Jill

Aug 17, 20203 min

2020 Tomato Tasting and Rankings!

This was so fun to do! It is the end of my tomato season (with the exception of my Sweet Million which I planted later in the summer to prolong my tomato crop) and I have enjoyed my tomatoes all summer during quarantine. But I really hadn’t tasted them, if you know what I mean. I had used them in salads indiscriminately, not really choosing any particular one – just picking those that were ripe, or those that were closest to where I was standing in the garden!

So I thought that before the last tomatoes leave the vine, I would do a taste test and really savor each specific type of tomato that I planted, and see which ones really stood out, and which I might choose to plant again next year.

The thing is, that I have a relatively tiny garden. I have a total of 5 plants, only one tomato plant of each kind, which is different from some other gardeners that I see on the internet that have loads of land and dozens and dozens of tomato plants. Mine is a different kind of gardening, maybe more like micro-gardening!

All my plants were purchased at my local farmer’s market at a TomatoMania! event. Tomatomania! is a traveling festival of tomato plants where they sell loads of different varieties of tomatoes. They must have over 200 varieties to choose from. It’s overwhelming but a complete blast!

There’s heirloom tomatoes, cherry tomatoes, brand new species of tomatoes—everything you can imagine including the old standbys like Early Girl, and Better Boy. (Hmmm… did that sound sexist?) I never buy common tomato types at Tomatomania! because you can get those at your local nursery. I go to Tomatomania! to educate my self about tomatoes, and to try some unusual varieties. Tomatomania! takes place at local farmers markets around the Los Angeles area for just one weekend at a time. Here’s an article about Tomatomania! from the LA Times this year.

https://www.latimes.com/lifestyle/story/2020-02-25/tomatomania-calendar-in-socal

In my area, they arrived on April 15. I remember this because I had tickets to see Angels Baseball at Spring Training in Arizona. So, because I knew I was going to miss Tomatomania, I had asked one of our good friends to purchase a few plants for me in my absence. Well, you know what happened. Everything shut down EXCEPT Tomatomania! – so we cancelled our trip to Arizona, and instead, drove around the block to purchase our spring crop of tomatoes! Not such a bad trade off – but I did miss my Albert (Pujols.)

I set up my tomato tasting in the kitchen and I took it very seriously. I savored each tomato and then tried to report the distinctive characteristics of each. I’m not a tomato expert, so I didn’t really have the proper vocabulary to describe each tomato as precisely as I would have liked – but I think you will get the general drift.

It was a kind of calming experience, really. I just sat down, without rushing, and tasted each tomato in turn. It was nice to focus in and to think while I was tasting exactly what it was that I was experiencing. I hope that you notice I used my vintage butter pats (I LOVE butter pats) to cradle the tomatoes as they awaited their turn for tasting. The dark blue butter pats are a flow blue vintage pattern, the light blue china with silver lining is my Aunt Anna’s wedding china, Johann Haviland “Blue Garland” Bavarian China. (I just included that because I always want the fine china to be identified! Last night I was watching a TV show about Russia with the most exquisite cut glass flutes! I wanted to look them up on the internet!)

So, I hope that you find my taste testing helpful for your tomato purchase next year. I won’t spoil the results – you have to watch the video to find out the rankings!