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by Barbara
Berst Adams and edited for MEF online use by Amy
Rose -
"Let them know that ugly is good," advised Mahara Mahar,
owner of Fabian Farms in Northwest Washington. Mahara grows heirloom
tomatoes along with other specialty crops, and finds the tomatoes
to be very popular. With more than 60 million tons of tomatoes already
produced each year, one might question the idea of growing them
as a specialty crop. They are the world's most popular fruit, with
16 million tons more grown per year than the banana, which is the
world's second most popular fruit.
To understand
how growing heirloom tomatoes can fill niche markets for the micro
eco-farm, this article written for www.MicroEcoFarming.com gives
an explanation of the advantages and disadvantages between hybrid
tomatoes and heirloom tomatoes, describes some of the most popular
heirloom tomato plants, and lists resources for heirloom tomato
plants.
Tomatoes have
been cultivated around the world for centuries. During those centuries
of cultivation, seed was saved year after year for next year's crop,
allowing the farmer or gardener to choose seeds from plants with
particular qualities. For example, seeds were saved from plants
that produced an especially good aroma, shape, texture or flavor.
(This article from the www.MicroEcoFarming.com
site). Plants, by nature, are very adaptable. They reproduce
their species year after year, but sometimes with a slight natural
change, such as fruit-set a day or two earlier, or extra tender
skin. This new trait can be counted on to reproduce itself year
after year in "open-pollinated plants," or plants that
created the change within themselves.
When the United
States transformed from a country of close to 40 percent of its
population being farmers, and the old neighboring farms gave way
to centralized agricultural corporations that shipped our food supply
over long distances, a new type of vegetable had to be bred. Growing
heirloom tomato plants went by the wayside.
The very nature
of tomatoes that makes them such luscious cuisine: vine-ripened,
aromatic, thin tender skin, and plump juiciness, does not lend themselves
to corporate agribusiness. Corporate agribusiness needs tough skins,
drier fruits, long shelf life, and quite often, uniform shape.
Agribusiness
turned to hybridization in order to create the new traits as fast
as possible. Hybridization crosses two parent plants to create offspring
with new traits. However, seed from the offspring of hybrids will
go back to one of the parent plants, rather than re-creating the
hybrid. Meaning, gardeners and farmers had to re-purchase their
seed from the company that hybridized them. The "new hybrids"
may have seemed exciting at first, because some appeared to guarantee
disease resistance and perfectly shaped uniform fruits. (This
article from the www.MicroEcoFarming.com site). But as
the ages-old method of selecting better and better offspring from
open-pollinated seeds gave way to purchasing hybrids year after
year, fruit quality was now dependent on what corporate agribusiness
dictated. Growing heirloom tomatoes was now only a backyard garden
hobby.
While the new
hybrids were a breakthrough for commercial growers, enabling them
to produce a more transportable food crop with minimal spoilage,
consistent color, and shelf appeal, little by little, other qualities
began to drop out of production.
Flavor, texture
and vine ripening were not part of the breeding program. It is still
the old-time open-pollinated and heirloom varieties that carry those
highly sought-after traits.
And here is
the window of opportunity for growing heirloom tomatoes as a specialty
crop.
"Heirloom"
tomatoes almost seem like a different fruit than their hybrid cousins,
they are very tasty and popular with customers, yet most simply
cannot be produced and shipped by standard centralized agribusiness.
What is an heirloom tomato? All heirlooms are open-pollinated, but
not all open pollinated crops are heirlooms.
(This article from the www.MicroEcoFarming.com site).
According to Taylor's Guide to Heirloom Vegetables, a tomato must
meet these three criteria to be considered an heirloom variety:
- The variety
must be "true to type" from seed saved from each fruit
- Seed must
have been available for more than fifty years
- The tomato
variety must have a history or folklore of its own
Although the
main disadvantages of heirlooms over hybrids are their lack of ability
to ship long distances and in ripening to perfect, uniform shape,
this "disadvantage" can be transformed into an advantage
in two markets: The local producer, and the value-added producer.
Local customers are looking for quality flavor again, and purchase
direct from the farmer, skipping the need for long distance shipping
altogether. Also, non-uniform shape and color has become a novelty.
Heirlooms come in many odd shapes, including the shape of an accordion!
As well, they come in brownish purple, striped, and even green when
ripe.
The University
of Florida tested fifteen different heirloom tomato plants. The
tomatoes in the trials were grown using standard commercial production
techniques rather than organic methods. Data was collected regarding
yield, fruit size, number of fruits, disease resistance and number
of unblemished fruit.
The heirloom
tomato plants tested proved too delicate for the picking, packing,
and shipping rigors of the Florida gassed-green market. This means
that in order to get the flavor of yesterday, customers must purchase
them locally if they want them fresh. This is where the local hand-tended
micro farmer has the advantage. "The all time favorite is 'Brandywine,'"
Mahara said. Customers come specifically for that tomato. And if
they can't get it, sometimes they won't buy any tomatoes."
Other markets
for growing heirloom tomatoes include the heirloom tomato plants
for garden starts and the seeds. According to Jere Gettle, who grows
and sells heirloom produce and seed from around the world, tomatoes
are not only the world's favorite harvested crop, they are, naturally,
the most popular backyard garden plant. "We offer a very unique
selection from many countries," he said. "The interest
in heirlooms never ceases to amaze us, and it seems in the past
couple of years, everyone seems to be growing them."
Non-perishable
value-added tomato products are a way to reach beyond local production
with heirlooms. (This article from the www.MicroEcoFarming.com
site). Diamond Organics, which distributes organic products
by mail from growers along the central California coast, sells "Dave's
Organic Red Heirloom Tomato Sauce" and "Dave's Organic
Golden Heirloom Tomato Sauce" along with its dry and fresh
organic pasta.
Below is just
a sampler of tested and available heirloom tomatoes, of which there
are hundreds. They are available through a growing number of independent
seed suppliers:
Marmande: This
lightly ribbed red tomato is an old French favorite. The flavor
is considered very "European," full and rich. The fruits
are medium to large, and will produce even in cool weather. These
heirloom tomato plants are considered productive, and are sometimes
used as a market variety.
Principe
Borghese: This is the Italian heirloom well known for its
fruits' high quality sun-drying ability. Fruits are grape-shaped,
have very few seeds, delicious flavor, and are only one to two ounces.
They grow abundantly in clusters, and are also successfully used
for sauces and fresh eating.
Break
O-Day: These heirloom tomato plants introduced in 1931 that
offers uniform red fruits considered great for canning or marketing
to outlets that need that smooth globe-shaped, bright red color.
(This article from the www.MicroEcoFarming.com
site). Flavor is described as good and tangy. Dr. Carolyn
Male, heirloom tomato expert and author of 100 Heirloom Tomatoes,
describes it as a "workhorse of a tomato."
English
Rose: Since before World War II, English Rose had been handed
down in the same family, generation after generation. Early for
its large size, the ripe fruits are pink with excellent flavor.
The plants are the potato leaf variety.
Thai Pink
Egg: Another grape-shaped tomato, this one was found to
be very popular in Thailand. The fruits are bright pink, crisp,
sweet, uniform and very full-flavored. Each fruit is about one ounce.
Pink Accordion:
The mild-flavored fruits of these heirloom tomato plants are slightly
flat and heavily ribbed to look ruffled like an accordion. They
make beautiful shapes when sliced. Because of their semi-hollow
insides, they are good for stuffing.
Brandywine:
This Amish heirloom from 1885 wins many taste tests, and is considered
by many to be the superstar of all heirloom tomatoes. The fruits
are large-up to a pound and a half each-and the flavor superb. Brandywine
comes in a variety of ripening colors, from pink to gold to blackish
purple, and the plants are potato-leafed.
Orange
Banana: Here is a great heirloom tomato for paste, drying
or canning. A rare orange paste tomato, the fruits are sweet and
fruity. They are also enjoyed fresh and make a pretty addition to
specialty market tomatoes.
Galinas:
This early heirloom comes from Siberia. The fruits are small, golden
yellow, and a combination of both sweet and tangy. The vines are
very vigorous and the yield is heavy. Growing heirloom tomatoes
like these can be very productive.
Plum Lemon:
From Moscow, the fruits of Plum Lemon are brilliant canary
yellow. Fruits are about three inches long and resemble real lemons.
They are sweet and good-flavored. (This article
from the www.MicroEcoFarming.com site).
Big Rainbow:
This heirloom tomato was first preserved by members of the Seed
Savers Exchange. The flavor is considered sweet and delicious. The
giant fruits ripen up to two pounds! What's more, the color is striking
when sliced: yellow flesh with crimson red streaks throughout. When
growing heirloom tomatoes like these, be prepared to take tender
care of the large fruits as they ripen on the vine.
Old German:
Considered one of the most exquisitely flavored heirlooms, this
variety originated with the Mennonites. Fruits are large, and are
yellow with brilliant red streaks, mottles and marbling that show
both on the skin and within the flesh.
Aunt Ruby's
German Green: Some say this bright green ripening
tomato is more flavorful than those that ripen red! A family heirloom
originating in Germany, it is a large beefsteak. (This
article from the www.MicroEcoFarming.com site). The fruits
can grow to one pound.
White
Currant: Growing heirloom tomatoes sometimes means looking
to the wild. This is a wild type producing huge yields of cherry
tomatoes in clusters. The ripened fruit is creamy white with yellow-tinged
skin. It is very sweet with well-loved flavor.
Cherokee
Purple: Described as a "Cherokee Indian heirloom,"
by Jere Gettle, publisher of The Heirloom Gardener, this pre-1890s
variety ripens to deep, dusky, purple-pink. (This
article from the www.MicroEcoFarming.com site). It produces
very flavorful large fruits.
Tigerella
Orange Slicing Tomato: Reddish-orange, small to medium tomatoes
are striped with golden yellow and are described as having a very
pleasing tangy flavor. Very productive vines produce huge disease
resistant yields.
. (This
article from the www.MicroEcoFarming.com site).
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