Tomato Jubilee (indeterminate)

by Maureen Sullivan on January 19, 2016

Full sun. Heirloom Jubilee was an All-America Selections winner in 1943. The 3″ fruits are bright golden-orange when ready for eating. Jubilee has a mild sweet flavor and is low in acid.

Indeterminate tomato vines set flowers until frost kills the plant. Indeterminate plants give you a long harvest season. Staking or trellising is recommended for indeterminate plants. Suckering of indeterminate plants is recommended for slicing varieties so that you get a good number of larger tomatoes (suckering is not necessary for cherry tomatoes).

Tomato Juliet

by Maureen Sullivan on January 19, 2016

Tomato Juliette wsFull sun. Juliet is so versatile that it is hard to categorize!  Some catalogs call it a grape, others a mini roma.  Juliet is a hybrid variety producing small (2 1/4″ x 1 1/2″),  deep red, shiny, elongated 1 1/2 to 2 oz. fruits. Delicious, rich tomato flavor for salads, great salsa, and fresh pasta sauce. Dries nicely with a sweet-as-candy quality. Juliet is very disease resistant.

Tomato Mountain Fresh Plus (determinate)

by Maureen Sullivan on January 19, 2016

Full sun. Mountain Fresh Plus is a big red hybrid  tomato that produces 8 to 16 oz. slicers with great flavor. Mountain Fresh Plus is tolerant of cool, wet weather conditions. Try this as a follow up to Bush Beefsteak for a longer supply of garden tomatoes. 75 days

Determinate tomato plants have a specific time period for producing flowers that will then set fruit and ripen. Caging determinate types will help to keep the fruit off the ground to reduce pest nibbling. Determinate types are not suckered.

Tomato New Girl (indeterminate)

by Maureen Sullivan on January 19, 2016

Full sun.  New Girl is an early variety (62 days) with flavor!  Fruits avgerage 4 to 6 ounces. New Girl has better flavor and are more disease resistant than Early Girl.

Indeterminate tomato vines set flowers until frost kills the plant. Indeterminate plants give you a long harvest season. Staking or trellising is recommended for indeterminate plants. Suckering of indeterminate plants is recommended for slicing varieties so that you get a good number of larger tomatoes (suckering is not necessary for cherry tomatoes).

 

Tomato Paste Antique Paste

by Maureen Sullivan on January 19, 2016

Tomato Antique Paste wsFull sun.  We’ve been saving seed from this heirloom variety since 1995. Plants are heavy bearing and the large ox heart fruit have few seeds, a thin skin and exceptional flavor. Left Field Farm’s favorite cooking variety goes from vine to sauce in 10 minutes.

Tomato Paul Robeson (indeterminate)

by Maureen Sullivan on January 19, 2016

Full sun.  Paul Robeson is an heirloom variety with a aistinctive flavor, sweet and smoky. The 7 to 10 ounce fruit are a brick red color. Named in honor of the famous opera singer/actor/activist.

Indeterminate tomato vines set flowers until frost kills the plant. Indeterminate plants give you a long harvest season. Staking or trellising is recommended for indeterminate plants. Suckering of indeterminate plants is recommended for slicing varieties so that you get a good number of larger tomatoes (suckering is not necessary for cherry tomatoes).

Tomato Striped German (indeterminate)

by Maureen Sullivan on January 19, 2016

Tomato Striped German wsFull sun. Striped German is a  gorgeous heirloom tomato with large yellow fruit that is  blushed with red. Fruits are extremely meaty and sweet. A Left Field Farm favorite.

Indeterminate tomato vines set flowers until frost kills the plant. Indeterminate plants give you a long harvest season. Staking or trellising is recommended for indeterminate plants. Suckering of indeterminate plants is recommended for slicing varieties so that you get a good number of larger tomatoes (suckering is not necessary for cherry tomatoes).

Tomato Sugar Lump (Cherry)

by Maureen Sullivan on February 5, 2018

Sugar Lump is  a  heirloom indeterminate cherry tomato from Germany. Expect heavy yields off of clusters of 6 to 12 smooth, deep-red fruits, each averaging 3/4″ to 1″ in diameter. Excellent eating quality and flavor.

Tomato Supersonic (indeterminate)

by Maureen Sullivan on January 19, 2016

Full sun From the same breeder as Jetstar, Supersonic is another excellent home-garden hybrid variety. Ripens a week later than Jetstar, but with larger, heavier “bragging rights” tomatoes.

Indeterminate tomato vines set flowers until frost kills the plant. Indeterminate plants give you a long harvest season. Staking or trellising is recommended for indeterminate plants. Suckering of indeterminate plants is recommended for slicing varieties so that you get a good number of larger tomatoes (suckering is not necessary for cherry tomatoes).

Tomato Yellow Brandywine

by Maureen Sullivan on February 15, 2021

Full sun.  Indeterminate vine.  We offered Yellow Brandywine for the first time last season.  It’s fair to say that we had our doubts that Yellow Brandywine could hold a candle to Pink Brandywine in a flavor comparison.  We can now say the Yellow Brandywine held its own in that comparison.  Sweet and juicy with a complex flavor Yellow Brandywine produces fruit late season, as does Pink Brandywine.