. Keep up the great work! This year, I’m planting Cherokee and Sweetie in pots. Historically I direct sowed them into my garden beds, but I’m switching things up. With your video tutorials, it’ll give me a leg up growing in an urban area zone 6 in Western Pennsylvania USA.
there are so many beautiful tomatoes large and small, the colors and tastes are wonderful, I love growing all colors of tomatoes because that makes for a beautiful tomatoes salad
I’ve been watching your videos on Facebook since last year, now I decided to search you on UA-cam, and I watched your first video on UA-cam. You’ve changed 😢 and appreciate your efforts and time for creating this wonderful content.
I so agree with you.Thanks for your video. I saw a Jaune Flammée in your garden ! this is one of my very favorite tomatoes, for the very reason that its flavor is just so special and amazing ! I've never seen it in any store nor even on markets.... Cheers from France 🥰
I love gardening tomatoes, theyre one of the most rewarding plants to grow in my opinion. BTW if you're interested in growing larger varieties in the new season, I'd recommend Cherokee Purples.
Thanks for the info, Mark. I keep my ketchup in the fridge. I have not noticed a difference in taste between chilled ketchup and warm ketchup, but I have noticed the difference when it comes to fresh tomatoes.
I always enjoy your videos Mark! I love making a tomato based fruit salad especially in the heat of summer, my salad consists of vine ripe tomatoes for flavor, cucumbers for they’re natural cooling affects, onions, salt and pepper! It’s one of my favorite recipes. Thanks for sharing all your well researched gardening information, everyone please stay safe and keep well!!!
@@shirleyk623 I’ve tried several variations of what you’ve suggested, I even like leaving them out while covered to get slightly fermented! If you use home grown vine ripened tomatoes I don’t think you’ll ever go wrong.
Great tips Mark. 🙌 I am guilty of picking our tomatoes green, mostly because of our short season here. Heritage tomatoes are my favourite for their beauty and flavour. I discovered a variety that was grown for our climate and it’s not a looker but it is very tasty. (Manitoba tomato) Take care, Annette🌺
@@TheCowEmporium you're welcome. you should look into the Russian Heirloom tomatoes, many are short season varities. If using the clear trash bags, if you have a particular warm sunny day, you might want to pull up the sides. Will normally be 20 degrees higher inside, with strong sun, 30 degrees higher, so keep in mind. If its going to be sunny and 60-65 might want to lift the sides for the day.
Oh how I love the flavour of home grown tomatoes. My father taught me how to care for tomatoes when I was about 8yo (now 62). However, life's journey has taken me on so many different paths I lost the need to grow my own. Now I live in Central Tassie (around 500m) where the growing period in the open for tomatoes is only two months on a good year, and I struggle to get a good crop before frost arrive and end up making a lot of green tomato relish using my GG Grandmother's recipe. I do cover my beds with big heavy grey furniture blankets which extends the period for about a month if I am lucky but the heavy frosts and hoar frosts get through them eventually. But hey I am smiling daily.
Hi Mark, A very good video. I have been a on the countertop person for many, many years. Because I use a lot of tomatoes year round here in Arkansas, USA, I can a lot. You can destroy the tomato taste also when canning them by overcooking (too long in the canner). I have a rule of thumb when buying tomato seeds for the garden, I stick to open pollenated Heirloom types they have been around for over a hundred years and they generally out-taste any of the Hybrid varieties. The open pollenated Heirloom tomatoes seeds may be saved. The seeds require a special process before saving, so watch Deep South Homestead: How to save tomato seeds on UA-cam. I plant directly into the ground and after my plants are established I put two teaspoons of 13-13-13 fertilize on each side of the plant and come back once a week and scratch around the plant. Prior to planting I like to work some barn yard manure into the soil. Jessie from Arkansas, USA.
I agree about the heirloom except for Sungold F1 cherry. I have grown many other cherry tomatoes but none have the same rich flavour of Sungold. I have tried sowing the seed but of course the plants revert to their parent plants and never can I replicate the flavour.
Master....i love tomatoes,i make 200\300 hundred bottles every year,especially with determined, like Roma ,Big rio! passata di pomodoro!!💪 Have a great weekend Mark and family!!
You answered a question I had during this video. My daughter left a few tomatoes here when she visited last October. There were a couple different varieties of store-bought ones and one of the tomatoes was a yellow variety. I left it sitting on my table and it never went bad, to this day it is still sitting on the table and looks the same as it did in October, I am a little afraid to eat it. It must have been a greenhouse variety that was one of the kind that ripen at the same time. I may try and plant the seeds in it to see what develops.
I have come to the conclusion that if a food is "good" enough to be sold at a store then it not only tastes awful but almost certainly will kill you young too. Stores only care about shelf life, not customer life.
If you haven't opened it up or ate it yet, place a camera in front of it and hit record or take daily snapshots until it starts rotting, use the good seeds and then take make a time-lapse video with the background story. If next season you harvest new tomatoes from those seeds, do the same experiment and if it works out, apply to the Guinness World Rrcords.
We grew tomatoes for the first time(properly) last year and we were blown away by the tangy fruity flavour - nothing like bought tomatoes even the expensive organic ones we buy. We followed a few tips - your tip using potash(on all our plants) was absolutely incredible - I have been gardening for 40 years and last year ALL our plants looked amazing - thanks. We also made our own liquid fertilizer and built up around our tomatoe plants with a hollowed out platic plant pot - so several tricks going on - we also did an experiment (on half our plats) using aspirin(but could not see any diffiernce - not that we have dismissed this). So thanks for your massive tip using potash(we now realize that this word is the derivative of potassium).
Hi Mark, what a great video! I love growing tomatoes too and since the season is now over in my part of Australia we can’t grow them anymore, but I love watching you grow them and give us helpful information. Thank you!
I love the puns and dad jokes! The more the better. We used to keep the ketchup out of the fridge until we got maggots back to back in one just opened bottle and one not long open bottle. After the second bottle no one had the stomach for it. In fact it was many months before any of us ate ketchup again.
Omg. I've kept sauce in the fridge because the bottles always say, "KEEP REFRIGERATED AFTER OPENING". I thought I might try leaving at room temp as Mark suggested, but after seeing your comment, maybe everything just stays in the fridge. I'd pass out if I saw maggots in my ketchup, or anything else. Thanks for what I consider a warning.
@@kele1264 Very unlikely. Fresh food factories don't just allow flies to infest their equipment. If it were a squeeze bottle left open just over night, then one could easily lay eggs. No idea if the OP has glass bottles or not, or how long they left them unsealed, or even outside for a cookout.
@@pineappleparty1624 I'm sure that most factories do their best to prevent the entry of flies and other pests. I'm sure they don't "allow" them in. That said, pests get in sometimes, and I'm sure the factories do their best to rid the pests. It may be time to let this subject drop. Since you can't prove how it happened, just as the Belden family can't, let's let them be.
Good day today in Queensland. We (in Melbourne) had a nice day as well, but those Rainbow Coloured Lorikeets I heard at the start make me miss Qld. Also, great vid as usual. Your a champ.
My whole life, I ALWAYS thought you needed to keep the ketchup in the fridge (after it was opened) but now I will have to point out to my wife,we should keep it out! My youngest son never lets it last very long anyway, so not likely to go bad!
If your ketchup is store-bought, it won't change much in flavor if kept in the fridge or in the pantry. That said: room temp ketchup is noticeably better on steak fries!
@@GloriaNdegwa Ketchup is shelf-stable. It's high in acid, high in salt, and high in sugar: all three of which act as preservatives. Keep the container sealed and it will last for months, just like mustard.
tomatoes are an excellent plant to practice low water use actually, and it produces a richer, denser flavor when they have slightly less water. Part of the reason that hydroponics plants may be less flavorful isn't because they're missing nutrients, but because the flavor is diluted by an excess of water. I learned a lot about this when learning how to grow plants for consumption in low water environments, and how to be water savvy with plants.
I have tried this and as I live in a zone 9 area with summer temperatures up to 43C, I found that it stressed the plant too much and as a result the fruit got blossom end rot. So I now irrigate with drip irrigation once a day in the morning under thick mulch. It spreads the water over a greater area of the bed and doesn't soak one area only and therefore wash out the nutrients.
@@andanssas it's plant-by-plant basis because not all species handle less water well, so a bit of study with some trial and error can produce some interesting results!
@@chichestermaritime8174 Not all varieties will react the same either, it's very plant by plant basis on which species do best. And less water doesn't mean no water, which is important to remember too. But those very arid zones are great for testing what species handle it well.
Not a big fan of cherry tomatoes. Too much skin, so I tend to gravitate towards larger ones. Condiments in the fridge for me. Nice video, even though it lacked a Roma. 😁
G'day Mark. Home grown always make me feel good... from my head tomatoes. 😉 See what I did there! 😂 Seriously though, that was just choc a block full of good info and thanks! I've been harvesting my tomatoes early and ripening inside, due to an inane amount of rodents stripping my orchard and veggie beds since the region was seriously flooded for a couple of months. 100% loss on some trees and 50% of tomatoes ruined for instance. The tomatoes were going to be sauce tomatoes ( San Marzano), but since I'm harvesting just as they turn and ripen inside, I'll be dehydrating and using them in burgers, steak sandwiches, salads and even making a powder, as I just don't think they'll have the full flavour for bottling (canning). Using them dehydrated and semi dehydrated, should hopefully keep that flavour more concentrated. Great video as always Mark and all the best. Daz.
Oh, Daz. I just saw Jenn's comment and thought I might have said something inappropriate. I was laughing at your tomatoe joke. Now I've read about flooding in your region and rodents! Tons of them! I'd be terrified, and mad as hell. I'm so sorry about your whole situation. It's fantastic that you can maintain a sense of humor amidst such terrible circumstances. I hope that never happens in your area again, and that your garden comes back doubly strong very soon.
@@JennTN411 thanks Jenn. I really felt like crap for a minute there. Because it's not me to be rude, or flip, or cruel. Felt like it demanded an explanation, and an apology. Have a great Sunday!
Last year, I grew tomatoes that were called the world smallest tomato. About 15 of them fit in a spoon. They were so bitter, even the birds left them alone.
@@Isaac-ho8ghLikely Spoon Tomatoes. Baker Creek sells the seeds for them, but I’ve always assumed they were one of those gimmicky plants. Fun to grow to show friends and family, but not really useful for food. Maybe you could sprinkle a handful on the top of a pizza or a salad, but it would likely only benefit the appearance.
Lovely video! Just a note: Tomato actually comes from Nahuatl, the language of the Aztecs, which was in turn translated by the Spanish. We should give credit where it's due to the Mesoamericans that first cultivated this delicious fruit!
Sorry to correct you but no, the word tomato does not have its origins in Spanish, but in the ancient Nahuatl language, spoken in Mesoamerica, mostly in what is now Mexico. The region was the first to mass produce both tomato as well as tomatillo (which is not related, it is not in the Solanaceae family), and it was known for thousands of years before the Spanish arrived. The original word is "tomatl", which the Spanish eventually adopted - just like the plant - and adapted to a more easily pronounced "tomate".
@@pineappleparty1624 I tried to paste a Britannica link but UA-cam keeps deleting it, so I suggest you do a quick Google search to check your "facts", since you couldn't be more wrong
@@JefeBoss Slow down there sonny...it is a fact Americans and Britians in the 1700's did NOT eat tomatoes because they believed them to be poisonous. However, Mediterranean people were already eating them at that time. I found it ironic, if what you said is true, that people so close to the food were not consuming it at that time.
@@pineappleparty1624 OK so since you seem to stubbornly refuse to actually look this up, let me paste this from the Britannica article on tomatoes: [...]The wild species originated in the Andes Mountains of South America, probably mainly in Peru and Ecuador, and is thought to have been domesticated in pre-Columbian Mexico; its name is derived from the Náhuatl (Aztec) word tomatl. The tomato was introduced to Europe by the Spanish in the early 16th century, and the Spanish and Italians seem to have been the first Europeans to adopt it as a food. In France and northern Europe the tomato was initially grown as an ornamental plant and was regarded with suspicion as a food because botanists recognized it as a relative of the poisonous belladonna and deadly nightshade. Indeed, the roots and leaves of the tomato plant are poisonous and contain the neurotoxin solanine.[...]Tomatoes were introduced to North America from Europe. Thomas Jefferson is known to have raised them at Monticello in 1781. The tomato was used for food in Louisiana as early as 1812, but not in the northeastern states until about 1835. It did not attain widespread popularity in the United States until the early 20th century. And I don't really think you realize that what you may consider "close" today, was a whole world away 400 years ago.... There is no irony there whatsoever, just the reality of the times...
@@JefeBoss Why did you type all of that? At what point do you think I am wrong? All you did was reiterate the historical facts that I said...Please get a grip...
I read once that keeping tomato sauce in the fridge was a marketing move as you open your fridge more than the cupboard and it is well lit so you would see the sauce more often and it would remain top of mind and thus be consumed more
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A few years ago when I lived on the Oregon Coast , USA, I was told by neighbors that the growing season their was very short. I grew tomatoes., mainly what the neighbors grew, they were great and pretty sweet. One year I grew some Black Chocolate Cherry Tomatoes. They were so sweet, I haven't seen them here in New Zealand yet and probably wont,. They do have a Black Cherry which I grew last year, they were ok , but not as sweet as the other one. I also grew the Yellow Pear and to my suprise growing outside that I had them ripening at almost wintertime. Love those guys too.. I really do like Heirlooms though.Thank you for your information.
👍 I'm jealous, your toms look so yummy. 🤤 Our tomatoes aren't even in the ground yet. Zone 8a, Georgia USA. An old farmer once told me not to plant them out until Mothers Day. I've stick to that rule and can harvest indeterminate toms until late October.
You're hilarious 🤣 And that cheese and tomato toastie at the end looked freakin' delicious! Thank you for your unending supply of valuable information. I also love being able to clock your garden set up there to get ideas for my own. 😁👍
Dear Self Sufficient, thank you for your great videos. Every one iv watched is a gem. As are you!! Do you or anyone here have a suggestion on how to keep chipmunks from devouring our Cherry as well as larger tomatoes before they even ripen? We’ve had to harvest them green and let them ripen at room temp indoors. Iv forwarded many of ur videos via email to my husband as he’s the one who preps and really takes care of our small garden. You are wonderful! Thanks for all ur care in sharing with us all. 🍅 Cheers! ♥️With from America♥️
Hey Thanks. You are a decent sounding/acting dude. I am trying to grow a bunch for the first time ever this season. I have a lot of variety of tomatoes which is why I came here. Thank you for the tips. You are informative without being condescending.
Mark, you are a ripper bloke and I am guaranteed to come away with lots of valuable info so I can help others have success. Plus, I just love your sense of humour. I am always saying "Let's get into it". Thanks for your videos.
I grew some Cherokee purple tomatoes one year, and they weren't as sweet as everyone had suggested they'd be. They were still good, but I didn't want to grow many large tomatoes after that. Then I got a hold of some indigo apple tomatoes. I didn't think they'd be all that sweet, so I was going to dice it up for tacos. My father wanted to eat one with salt, and I tried it too. ... easily the best large tomato I had ever had.
G'day Everyone, someone (Adam & Charlotte) asked me yesterday what my favourite food was to grow, and without thinking very much, I said tomatoes. It's true! Tomatoes are my favourite "fruitable" fruit/veg to grow, and all the rest have a long way to ketchup. Thanks to your support, our Channel has had a great start to the year with a heap of views and a ton more subscribers. These achievements are not possible without your help and generosity so thank you very much... Cheers :)
Another good tip is to pick tomatoes early in the morning. Harvesting first thing in the morning (after a night of no rain) before you water or the heat of the day gets high, means that the flavors will be more concentrated. I've tested this and, by far, the tomatoes taste much better than if you picked them midday or late evening.
Great video! I love all the puns 😂 I'm late starting my tomato seeds. I better ketchup! 😁🤣😎
Nice ketchup pun Mark 😂
This just helped me so much. I had no idea the refrigerator damaged the tomatoes. I won’t be doing that anymore. Thank you!
Any chance you could share you top 3 varieties for small and large tomatoes?
I love the smell of tomato plants in the summer!! Not just the tomatoes but that plant itself has a strong scent that smells so fresh to me
I do too. I shake the plants a bit and love the smell.
Me too! It reminds me of cologne scent but really fresh too
Grew up in a family that grew tons of tomatoes for sauce and still growing as an adult. Nothing compares to that strong scent left on your hands and wrists after working with tomatoes
I haven't had much success growing tomatoes ( inconsistent watering I think) but one time I threw some tomatoes into the garden as kitchen scraps to my surprise a plant grew with a few real tasty and lovely smelling fruit.
Love it! Reminds me of being a little and helping grandparents in the garden❤
This man is a national treasure and must be protected at all cost
The global treasure.
Damn, you beat me to it. Couldnt agree more!
National treasure is a weird thing to call someone when youre (likely) sitting in a different nation lol
Internet celebrities are international sensations
@@jek__ lol true
Is he in danger?
Nothing beats a fresh homegrown tomato plucked from the vine, still warm from the sun. Can't wait to sow this year's batch - I got some fancy varieties I want to try, as well as some proven performers, and this year I've moved out to the countryside, so I can take care of them everyday instead of only on weekends.
I work in a grocery store refrigerated warehouse and we go through extra steps for tomatos. The general warehouse is kept at 35F but the tomatoes ( and several other sensitive fruits) are kept in a 55F area. When you finish the pallets we wrap a giant plastic bag over it to hold in the warmer air while it gets shipped. Of course Murphy's law means late shipments getting too cold
Hi mark I'm 16 and love the videos and your homested! Keep it up, from Perth Hills 👍🌱
A nice slice of home grown tomato with some sea salt on top is delicious. That on some buttered toast is even better 👌
Oh yeah! No need to do much else when something is so flavorful on it's own. I also love them broiled.
@@jeanniewahine5443 Broiled as in stewed?
The saucers sauce on the saucer was saused by a flying saucer for an unknown sauce. It was called the specie sauce, and the secret ingredient was not sauce.
What's your sauce for that?
OMG toasted tomato and cheese!!!! My favourite! Thanks for the video, Mark!
That's even better if you flash fry the tomato slice or grill it separately and then on the cheese and toast 😋
As a kid, I always hated tomatoes. Even into adulthood a little bit. Eventually I found that I really liked cherry tomatoes and I thought that that was interesting. As time went on I ended up being able to try some home grown tomatoes instead of store bought. Wow! What difference!
All that to say that we often select genetics for larger and better looking food, but that doesn't mean it tastes better.
There are LOTS of heirloom varieties of all different sizes. They are better to begin with but they still also need to be grown care-fully and picked when they are ripe. I've had some incredible tomatoes that you'll never see in the super-markets, but farmers markets and roadside stands yes.
I was lucky enough to be introduced to home grown tomatoes as a kid, and it shook me to my core when I went to a buffet one time and tried their salad bar tomatoes and they tasted like.....bad spit? It was gross. I was so upset. It was that day that I understood why some people hate tomatoes. They never got to try the good stuff, and probably never will now that they've been that badly burned.
@@fourcatsandagarden that and they have a texture like grainy snot. Like who grew that and was like, "alright boys, we got ourselves a winner"?
@@fourcatsandagarden tasted like bad spit had me rolling around in stitches that's the funniest thing I've read today!😂🤣😂✌️
@@thekraden04 grainy snots also a good comparison!😂🤣😂✌️
Best advice on the whole of UA-cam!!! You are a very kind loving informative Legend!!!!!…
Living in Vietnam, Ive had this same discussion with a buddy. He complained that Vietnam grows the blandest tomatoes on earth. I said well mostly its because most dishes here call for sour tomato flavors. But sadly, even the newer varieties available here are tasteless. Your video explains why this is the case. Thanks!
They cannot be worse than most of the tomatoes sold here in Thailand !
@@Mike_in_Thailand I have to agree with you. There are tomatoes sold in max value grown in Japan. They are about the best I have found but still nothing like home grown.
You obviously never have eaten Dutch tomatoes, there is a joke here in Europe that Dutch tomatoes are the fourth state of aggregation of water!
Back in the 70's my Dad grew quasi-hydroponic tomatoes, in soil and in a greenhouse and they were sooooo good. Funny how the stores would only take the perfect ones so we had a huge supply to eat and give to friends. Yes, refrigeration stops the ripening process. Glad you did this video because a lot of people don't know, especially grocery stores, not to cold store them. 😁👍👍
I love this guy so much. He seems so pure and kindhearted, love to see it!
Right before the first freeze we harvest multiple huge bowls of green tomatoes. We leave some out on counter to ripen, but put rest in fridge to slow down ripening. We eat tomatoes for months this way. All other times keep them out of fridge
Everytime he posts a video it's always new and relevant. You are #1 on my list of people I want to meet.
-Westminster, Colorado
The first time I grew tomatoes myself, when I ate them, I thought 'these taste like tomatoes did when I was a kid'! So yummy and flavourful, juicy, delicious. No need to add anything. The stuff from the supermarket, I like to call 'plastic tomatoes', they have their uses but there is nothing better than a sun-warmed ripe tomato you grew yourself. Bliss!
This is my first year back to having a garden in at least 12-15 years. Thanks for the refresher!!!
South Mississippi zone 8 here. I have grown for years now, a local heirloom beefsteak variety tomato that I got from a friend, who had grown them so many years they forgot the original name of them lol. After those years of adaptation, the plants consistently produce more, bigger, and better tasting tomatoes than any 'early girl' or 'better boy' hybrid I can buy in the stores. It is definitely worth a few seasons of growing and collecting and planting that seed, to allow for adaptation to your local environment. If you've the patience, the plant won't fail you, and your taste buds will be forever thankful! Thanks for another great video, Mark!
Any sauce with a label that says refrigerate after opening goes in fridge. -- after watching this I'm keeping all my tomatoes out of the fridge. Thanks Marc
Great video, my wife walked up as I was watching you talk about not putting tomatoes in the fridge, you instantly converted her to no fridge tomato storage, our current crop is just starting to ripen and wont be put in the fridge, the tomato's and cheese on toast won us over as well.
Amazed at everything you have grown over time been following for a good while since before you started to grow it and it's very impressive. 🙂
Australia has a nice weather to grow ;3 and he knows how to make compost... if u know how to make compost u know half the things to grow a beautiful garden
This is the best gardening channel that ive seen on youtube. Its so honest and straight to the point, and entertaining. :)
I love his knowledge and dry humor. But stressing tomatoes is a great secret. It should be done 💜
Honestly even a homegrown tomato without flavor is better than a supermarket tomato... I swear those supermarket things are just red squishy balls of water
We have a grocery/ice cream store we frequent and theirs are crunchy like apples. Yeah can't wait for summer!
I canned some average tomatoes last fall and just made white beans and tomatoes with them, I was stunned by the delectable rich tomato flavor. The store canned ones were redder and held their shape better than mine, but the ones I canned myself had matchless flavor. I'll take flavor over appearance any day! 🍅
Yeah, have to agree with you. I have never had a supermarket tomato that had the texture and flavor of a homegrown one.
@@pablovegas743 If they sold them the tomatoes would be tomato sauce by the time we got them! I love them when they get almost squishy on the vine with some salt
@@JackPitmanNica I think the variety of the tomatoes that are sold in the store have some sort of a gene or something that keeps them that way, because when I pick a green tomato from my garden it eventually becomes softer as it ripens. But I also like soft, squishy tomatoes with some salt or brined cheese.
Thank you for the tip about heirloom tomatoes having that green part at the top when fully ripe. I had let my tomatoes get over ripe and wondered what I did wrong.
Love snacking on little tomatoes in the garden and all the little huckleberries ripen daily get me up early to see how things are growing. Thanks for the tips Mark!
Good morning Mark,
You cracked me up when saying the meaning of Tomato and then looking at your stomach. I get it Bud, I’m in my late 50s and my young chest has fallen to my stomach 😢
The Heinz Ketchup bottle I buy says to refrigerate after opening on the back of it. So I usually do. That being said I don’t refrigerate my homegrown tomatoes.
Due to the amount of sugar in it- over 1/3 sugar
Lol, I've always kept my ketchup in the fridge. Grew up with it in the fridge, but I wouldn't be afraid to use ketchup that was stored in the pantry. After all it is a vingar based sauce and would keep just fine on the shelf. I just prefer my ketchup cold as that's how I've always had it. NO fresh tomatoes in the fridge though, they are so nasty cold!🍅
I think this is a US thing verses other countries. Lol. I never thought of putting, catsup, mustard, etc in the pantry, they were always in the fridge when I was a kid. Makes sense tho. However, I’ve known for YEARS that tomatoes in the fridge are GROSS! I NEVER put mine there. And store bought tomatoes leave a lot to be desired except when I have to have one during the off season! Even then I buy the mixed color cherry tomatoes. They taste better!
@@1MSally1965 Maybe it is, lol! Never thought about that, but most of my condiments are in the fridge once they are opened. I'm the same with store bought tomatoes, the little cherry ones are actually pretty good and sweet!
I live in a tropical country and always put everything that has been opened in the fridge. We also always put tomatoes in the fridge (because they will get rotten in a day or two if not and attract countless fruit flies into the house), I learned it from my mother, she learned it from hers. I finally understand why I dislike tomatoes since I was a kid... I missed so much and I'm already in my 40s now. Thanks to Mark and people in this comment section, maybe this year I will eat a great tasted tomato directly from my yard...and finally able to love the real tomato taste. 🥲
I didn't think much of this video because of the thumbnail, but the sheer information and effort you put into making this video makes it amazing! My hat is off to you good sir!
Wow had no idea about the green on the tomato help it ripen and sweeten.
Great advice. I have been growing tomatoes for 35 years and I favor the small varieties ( sweet 100's, cherry Roma, etc) for sauces and for freezing for winter use. I grow medium, Ace, Celebrity etc for slicers in the summer. I think my region ( 9b Sacramento, Ca) is too hot for beefsteak varieties, they tend to split in the heat. Thanks Mark, love your humor and your videos.
Try Grosse Lisse. I haven't grown them myself but Dad grew them for years. I am sure they sell them in the US. They are a fairly large fruit but Dad didn't have a lot of trouble. He mainly grew them for juice but the family ate some too.
He would build a moat around each plant (in heavy clay soil) and pierce holes in soup tins and bury them inside the edge of the moats. He would use a slow-running hose to fill the cans and flood the moats without splashing the plants. He would do it after work which, in mid-summer, isn't ideal for the plants but worked for him. Mum said that doing that for over two dozen plants relaxed him. Tommy Toe is a small tomato that is highly praised for its taste. I guess that you are coming into your growing season soon. Best of luck.
Im not a fan of cherry tomatoes. They are too sweet for my taste. Here in S Spain they grow huge tomatoes as well as normal, pear and cherry. I suspect the big tomatoes are used for gazpacho. The family run shops arent picky about looks though so as long as the produce is sound no one bothers about the odd split or blemish
The supermarkets dont seem to have as much variety as the greengrocers. The various fruits and veg they sell are amazing. Some imported stuff like kiwis and dragon fruit but many family run shops also have their own fincas. Plus living here where so much of the fruit and salad stuff is grown for export to Northern europe we are close to the source.
G'day, Mark! You are the boy! You are so right; it is what you grow things in that is so important, not what you are fundamentally growing!
Mark ya bloody legend !
Here’s a big fat red juicy tasty thumbs up 👍🏽
Have another 👍🏽
Confidence building 101 for home grown cropping. Thanks for motivating me to learn more, do more, plant more. YeeHaw from the Great State of Texas.
Lots of love from Bangladesh, I watch all your videos 🇧🇩
If you’re looking for a new beefsteak tomato to grow I would highly recommend Cherokee purple
Mark I have to agree with your hypothesis on hydro. You nailed it comparing grapes and strawberries.
USA Ohio almost time to start indoor seedlings man did your burgers look great
Best tasting Thornbury Terracotta and great early slicers and productive 😋
I'm guilty of never adding fertilizer later as fruit had developed
Thanks for inspiring 🙏
Hey Mark! Have you tried growing Cherokee purple tomatoes yet? I grew them last year along with some other mostly heirloom varieties, but the Cherokee truly stood out with such a rich depth of flavor! I highly recommend trying them if you're able to get some seeds!
Cherokee Purple are good, but Russian Black Krim are AMAZING
I tried growing black tomatoes. The birds pecked every last one of them thinking they were ripe T_T...
@@teebob21 I know! First time I ever tried them last year. Holy, its almost like they are concentrated tomatoes. They really pack a punch of flavor.
Third time I have heard that the Cherokee Purple Tomato are worth growing. Going to try them myself.
Good to know! I always prefer an unconventional variety to liven things up. Bit of a homage to my home state Arizona too 🙂
The yellow varieties are awesome and the green speckled cherry are my favorite.
If you want big good tasting tomatoes grow the pineapple tomato, i had some that were 1kg and still tasted good.
For the smaller ones there are many good varieties, but blush tiger and the mexican honey tomato are some very good ones.
None of them are hybrids so you can take seeds and regrow them.
Thanks for tip. I'll give them a try in 2024.
My ketchup and fermented salsa goes in the fridge. My Romas go into the freezer until I get around to making sauce. The breaded green tomatoes are stored in the freezer. Fresh eating tomatoes always hang out on the counter👍 If a couple of weeks I'm sowing a chocolate cherry, romas, german Johnson and 🤔 heirloom variety of the teacher tomatoe. I can't remember the name at the moment. 🤷♀️ excellent video 👍
Same with strawberries. The flavor *and shelf life seem to change for the worst when refrigerated.
Thanks Mark.
Ive never tried this. I only get strawberries from the market. When do you keep they dont get liquid/juice in the table through the container? When i keep strawberries at least one goes bad and gets juice on the fridge.
hey Mark, could we get a shirt in the shop like the one you have, where it says the moto along the lines of “you don’t have to be completely self sufficient, just be self sufficient in something..” thanks a lot! have a wonderful day :)
I just found you a few weeks ago and I love everything you've put out so far! I can't wait to move on to my little acre of land and start growing! Good on ya Mate! You're amazing!
I recently started plant cherry tomatoes and was so surprised there are very sweet tomatoes 🍅. My son love to eat them when they ripe straight from the plant. The taste sooo fresh & yes much much better & sweeter than store bought. 🍅❤️🥰
We usually have to pick the tomatoes before they are ripe, because we have short summers and cold springs. The key to picking early and still getting acceptable fruit is to leave thm on the vine. If you are picking before a frost, cut the plant off at ground level (or even dig up some of the root), and bring it into your pump house or wherever you are going to keep them warm. Not quite as good as leaving them outside in the ground, but far better than picking them off the vine early.
Have you heard about the Italian and Spanish ' winter tomatoes ' ? There are some sorts ( like ' piennolo') that are meant to be ripening on cut branches, just as you do .👍🏼
Thanks for being you and sharing your life. It's so comforting to watch your videos, I not only learn but feel as if I'm learning from a friend. Thanks, again.
In answer to your question about how we keep our opened bottles of sauces: I always keep mine in the fridge, mostly because there is an all-capitals "warning" on the bottles that says, "KEEP REFRIGERATED AFTER OPENING". I always thought that if I didn't do that, the sauces would go bad and moldy. Not wanting to waste money, or worse, get sick, I follow those instructions. Maybe I should do a home experiment and try keeping some of them at room temp. Curious to see what others say in the comments. Great video, Mark, Thank You!
General rule of thumb, acidic (with🍋/🍅), salty, very sugary, spicy and/or oily sauces don't need refregiration.
Every sauce with uncooked eggs or dairy (🥛/🥚) might grow bacteria in unhealthy quantities if no chemicals are mixed to prevent their growth, so _fridge_ them after opening.
Once it's been processed I don't think the coldness thing applies. You've already broken down the cell structure of the tomato once you've cooked it!. Please keep your opened, processed products refrigerated!
@@schoo9256 it always depends what you mix them with... Restaurants normally don't refrigerate several kinds of sauces.
@@andanssas But the restaurants might be going through those sauces fast enough that it doesn't matter, that probably won't be the case at home. I always refrigerate sauces after opening myself.
@@mbern4530 true, but I went to restaurants where some sauces bottles do not seem to be used for months: in any case, even when refrigerated it's better to check their expiry date, ingredients and LST them (look, smell & taste) before: the worse it can happen is 🤮😅
We've kept our tomatoes out of the fridge since watching this video and what a difference. We're even educating the cashiers at the supermarket now 👍
I agree with the comment about the flavor of smaller tomatoes. I think Sungold tomatoes are the best. I usually grow only Sungold and Juliet, the latter being dependable but, now that I think about it, not that flavorful.
Yes agree completely! Our local farmers market and grocery store always have tomatoes stored unrefrigerated! Tomatoes and all tomato products are our most used products
in our house! 👍❤️🙏
Mark, I absolutely love your humor and your channel. Keep up the great work! This year, I’m planting Cherokee and Sweetie in pots. Historically I direct sowed them into my garden beds, but I’m switching things up. With your video tutorials, it’ll give me a leg up growing in an urban area zone 6 in Western Pennsylvania USA.
there are so many beautiful tomatoes large and small, the colors and tastes are wonderful, I love growing all colors of tomatoes because that makes for a beautiful tomatoes salad
That was a tasty video! Full of edible info. Thank you Mark❤
Love the Dad joke humor ❤❤
Have a great day 😊
I’ve been watching your videos on Facebook since last year, now I decided to search you on UA-cam, and I watched your first video on UA-cam. You’ve changed 😢 and appreciate your efforts and time for creating this wonderful content.
I so agree with you.Thanks for your video. I saw a Jaune Flammée in your garden ! this is one of my very favorite tomatoes, for the very reason that its flavor is just so special and amazing ! I've never seen it in any store nor even on markets....
Cheers from France 🥰
Jaune Flamme is incredible. Very intense flavor!
It's rare that I get to chuckle while I'm learning. This guy is awesome haha
I love gardening tomatoes, theyre one of the most rewarding plants to grow in my opinion. BTW if you're interested in growing larger varieties in the new season, I'd recommend Cherokee Purples.
Great sense of humor. Thanks for the tips.
Thanks for the info, Mark. I keep my ketchup in the fridge. I have not noticed a difference in taste between chilled ketchup and warm ketchup, but I have noticed the difference when it comes to fresh tomatoes.
G'day from Texas to you Mark.
Yes I keep sauce in fridge but I don't add tomatoes to fruit salad.
Wisdom. Love all the ketchup/catsup.
I always enjoy your videos Mark! I love making a tomato based fruit salad especially in the heat of summer, my salad consists of vine ripe tomatoes for flavor, cucumbers for they’re natural cooling affects, onions, salt and pepper! It’s one of my favorite recipes. Thanks for sharing all your well researched gardening information, everyone please stay safe and keep well!!!
@aThomas McCardle. Add a little vinegarette dressing and some microgreens to your recipe and that's my favorite tomato salad 🍅🍅🍅🍅🍅
@@shirleyk623 I’ve tried several variations of what you’ve suggested, I even like leaving them out while covered to get slightly fermented! If you use home grown vine ripened tomatoes I don’t think you’ll ever go wrong.
Man, you are indeed a National/worldwide treasure. I wish l could visit your garden farm.
Great tips Mark. 🙌
I am guilty of picking our tomatoes green, mostly because of our short season here. Heritage tomatoes are my favourite for their beauty and flavour. I discovered a variety that was grown for our climate and it’s not a looker but it is very tasty. (Manitoba tomato)
Take care,
Annette🌺
get some large CLEAR trash bags,
put them over the plants late in the season,
helps ripen the fruit quicker.
@@theboringchannel2027 thank you! 🌺
@@TheCowEmporium you're welcome. you should look into the Russian Heirloom tomatoes, many are short season varities.
If using the clear trash bags, if you have a particular warm sunny day,
you might want to pull up the sides. Will normally be 20 degrees higher inside,
with strong sun, 30 degrees higher, so keep in mind.
If its going to be sunny and 60-65 might want to lift the sides for the day.
Oh how I love the flavour of home grown tomatoes. My father taught me how to care for tomatoes when I was about 8yo (now 62). However, life's journey has taken me on so many different paths I lost the need to grow my own. Now I live in Central Tassie (around 500m) where the growing period in the open for tomatoes is only two months on a good year, and I struggle to get a good crop before frost arrive and end up making a lot of green tomato relish using my GG Grandmother's recipe. I do cover my beds with big heavy grey furniture blankets which extends the period for about a month if I am lucky but the heavy frosts and hoar frosts get through them eventually. But hey I am smiling daily.
Hi Mark, A very good video. I have been a on the countertop person for many, many years. Because I use a lot of tomatoes year round here in Arkansas, USA, I can a lot. You can destroy the tomato taste also when canning them by overcooking (too long in the canner). I have a rule of thumb when buying tomato seeds for the garden, I stick to open pollenated Heirloom types they have been around for over a hundred years and they generally out-taste any of the Hybrid varieties. The open pollenated Heirloom tomatoes seeds may be saved. The seeds require a special process before saving, so watch Deep South Homestead: How to save tomato seeds on UA-cam. I plant directly into the ground and after my plants are established I put two teaspoons of 13-13-13 fertilize on each side of the plant and come back once a week and scratch around the plant. Prior to planting I like to work some barn yard manure into the soil. Jessie from Arkansas, USA.
I agree about the heirloom except for Sungold F1 cherry. I have grown many other cherry tomatoes but none have the same rich flavour of Sungold. I have tried sowing the seed but of course the plants revert to their parent plants and never can I replicate the flavour.
Master....i love tomatoes,i make 200\300 hundred bottles every year,especially with determined, like Roma ,Big rio! passata di pomodoro!!💪 Have a great weekend Mark and family!!
You answered a question I had during this video. My daughter left a few tomatoes here when she visited last October. There were a couple different varieties of store-bought ones and one of the tomatoes was a yellow variety. I left it sitting on my table and it never went bad, to this day it is still sitting on the table and looks the same as it did in October, I am a little afraid to eat it. It must have been a greenhouse variety that was one of the kind that ripen at the same time. I may try and plant the seeds in it to see what develops.
I have come to the conclusion that if a food is "good" enough to be sold at a store then it not only tastes awful but almost certainly will kill you young too. Stores only care about shelf life, not customer life.
If you haven't opened it up or ate it yet, place a camera in front of it and hit record or take daily snapshots until it starts rotting, use the good seeds and then take make a time-lapse video with the background story. If next season you harvest new tomatoes from those seeds, do the same experiment and if it works out, apply to the Guinness World Rrcords.
We grew tomatoes for the first time(properly) last year and we were blown away by the tangy fruity flavour - nothing like bought tomatoes even the expensive organic ones we buy. We followed a few tips - your tip using potash(on all our plants) was absolutely incredible - I have been gardening for 40 years and last year ALL our plants looked amazing - thanks. We also made our own liquid fertilizer and built up around our tomatoe plants with a hollowed out platic plant pot - so several tricks going on - we also did an experiment (on half our plats) using aspirin(but could not see any diffiernce - not that we have dismissed this). So thanks for your massive tip using potash(we now realize that this word is the derivative of potassium).
Hi Mark, what a great video! I love growing tomatoes too and since the season is now over in my part of Australia we can’t grow them anymore, but I love watching you grow them and give us helpful information. Thank you!
Excellent video - with all the "whys" answered. Nothing like that still warm from the garden home grown tomato. Thank you!
I love the puns and dad jokes! The more the better.
We used to keep the ketchup out of the fridge until we got maggots back to back in one just opened bottle and one not long open bottle. After the second bottle no one had the stomach for it. In fact it was many months before any of us ate ketchup again.
Omg. I've kept sauce in the fridge because the bottles always say, "KEEP REFRIGERATED AFTER OPENING". I thought I might try leaving at room temp as Mark suggested, but after seeing your comment, maybe everything just stays in the fridge. I'd pass out if I saw maggots in my ketchup, or anything else. Thanks for what I consider a warning.
That's really strange because a fly has to lay eggs for there to be maggots. How did flies get into your ketchups?
@@pineappleparty1624 Dirty factory equipment where the ketchup is made?
@@kele1264 Very unlikely. Fresh food factories don't just allow flies to infest their equipment. If it were a squeeze bottle left open just over night, then one could easily lay eggs. No idea if the OP has glass bottles or not, or how long they left them unsealed, or even outside for a cookout.
@@pineappleparty1624 I'm sure that most factories do their best to prevent the entry of flies and other pests. I'm sure they don't "allow" them in. That said, pests get in sometimes, and I'm sure the factories do their best to rid the pests. It may be time to let this subject drop. Since you can't prove how it happened, just as the Belden family can't, let's let them be.
Good day today in Queensland. We (in Melbourne) had a nice day as well, but those Rainbow Coloured Lorikeets I heard at the start make me miss Qld. Also, great vid as usual. Your a champ.
My whole life, I ALWAYS thought you needed to keep the ketchup in the fridge (after it was opened) but now I will have to point out to my wife,we should keep it out! My youngest son never lets it last very long anyway, so not likely to go bad!
If your ketchup is store-bought, it won't change much in flavor if kept in the fridge or in the pantry. That said: room temp ketchup is noticeably better on steak fries!
@@teebob21 I make my own ketchup with fresh tomatoes. I don't think it's advisable to leave them at room temperature. Is it??
Ketup will get fungus if kept out side for several days. ( and 4 days if it is homemade)
@@GloriaNdegwa Ketchup is shelf-stable. It's high in acid, high in salt, and high in sugar: all three of which act as preservatives. Keep the container sealed and it will last for months, just like mustard.
I whole heartedly agree. With one exception, kroger's clam shell offering is quite good. Like one notch off of f'n wow!
tomatoes are an excellent plant to practice low water use actually, and it produces a richer, denser flavor when they have slightly less water. Part of the reason that hydroponics plants may be less flavorful isn't because they're missing nutrients, but because the flavor is diluted by an excess of water. I learned a lot about this when learning how to grow plants for consumption in low water environments, and how to be water savvy with plants.
Interesting, thanks for the tip. So soils that retain less water should be better for them, right?
I have tried this and as I live in a zone 9 area with summer temperatures up to 43C, I found that it stressed the plant too much and as a result the fruit got blossom end rot. So I now irrigate with drip irrigation once a day in the morning under thick mulch. It spreads the water over a greater area of the bed and doesn't soak one area only and therefore wash out the nutrients.
@@andanssas it's plant-by-plant basis because not all species handle less water well, so a bit of study with some trial and error can produce some interesting results!
@@chichestermaritime8174 Not all varieties will react the same either, it's very plant by plant basis on which species do best. And less water doesn't mean no water, which is important to remember too. But those very arid zones are great for testing what species handle it well.
Not a big fan of cherry tomatoes. Too much skin, so I tend to gravitate towards larger ones. Condiments in the fridge for me. Nice video, even though it lacked a Roma. 😁
Ya know mate. I hated tomatoes a few years ago. And then I grew some! It's now my major crop by far.
Home grown is defo a game changer when it comes to tomatoes. And carrots.
I´ve never seen anyone so passionate about tomatoes, and it is amazing
G'day Mark.
Home grown always make me feel good... from my head tomatoes. 😉 See what I did there! 😂
Seriously though, that was just choc a block full of good info and thanks!
I've been harvesting my tomatoes early and ripening inside, due to an inane amount of rodents stripping my orchard and veggie beds since the region was seriously flooded for a couple of months. 100% loss on some trees and 50% of tomatoes ruined for instance.
The tomatoes were going to be sauce tomatoes ( San Marzano), but since I'm harvesting just as they turn and ripen inside, I'll be dehydrating and using them in burgers, steak sandwiches, salads and even making a powder, as I just don't think they'll have the full flavour for bottling (canning).
Using them dehydrated and semi dehydrated, should hopefully keep that flavour more concentrated.
Great video as always Mark and all the best.
Daz.
😂🤣🍅 Good one!
Oh man, what a loss! I hope the next season for you is better!❤
Oh, Daz. I just saw Jenn's comment and thought I might have said something inappropriate. I was laughing at your tomatoe joke. Now I've read about flooding in your region and rodents! Tons of them! I'd be terrified, and mad as hell. I'm so sorry about your whole situation. It's fantastic that you can maintain a sense of humor amidst such terrible circumstances. I hope that never happens in your area again, and that your garden comes back doubly strong very soon.
@@kele1264 for the record, I did realize you were laughing at the tomato joke😉❤
@@JennTN411 thanks Jenn. I really felt like crap for a minute there. Because it's not me to be rude, or flip, or cruel. Felt like it demanded an explanation, and an apology. Have a great Sunday!
I just love all your jokes and puns, Mark. Thanks for the laughs and knowledge you're sharing.
Last year, I grew tomatoes that were called the world smallest tomato. About 15 of them fit in a spoon. They were so bitter, even the birds left them alone.
Oh wow, what variety is it? That's insane xD
@@Isaac-ho8ghLikely Spoon Tomatoes. Baker Creek sells the seeds for them, but I’ve always assumed they were one of those gimmicky plants. Fun to grow to show friends and family, but not really useful for food.
Maybe you could sprinkle a handful on the top of a pizza or a salad, but it would likely only benefit the appearance.
I have seeds for these, but re-thinking planting them. Sounds like they are very indeterminate. Maybe somewhere for novelty!
I'm growing these this year. Hopefully won't be bitter.
Lovely video! Just a note: Tomato actually comes from Nahuatl, the language of the Aztecs, which was in turn translated by the Spanish. We should give credit where it's due to the Mesoamericans that first cultivated this delicious fruit!
Sorry to correct you but no, the word tomato does not have its origins in Spanish, but in the ancient Nahuatl language, spoken in Mesoamerica, mostly in what is now Mexico. The region was the first to mass produce both tomato as well as tomatillo (which is not related, it is not in the Solanaceae family), and it was known for thousands of years before the Spanish arrived. The original word is "tomatl", which the Spanish eventually adopted - just like the plant - and adapted to a more easily pronounced "tomate".
That's pretty weird considering places like Italy used tomatoes far longer than American settlers as well as the rest of Europe.
@@pineappleparty1624 I tried to paste a Britannica link but UA-cam keeps deleting it, so I suggest you do a quick Google search to check your "facts", since you couldn't be more wrong
@@JefeBoss Slow down there sonny...it is a fact Americans and Britians in the 1700's did NOT eat tomatoes because they believed them to be poisonous. However, Mediterranean people were already eating them at that time. I found it ironic, if what you said is true, that people so close to the food were not consuming it at that time.
@@pineappleparty1624 OK so since you seem to stubbornly refuse to actually look this up, let me paste this from the Britannica article on tomatoes: [...]The wild species originated in the Andes Mountains of South America, probably mainly in Peru and Ecuador, and is thought to have been domesticated in pre-Columbian Mexico; its name is derived from the Náhuatl (Aztec) word tomatl. The tomato was introduced to Europe by the Spanish in the early 16th century, and the Spanish and Italians seem to have been the first Europeans to adopt it as a food. In France and northern Europe the tomato was initially grown as an ornamental plant and was regarded with suspicion as a food because botanists recognized it as a relative of the poisonous belladonna and deadly nightshade. Indeed, the roots and leaves of the tomato plant are poisonous and contain the neurotoxin solanine.[...]Tomatoes were introduced to North America from Europe. Thomas Jefferson is known to have raised them at Monticello in 1781. The tomato was used for food in Louisiana as early as 1812, but not in the northeastern states until about 1835. It did not attain widespread popularity in the United States until the early 20th century.
And I don't really think you realize that what you may consider "close" today, was a whole world away 400 years ago.... There is no irony there whatsoever, just the reality of the times...
@@JefeBoss Why did you type all of that? At what point do you think I am wrong? All you did was reiterate the historical facts that I said...Please get a grip...
I read once that keeping tomato sauce in the fridge was a marketing move as you open your fridge more than the cupboard and it is well lit so you would see the sauce more often and it would remain top of mind and thus be consumed more
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I agree with the hydroponic tomatoes! They used to be the best priced at the store, but just tasted like nothing!
A few years ago when I lived on the Oregon Coast , USA, I was told by neighbors that the growing season their was very short. I grew tomatoes., mainly what the neighbors grew, they were great and pretty sweet. One year I grew some Black Chocolate Cherry Tomatoes. They were so sweet, I haven't seen them here in New Zealand yet and probably wont,. They do have a Black Cherry which I grew last year, they were ok , but not as sweet as the other one. I also grew the Yellow Pear and to my suprise growing outside that I had them ripening at almost wintertime. Love those guys too.. I really do like Heirlooms though.Thank you for your information.
Oh I love your show, my hubby and I watched at least three shows a day trying to learn, from south Africa xxx
👍 I'm jealous, your toms look so yummy. 🤤 Our tomatoes aren't even in the ground yet. Zone 8a, Georgia USA. An old farmer once told me not to plant them out until Mothers Day. I've stick to that rule and can harvest indeterminate toms until late October.
You're hilarious 🤣 And that cheese and tomato toastie at the end looked freakin' delicious! Thank you for your unending supply of valuable information. I also love being able to clock your garden set up there to get ideas for my own. 😁👍
Dear Self Sufficient, thank you for your great videos. Every one iv watched is a gem. As are you!! Do you or anyone here have a suggestion on how to keep chipmunks from devouring our Cherry as well as larger tomatoes before they even ripen? We’ve had to harvest them green and let them ripen at room temp indoors.
Iv forwarded many of ur videos via email to my husband as he’s the one who preps and really takes care of our small garden.
You are wonderful! Thanks for all ur care in sharing with us all. 🍅 Cheers! ♥️With from America♥️
Hey Thanks. You are a decent sounding/acting dude. I am trying to grow a bunch for the first time ever this season. I have a lot of variety of tomatoes which is why I came here. Thank you for the tips. You are informative without being condescending.
Mark, you are a ripper bloke and I am guaranteed to come away with lots of valuable info so I can help others have success.
Plus, I just love your sense of humour. I am always saying "Let's get into it". Thanks for your videos.
Hey mark, thanks for the good advice. Cheers 🍅🍅🍅
I grew some Cherokee purple tomatoes one year, and they weren't as sweet as everyone had suggested they'd be.
They were still good, but I didn't want to grow many large tomatoes after that.
Then I got a hold of some indigo apple tomatoes.
I didn't think they'd be all that sweet, so I was going to dice it up for tacos.
My father wanted to eat one with salt, and I tried it too.
... easily the best large tomato I had ever had.
So what are the types of really good tasting tomatoes this video really looks great and makes me hungry I love tomatoes and that salad you showed mmmm