8 Must-try tomato varieties to grow from seed
There is such a wide variety of tomatoes available that it is tempting to go wild and grow as many as you can. But before you start growing your tomato seeds, check carefully what sort you are buying:
Vine (cordon) or bush (spreading); greenhouse or outdoor; cherry, plum, round or beefsteak. And, although some of the more unusual cultivars are tempting, not all of them will ripen outdoors in cool climates.
1. Vine Tomatoes
Cordon or vine tomatoes grow on trusses from a single upright stem. Sometimes called "indeterminate" they need supporting as the fruits swell and ripen. Traditionally a greenhouse plant, there are now numerous varieties that will grow happily outdoors.
2. Plum (Roma)Tomatoes
With their distinctive oval or elongated shape, plum tomatoes were once the classic, mid-sized Italian cooking tomato. These days they are much more varied. They are available in either vine or bush forms and can be grown indoors or out. Plum tomatoes are also known as Roma or paste tomatoes.
3. Cherry Vine Tomatoes
Most cherry tomatoes are bred to be very sweet and conveniently bite-sized. Cordon or vine varieties are often borne on long trussen laden with fruit.
4. Beefsteak Tomatoes
These giants can grow to enormous sizes so, whether bush or vine, they usually need some form of support. Modern hybrids can easily weigh in at over 400-600g (14-21oz) each!
5. Striped Tomatoes
There are plenty of tomatoes with distinctive patterning, many of them unusual heritage or heirloom varieties that are worth tracking down.
6. Orange and Yellow Tomatoes
Bred and grown largely for their unusual colouring, these Orange and Yellow tomatoes can nevertheless be extremely tasty.
7. Bush Tomatoes
Bush or "determinate tomatoes" tend to spread or trail and grow from multiple stems rather than a single one. They do not need pinching out. Smaller or dwarf cherry varieties can be grown in hanging baskets. If you don't have a lot of space for a tomato vine to climb, growing bush tomatoes might be your best bet. These foliage-heavy plants grow to varying heights: dwarf varieties remain below 0.5-1 meter (2-3 feet,) while others are 1.5 meter (5 feet) or less.
8. Black Tomatoes
In the world of fashionable tomato growing, black is the new red. Black tomatoes, which originated in the Ukraine over 150 years ago, have a unique depth of flavour. Nearly all black tomatoes come from the Crimean peninsula in the Ukraine, where they’ve been favourites of the locals for more than a century. Hot summers there built pigment and fruit sugars that turn flesh and skin dark shades of mahogany, chestnut, bronze and deep purple. Consumers are often put off by the green and black interior and this is the reason why you do not come often across this colour tomato in your local super market.
Try 'Brown Berry', a highly sought after cherry-sized, lovely dark maroon tomato with great flavour and sweetness.
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