
Planting, Growing, and Harvesting Tomatoes
The Almanac Garden Planner - Use It Free for 7 Days!
Plan your 2025 garden with our award-winning Garden Planner.
Cooking Notes
- Tomatoes are nutritious and low in calories. One medium-sized tomato provides 57% of the recommended daily allotment (RDA) of vitamin C, 25% of vitamin A, and 8% of iron, yet it has only 35 calories.
- Preserve your harvest to enjoy all year long by canning tomatoes or drying tomatoes.
ADVERTISEMENT
How do I fight certain infections that attack tomatoes
I've been told that you shouldn't plant tomatoes and peppers close to each other. Is that true? Also, I've been told not to plant hot peppers next to sweet peppers as they can cross-pollinate causing the sweet peppers to become hot. Is there truth to this?
All that you have told are true but they can be avoided just follow the correct procedures.
My husband said they get cut worms etc. which will kill them.
I started germinating my tomatoes too early and we've had a run of cool weather (I'm in SE NY). So I'm looking at seedlings that are too big for their containers but can't put them out for a week to 10 days and they are showing some signs of stress (some wilting). Is it a bad idea to repot given that they are going out in 10 days or less? I use grow lights....is there another way to relieve that stress instead of repotting?
Thanks
Many people repot tomato plants several times before transplanting outside to help build stong roots. You would be fine to replant them into bigger pots.
I have a Roma plant which producing a lot of fruit but some of the fruit has developed blossom rot . I remove the affected fruit every day and wonder if the unaffected fruit is safe to eat, I would hate to throw the good fruit away it is a firm,nice shape and red,please tell me it is safe to eat.
We would cut off the blossom rot and use the tomato in whatever way you would, sure.
While you’re enjoying that succulent tomato, plan now to avoid blossom rot again. Read here: https://www.almanac.com/pest/blossom-end-rot
Tomatoes aren't a vegetable they are a fruit!!!!
With all due respect, the tomato is a fruit, not a vegetable.