If you enjoyed this video, please "Like" and share to help increase its reach! Thanks for watching 🍅TIMESTAMPS for convenience: 0:00 The Vine Ripened Tomato Lie 1:23 Stages Of Tomato Ripening 2:34 Why Grocery Store Tomatoes Taste Bad 3:45 The Problem With Vine Ripening Tomatoes 4:38 Tomato Breaker Stage 6:16 The Best Time To Pick A Tomato 9:30 How To Ripen Tomatoes Indoors 12:58 The Psychology Of Vine Ripened Tomatoes 16:12 Adventures With Dale
@cynthiacollins26688 ай бұрын
I stopped waiting until they are totally ready to eat because they tend to crack so bad, and then they don't keep as well. My question is, if they are sealed off from the plant, how come they crack? I thought that was from them continuing to take in water? I agree; picking them a little earlier doesn't hurt the flavor one bit!
@jimmyriggin8 ай бұрын
Thank you very much for the very thorough and in depth Explanation of the various stages of ripening. I made a video the other day and I had mentioned my brief reason why I am cut a tomato before it was ripe. It was nowhere near as colorful and informative as yours lol. I just kept it simple and said in my video that you don’t have to keep the tomato on there because it’s already absorbed all the nutrient it needs. I did not in no way go as in depth as you and I do appreciate your time and effort to put this video together. It helps many people understand this process in the very educational way. I do my best to teach in my own way, I’m just getting started with this new garden and this channel. My channel is not for everyone. I do things a little differently and hope my channel inspires other people to think outside the box and I hope that the people that watch your channel understand these things much better with knowledge based information that you share through your content your videos. It’s absolutely amazing. Thank you for all your hard work!
@jimmyriggin8 ай бұрын
My garden channel youtube.com/@squirrelsgarden58?si=SiYkME-0g0srpGnk
@natureboy64107 ай бұрын
@@cynthiacollins2668Not sure about your area, but here in the Southwest, because of the environment being so hot and dry, with hot dry winds, low humidity and high temperatures, it is necessary to pick early. Otherwise the skin dries too fast and cracks and splits when the internal moisture expands from the heat.
@chadshaffer457 ай бұрын
What about peppers? Pick early as well?
@scottolson62017 ай бұрын
70 year old gardener here and I have been growing tomatoes for many of those years, and this is one of the most informative videos on tomatoes I've ever watched. Thanks for adding to the gardening knowledge of this old dog!
@eb16847 ай бұрын
Are you talking about Dale?
@anthonylombardo13067 ай бұрын
Ill trust your word.
@angelmartinelli99837 ай бұрын
Wow, cool. I wondered why store bought tomatos tasted like shit. I never eat tomatos in the winter.
@eb16847 ай бұрын
@@angelmartinelli9983 You must eat it to know what it tastes like.
@angelmartinelli99837 ай бұрын
@eb1684 I have tasted them that's why I don't eat them anymore, that's all that's available in the winter, so I don't eat tomatos in the winter ever
@kevinduta55498 ай бұрын
This was one of your best videos for tomatoes. This isn’t discussed as frequently by most influencers and a major tip
@TheMillennialGardener8 ай бұрын
I agree. I honestly think it's one of those "little known facts." Or, at least, it's a fact that has been lost because of the internet. Looking back, my grandfather *always* picked his tomatoes early and let them finish ripening on the porch, but the internet has popularized photos of blood red tomatoes hanging on vines, so I think the knowledge of past generations has been forgotten. Whatever it is, I hope this video helps people.
@teamshoemaker8 ай бұрын
Too many bugs or birds getting them if you leave them. Also I give a lot of extra away, so it allows a few days time to use them up.
@dpaw608 ай бұрын
Yep. Excellent video. Thank you.
@Lochness197 ай бұрын
@@teamshoemaker I haven't had too much of any issue with bugs and critters eating them vine ripened. Sometimes the occasional chipmunk nipple but mainly just on the cherry tomatoes and there's far more than they can keep up with, not to mention they're often drawn away by the nearby raspberries.
@jesswelsh98387 ай бұрын
I agree! Great info💚
@ToneThaCreator8 ай бұрын
I love how this channel content isn't driven by sponsors! The information provided is far more trustworthy as a result. Thank you!
@TheMillennialGardener8 ай бұрын
You're welcome! I don't think sponsorships are necessarily bad, but I just do this because I really love it. My garden is my sanctuary.
@claustelmach53057 ай бұрын
then find a way to support him through his amazon list or shop
@Martha-q8p1b7 ай бұрын
Same here! I've been so turned off by the evolution of my favorite gardening channels that are mainly pushing products, now.
@proudboxermom31047 ай бұрын
@@TheMillennialGardener I agree 100%!! "My garden is my sanctuary" It keeps me sane in this insane world!! Thank you for all you do I'm a brand new gardener, and I've learned so much from you and try to watch all your videos!! You rock!!
@bradical27236 ай бұрын
@@Martha-q8p1blike epic gardening?
@sarathompson66287 ай бұрын
Considering that the half-ripe fruits I’m harvesting now are coming off the vine with little to no resistance, it makes sense that the plant has finished nourishing the fruit.
@westcoast85627 ай бұрын
lol
@Maria-ql3fc8 ай бұрын
Many people in the sticks where I use to live would buy a case of green tomatoes from a local tomato farmer in the fall, they would wrap them individually in News paper in a box and close the box and put it under the bed or in a closet. When they wanted ripe tomatoes they would unwrap some and set them out on the counter, in just a few days they had ripe tomatoes.
@TheMillennialGardener8 ай бұрын
Funny thing is if they took a sheet of newspaper and covered the whole box, the ethylene would build up and ripen them all quickly. It's pretty fascinating.
@lindamorgan26788 ай бұрын
I do that to all the ones unripened before frost sometimes I do not wrap them just lay them flat and don't let them touch
@EssieKaye-f3q7 ай бұрын
@@lindamorgan2678I left some unripe yellow pear-shaped tomatoes just lying around in different rooms of the house last autumn and months later, really months, the ripened tomatoes remained unspoiled. Some didn't start shrivelling or drying up until 5-6 months later.
@Maria-ql3fc7 ай бұрын
@@TheMillennialGardener but they didn't want them all to ripen at once, they wanted to have ripe tomatoes through the winter
@maureenramirez69057 ай бұрын
I do this every fall before frost. I eat red-ripe tomatoes well into the winter.
@ndbg468818 ай бұрын
Yep, old lady gardener here and I can attest that picking tomatoes at the breaker stage is the way too go. Took me years to believe it but it is true. I did a taste test between letting them stay on the vine and ripening them inside - no difference. Honestly, it reduces so much stress letting them ripen inside!
@davetrayford6 ай бұрын
U R a SMART "old lady🙂😜
@joanbadalian38036 ай бұрын
Old lady here. If i dont pick my tomatoes earlier if the 117/118 degrees does my local birds gets to it before I do I do have shade cloth on them. My tomatoes and peppers are wonderful ripeten in my kitchen.
@busterbiloxi38335 ай бұрын
Nervous Nellie!
@bmiller19588 ай бұрын
❤ 17 straight minutes of content JAM PACKED with GREAT INFORMATION!!! I learned a lot!!
@TheMillennialGardener8 ай бұрын
I'm glad you enjoyed it! I tried to storyboard it as efficiently as possible 😀
@kevinsnyder84483 ай бұрын
I do believe growing our own tomatoes is one of our finest rewards as a gardener and you my brother have removed decades of gardening failures and myths. I give you my props❤
@floraputman60067 ай бұрын
So guilty of " just one more day" to go out and be frustrated that a critter got it first........Thanks so much for this info. God Bless
@hpawebster656 ай бұрын
Why would a God bless this individual but allow millions to suffer daily because they don't know anything about him? Think about it.
@marygrott80957 ай бұрын
I learned this a couple of years ago from one of my FB gardening group.. I was getting so discouraged from.losing almost fully ripened tomatoes to pests. I posted a picture and was advised to harvest the tomatoes earlier, almost as soon as it starts blushing. I've saved a lot of tomatoes by doing that, and the flavor is always great!
@normanhooten94457 ай бұрын
I am 70 years old & have grown tomatoes for 50 of them...& you're right ! Old wives tales die hard. But your info about stages of ripeness, storage, etc. are spot-on.🍅🍅🍅🍅🍅🍅🍅
@noneyabusiness-kh5sx9 күн бұрын
Fellow engineer (retired) and gardener here. You have one of the best gardening channels on KZbin. I’ve learned so much from your videos. Just curious, where/how did you get all your gardening knowledge? Also, love the Dale additions to your videos 🐶😎
@Mark-lw8bg8 ай бұрын
I have been growing tomatoes for a few years. Last year i grew 185 lbs of tomatoes in my backyard garden. I can say for a fact that everything mentioned in this video is true and it works. It took me a long time to realize that picking my fruit early gave me the best results. Now that stink bugs are a major issue for my tomatoes and peppers, it is especially important to pick them before they are attacked. In mid to late summer, I often have up to 10 trays of tomatoes ripening in my dining room, at any given time.
@Julie-bp1zf7 ай бұрын
Can i do the same with peppers? I had some crop loss due to bugs eating the peppers last year
@daffodilrose19506 ай бұрын
I never ripe my tomatoes on the vine. I wrap them..put them in a box…they ripen around the same time. Very seldom having to throw any away. Once ripened..I cut them in half put them Into a covered casserole dish with other ingredients for sauce….pop it in the oven! The best flavored sauce!
@davetrayford6 ай бұрын
I bet your dining room smells great!! You serving tomato pasta ?? 😄
@stevesmith40517 ай бұрын
I've been growing vegetables and tomatoes for close to two decades before you were born, I learn something new every year. Homegrown tomatoes are the number one treat from the garden for me. For tomato advice, I'm looking no further than your channel. I'm so glad you're here for us!
@GretchensVeganBakery7 ай бұрын
This is so crazy that you put this video up yesterday!! Last evening I was out in my garden, picking my tomatoes at about 30% ripeness and I said to myself “I believe that vine ripe tomatoes is a myth. There’s no way people let their tomatoes ripen all the way on the vine!” 😅 👌🏼
@rwh7775 ай бұрын
Huh?
@guyindecatur4 ай бұрын
It probably started as a marketing gimmick. Kinda like that "apple a day" non-sense. And yes, I love an apple in my green salad..!
@melissa72337 ай бұрын
I figured this out several years ago when I started gardening. I was mainly picking early because critters (mainly rodents) were raiding my garden. MANY people criticized me for doing it, but this was the only way I was going to get a harvest. However I didn't know about not ripening them in sunlight. I don't generally do that, but I never realized that it could cause a problem.
@jaybeliever14797 ай бұрын
I just returned from being gone 2 days and found two beautiful tomatoes partially ruined by either splitting or a bird pecking. I was waiting "one more day" to pick 4 tomatoes when I watched this video. It's dark, but I just went out and picked them. Thanks for this video.!!
@AmishFury8 ай бұрын
This is my 3rd year growing tomatoes. This was extremely informative and I'll never let my tomatoes just hang. My issue is splitting and now I know. Thanks for always giving direct info and brining in the technicals and real word into a great video.
@TheMillennialGardener8 ай бұрын
I'm glad you enjoyed the video! Let them go to half-ripe and that should be far enough. No need to risk them beyond that point.
@AmishFury8 ай бұрын
@@TheMillennialGardener I lost a lot of cherry tomato's last year to splitting. I'll pick sooner and let ripen. I also am heeding your container growing guidance since I added hoops to my raised beds and am growing them in 5 gal buckets this year. First time successfully growing from seed as well. Lots going on in my little back yard this year. Grapes, Strawberries, many other things. Really enjoy the content, keep it up. Now to deal with these slugs.
@MichaelRei998 ай бұрын
Well how exactly could your tomatoes be splitting if the plant separates itself from the tomato??
@MsLookinup7 ай бұрын
@@MichaelRei99That is a good question, but I notice that my cherry tomatoes do split sometimes when I am washing them in the sink. Must be too ripe at that point? IDK
@mattgohlke82165 ай бұрын
They are just so much more pliable and thin skinned when ripe and any temperature changes cause slight flexing which can split the skin, also when he says they are "seperate" from the plant, they still can take in water, which they basically do nothing with other than swell, they aren't benefiting from any nutrients or anything coming from the plant at this time. It's basically pumping water into a tomato for no reason, and they pop really easily.
@KevinSmith-dq9tz7 ай бұрын
Been trying to tell people this for years. I'm in east central Fl. Totaly organic. Pick at about 30 to 50 % max. Give them time. Some neighbors tried to argue with me about that. Now they buy from me. 🤷♂️. Hard down here in the heat and humidy in the summers. Birds like to drink my fruits. Ripend fruits on the vine don't last long. In the house or on the vine. Just for the point of view, I've been doing this a long time. Your channel is by far above the others. Really appreciate your efforts that put into this.
@jasonhawkins27177 ай бұрын
Great video thank you. I am definitely one of those “gotta let it ripen fully on the vine” kind of people. I am glad to know that I no longer have to do this. Look forward to trying it out this year.
@proudboxermom31046 ай бұрын
Does anyone know if this goes for cherry tomatoes too?
@diane49837 ай бұрын
This is how all the older generations picked tomatoes. My mother became her father had a big garden and they had to keep food in cellar and it had to last. They knew all this. I watched this video and called my mom and I said that’s why you have such great tomato crops. She learned from her dad. I never paid atteattention to my mom is 83. So old school wins the day but definitely new and good info for younger generations 👍
@Wellbaby948 ай бұрын
Wow, learned something new! I knew to pick my tomatoes as they colored up but I have always put them in my kitchen WINDOW. Gotta go move a bunch of tomatoes. . .
@karricompton8 ай бұрын
Me too!
@nonyadamnbusiness98878 ай бұрын
I think you should move half and study the results. My mother always ripened hers in an east facing window..
@jeas49808 ай бұрын
That's where I keep the ones I want to stay green... for fried green tomatoes. They develope the flavor I like after 2 days on the window sil. The rest go in a big paper grocery bag.
@TheMillennialGardener7 ай бұрын
Try both. Your window blocks most UV rays, surprisingly. Keep some in your window, put some on your counter in the shade. See which way you like better. You may prefer one way over the other.
@ZeFeratu7 ай бұрын
@@TheMillennialGardener I'm digging this idea. My tomatoes in the East facing window take 1-3 weeks to ripen, but I pick those when they are still green (depending on the condition of the plant) I'm going to conduct an experiment like this with one of my plants and compare.
@cryptoguy707 ай бұрын
I saw the thumbnail and said to myself "yeah, whatever bro". After scrolling down another page or two I decided to go back and watch it. I am glad I did! Thank you for the great information.
@rconnor99665 ай бұрын
Yep. This is so true. Once the tomato releases easily from the stem, it wants to go in your salad, soup and pasta.
@t0mt0mt0m7 ай бұрын
As a grocer who sells thousands of pounds of tomato of different types year round. This is all correct information. Sadly people will fight any type of information that conflicts with their own.
@dross100017 ай бұрын
Grocery tomatoes...🤮 They are picked way too early to give them a longer shelf life.
@giftedwithEsteem7 ай бұрын
Cognitive dissonance.
@kellyvcraig7 ай бұрын
@@dross10001, thus was born the name hothouse, that is, tasteless, tomatoes.
@ayecaptin7 ай бұрын
@@dross10001I don't think it's the harvesting time that affects the taste. I've harvested tomatoes to early and they just don't ripen, if they ripen at all the timing may be fine. The taste is probably more of a result of what they are fed.
@_JimmyBeGood7 ай бұрын
Yes they will. See half of the western world in their political views lol
@kkiissssiikk8 ай бұрын
My grandmother from Siberia was getting 30%-50% ripe tomatoes and ripen them on sunny windowsill. 😊 It’s also helps tomato with releasing some weight from the vine. I love how very informative your videos. The best detailed content out there.
@pingwin4668 ай бұрын
Great video as usual. We love Dale too. Started tomato's in Fla from seed in November 6 plants in the pool screen area, Cut suckers for months and made 50 plants, Built large raised beds to accommodate all the new garden, Disease and animals taking their toll last couple weeks picked them all and removed the heirlooms this week left the determinates. I ate tomato's sandwiches for the last 3 months and we have about a hundred German Johnson green on every table in the house lol. Army worms, every leaf disease, borer worms, just started and over 5 inches of rain this last week. Your channel has inspired us immensely Thank you for the hard work you do.
@BNOBLE.7 ай бұрын
I did almost the exact same thing here in central Florida and thought I started the season to early. Had a great harvest and ate my LAST tom sand for lunch today
@tinameschko7 ай бұрын
I'm so glad I saw this! I have to pick my tomatoes when they are blushing before the bird's get them. Thanks for a great video. I've learned so much from this channel.
@andrewflei8 ай бұрын
I've been growing Tomatoes for years and today I learned something, thank you for this video.
@Bill-y4h2 ай бұрын
I really appreciate this advice it's very helpful . I wrestle with this problem all the time with my wife . She thinks that a tomato has to ripen fully on the vine to be any good and I end up loosing many just as you say . I could not point to any proof that it's not necessary to fully vine ripen but now I can . Thank you . We need more videos like this that go deeper into the details of growing things . I am a retired soldier and growing vegetables is a hobby , but it does not come naturally to me and I struggle a lot . I now have a far better idea of when to pick my tomatoes .
@SunSugarFarms5 ай бұрын
I sustainably grow sun sugar cherry tomatoes and sell them commercially to local Cincinnati area grocery stores. Since I hated putting them in plastic produce clamshells, I created a paperboard container to package them in that I also sell to other growers. They do indeed finish ripening quite nicely in the vented box within the delivery day with no discernable taste difference in flavor if picked at least 50% ready. The reason I prefer a ripe cherry tomato picked right off the vine though (and not one that's been sitting on the counter) may have something to do with the volatiles (the chemicals that produce their flavors). A warm cherry tomato off the vine to me has a richer flavor and the skin is softer and easier to eat than one in an air conditioned 70' kitchen or store. There was a study done that showed while lower storage temperatures didn't change the sugar and acid makeup of tomatoes, it did cause the tomato's volatiles to dip as the temperature decreased. Cold storage temperatures would further break down the cell's membrane and affect taste. It sure explains why we shouldn't be refrigerating tomatoes but could even small temperature and humidity changes explain the difference in flavor some of us are percieving? The study is here: www.pnas.org/doi/10.1073/pnas.1613910113
@brianshaw3736 ай бұрын
It has taken me a few years to figure this out by myself. Some success and lots of disappointment. Thanks for the easy to understand explanation of why some of our gardening myths are wrong. I wish I had this video years ago.
@buckshottv34207 ай бұрын
i pick em on the blush...let em ripen on the counter...there's a softness point where i like to eat them...merita old fashioned...heavy on the dukes....cracked pepper and sea salt...and sometimes a slice of cheddar...gotta love it...yall...
@paulaback6 ай бұрын
So glad to hear this. I lost 2 huge German Johnson today. I left them on one more day and went out this morning and half of both of them were half gone!!
@cynthiamartinez58848 ай бұрын
Yea! Finally, the video I asked you to make last year. I've seen so many gardening YT channels mention this but I've never seen anyone do a dedicated and informative video on the topic. I'm glad to have a source to point people to now when so many people on gardening FB groups are adamant about a tomato picked before fully ripe is the same as grocery store tomatoes.
@cherylmallie46227 ай бұрын
Just saw your picture of you, your lovely, and Dale on your wedding day! Congratulations!! And God bless you! I am So Very happy for you both. I mean for all three of you!
@tjuedes7 ай бұрын
Totally agree with you. Especially here in TN. The rain will crack them all the time if i dont pick early. I like to pick right after they start to blush. Helps with insects attacking as well. Thanks for the science behind the tip.
@WinsomeWinslet7 ай бұрын
Gardening for about 30 years now and this is something I intuitively figured out over the years as we would watch perfect nearly ripened tomatoes split, be eaten or taken altogether by animals. Now I know that it was the right decision to pull them "early" and I have you to thank! So thanks!!!
@davidpeak13238 ай бұрын
I started a container garden a few years ago. I’m growing tomatoes this year from your recommendations. I’m also growing dwarf tomatoes from the dwarf tomato project. I’ve learned so much from your channel! Thanks so much for all your efforts to produce informative content!
@TheMillennialGardener8 ай бұрын
I'm curious to hear how things turn out. Please let me know later in the year. I'm curious how you will like the Dwarf Tomato Project plants. They're very interesting and unlike any other tomatoes. They're built like little trees and the flowers look like dandelions.
@davidpeak13238 ай бұрын
@@TheMillennialGardener I also started an early tomato project back in January. I seed started 2 Rosella Purple & 1 Siletz Jan 6 with a goal of tomatoes by June. I have tennis size tomatoes on the Siletz.
@pizmot38938 ай бұрын
Hey, I could have told you that 40 years ago. Down here in Florida, when the tomatoes and peppers are forming, the birds and varmits are going into their cupboards getting out their knives, forks and bibs. I don't mind sharing, but it reaches a point! 20% tomato crop loss even picking them early. The last week the varmits have attacked the peppers (even Hot) with Hannibal Lecture efficiency. It's war!
@Freedom2025-x2b8 ай бұрын
Florida 9b Found out the hard way . Squirrels beat me to it 🤬
@TexasNana28 ай бұрын
Raccoons love my tomatoes 😠😡
@nonyadamnbusiness98878 ай бұрын
Terriers and house cats. Also, a good perch for hawks and owls.
@jonathan-ku3ed8 ай бұрын
NY slugs and rolly polly,s
@TheMillennialGardener8 ай бұрын
Depending on where you're at, if you're growing tomatoes during the rainy season, even worse than the pests is the splitting. For every tomato I lose to pests, I lose 2-3 from the rain if I let them vine ripen. It's best to pick them half ripe and let the countertop finish them.
@singanddance-q9b8 ай бұрын
I love it when you upload. Every time I learn something new!!! This information is so so crucial. I had no idea I could cut my tomatoes off sooner! Last year, I came outside and beetles had taken out some of my ripe tomato while on the vine.
@TheMillennialGardener8 ай бұрын
I used to make that mistake, too. Pick them when they're halfway and you'll lose so many less tomatoes!
@karricompton8 ай бұрын
My husband has been telling me this for years! I’m like, “you pick them when they’re orange!” 😂 Thank you! I now have to admit he was right!
@lostpony48858 ай бұрын
Red. Even if it werent true id need to cuz pests dont wait...
@TheMillennialGardener8 ай бұрын
He was right, but you don't have to admit it 😆
@rickbroomhead32267 ай бұрын
I have to tell someone else to tell my wife because she never believes me.
@jf12747 ай бұрын
As a husband that doesnt get many wins, Im taking this as a personal win. Thank you for your sacrifice!
@kellyvcraig7 ай бұрын
Orange? Oh hell NO. Regardless of what anyone says, letting your maters turn red is not a problem. Said another way, I don't think the folks growing a hundred acres of tomatoes are fully ignorant of how to grow and when to pick them. Yes, waiting until they are super soft is iffy, at times, other times, just bring a salt shaker out to the patch with you and. . . .
@jc50667 ай бұрын
The not letting tomatoes get cold is the best tip. I have known this for years. I hate the fact that every restaurant refrigerates their tomatoes and always taste horrible. Many grocery stores do the same.
@37yearsofanythingisenough397 ай бұрын
If the restaurant didn’t refrigerate they would get warnings to do so from the local health dept. who know nothing about tomatoes, but claim to know everything about food poisoning 😮
@sandycarlton26507 ай бұрын
Maybe the restaurant uses them up quick enuf before the tomatoes have a chance of losing quality.. or they just don’t care about the quality they are serving..🤷♀️
@briantaylor4967 ай бұрын
Tomatoes never go in refrigeration unless they have been sliced and leftover, which never happens at my house. lol
@guyindecatur4 ай бұрын
I chill mine in the frig for about an hour before serving in a salad or just sliced into chunks. Can't believe the season is almost over. 😒
@ashleyl36995 ай бұрын
thanks so much, i have only grown a garden for 2 years, my aunt who is a very experienced gardener visited and said i should have already picked some of the tomatoes that are reddish-yellow and put them in a cool dry place to finish, i had huge doubts but your video explaining the actual scientific reasoning has banished them and today i went out and picked everything that looks close to ready.
@oxigen857 ай бұрын
I really appreciate how you make the video more easily watchable by adding Celsius. Thank you!
@renefig17 ай бұрын
One of the best videos on tomatoes I have ever seen
@monicalinerode17837 ай бұрын
Great to hear the facts of tomato ripening stages. I noticed this in the autumn when frost was expected we would pick half ripened tomatoes and when they full ripened they tasted great
@denisebrady68582 ай бұрын
Thank You, Thank You, Thank You I am 73 years old & totally agree with everything you have said in this video as I have been saying the same thing for about 10 years- since I started growing vegetables. Your videos are so informative. Newbie Here from Australia. Cheers Denise- Brisbane Australia
@warnerwinborne7 ай бұрын
I grew up in Hanover County, Virginia, the "Tomato Capital of the World". As a boy I would work during the summers in the tomato fields. Because we went from farm to market, we would pick a tomato as soon as it started turning pink on the bottom. All tomatoes would then go to the sorting tables at the farmhouse. Those with the most color would go to the markets. Those with less would ripen another day or two and then go. In short, you are absolutely correct that a "vine-ripened tomato" is one that has begun to turn, not one that is beet red.
@Zummbot6 ай бұрын
Hanover boys represent 💪
@mosesmerlin88827 ай бұрын
Thank you so much!! This information is particularly valuable right at this moment. Last year, for the first time, our community garden, with a view of the ocean in Southern California, got overrun with rats! It was such. a demoralizing situation. Overnight, on the 3rd of July, they came in and ate 30 perfectly ripe ears of corn that I was saving to pick for a party on the 4th of July. Out of 72 corn stalks, I ended up with 5 good ears. The same with tomatoes. Every time a tomato got ripe, overnight it got a giant chomp out of it. Thank God they weren't interested in cherry tomatoes; so, I got masses of them. And, so thankful, too, that we can garden here all year round; so, there was plenty of joy left over for the rest of the year. The rats didn't seem interested in broccoli and Brussel sprouts. But, you have given hope for this new tomato season!!! I"ll just pick the tomatoes before the rats are even interested in them!! Thank you so very dearly!!!
@grannygct7 ай бұрын
Hi Millennial Gardener, thank you so much for the informative video on ripening tomatoes. You made some good points. Now I understood the stage of the ripening process. Last year, my tomatoes were on the vine a bit too long and they were somewhat mushy. This year, I will not let my tomatoes go too far so to compare the difference. I will let you know how my fruits turn out following your suggestions. YES, never put tomatoes in the refrigerator. The fruits are tasteless, soft and mushy at times. Ripe tomatoes will be left in my fridge ONLY if I can't use them right away. Once in the fridge, I will use them later to make soups or sauces. Great video!
@gailoreilly15167 ай бұрын
WOW. You described my tomatoes (split, bug bites etc) for the last 2 years. I just didn't know to pick them earlier. Thank you!
@jimunderwood59735 ай бұрын
You had me at the bird pecking the tomato comment. The last two years I’ve lost my first tomato of the season to birds. Thanks for the info
@chirkware7 ай бұрын
I started listening to this video thinking "no way I'm going to agree with this nonsense". I ended it thinking "huh...I'm going to have to do some blind taste tests this summer!". I specifically started gardening so I could have "vine ripened tomatoes"...this challenges what "vine ripened" really means. Very interesting! Very logical breakdown of the facts.
@Raider2K076 ай бұрын
1st your a very good speaker .. 2nd your 100% right...We had a produce stand and until our field tomato's came in we would buy at the local farmers market ..(Shipped in from Fl. )We nicknamed them square Tomato's because they ripened in the ethylene room and on the truck in a box. It's definitely a mindset about vine ripened but still an old wives tale. It's hard to beat some of the old fashioned ways but when you add the science into the mix it just gets better. LOL.. my neighbor asked me why I am always shaking my plants ... I told him Tomatoes are self-pollinating, meaning they have flowers that contain both the male and female parts and this will help out nature to produce more fruit .. He just scratched his head as he walked away .. Keep up the great work !! subbed
@DavidWilmering8 ай бұрын
I got some 8x12 drawstring net bags off amazon to try on my tomatoes this year. I had trouble with squirrels stealing my tomatoes last year ,even when they were not fully ripened. I think the net bags covering the tomato clusters will fix this. Thanks for busting up the myth of vine ripening because I never would have thought otherwise.
@PatC.7 ай бұрын
Maybe if you spray near your tomatoes with neem oil or insecticidal soap, (both have a strong chemical odor), perhaps it would deter the critters.
@edheitzman32675 ай бұрын
Yes, squirrels have been my primary tomato nemesis for years. I've tried various spraying with little to no success. They find their way into most caging and if it works it makes it tough for me to access them too! My best "solution" so far is to just grow more bushes and let them take some. Yes they'll prefer red ones, so at times I'll wrap a few in grow-cloth mesh when they first start to color until the break stage at least. The critters will take a green one rather than work harder for the red. It's been odd that at my Mom's (10 miles away) she has never had trouble with the squirrels -- until this year! She only grew 3 bushes (1 cherry, 1 Rutgers, 1 Big Boy) and they took every single one of the larger ones' first batch so far (14 from the Big Boy plant), all while they were yet completely green.
@sodsqad80897 ай бұрын
I have to laugh but you made a good point for newbies to gardening. There are so many folks that don't know that you just preached facts. Chicken eggs are the same way when purchased from a grocery store! You nailed this video!!!!!
@joyfullife29058 ай бұрын
Great idea to prevent birds stealing your tomatoes. Thank you for your wonderful information.
@PatC.7 ай бұрын
They say that birds aren't eating your tomatoes, instead they are quenching thirst and that you should put a pan of water out for them.
@TheMillennialGardener7 ай бұрын
You're welcome!
@joyfullife29057 ай бұрын
@@PatC. Thanks for your advice. I do put a pan with water on my backyard. I also have few bowls of water for toads during summer.
@jzinkhan56084 ай бұрын
Wow, very helpful information!🍁
@cingleinva7 ай бұрын
In my opinion, this is your best video yet! Invaluable information, thank you!!
@sarahpaxson20847 ай бұрын
I’ve been doing this for years because something would eat my tomatoes once it ripened. I am so glad to hear exactly why this works. 🙌👏🏼
@Martha-q8p1b7 ай бұрын
Thanks! Well researched and thorough. I've grown tomatoes for over 10 yrs. and was interested to see if there was something I didn't know. I was hoping to hear " the sooner you pick...the more you get", like beans, peas, cukes, etc. The explanation of how the partially ripe fruit gets cut off was new info to me and explains things. Thank you! I just subscribed.
@AcornHillHomestead5 ай бұрын
Great info. TY ❤ I haven’t spent much time on my tomatoes this year and the temps have been great. I transplanted my young home grown plants into the garden on 6/8. A month later than normal. We got tons of rain in spring and everything grew like crazy as did the mosquitoes. 😩. I couldn’t stand being in that garden, rain frequency lessened and I only watered twice after the rains but I mulched the plants with pine shavings. Today I picked a beautiful and very firm big red Roma. I have to say that was the most amazing tomato I have ever tasted. I’m embarrassed to say I also didn’t stake them after the first 18” so they sprawled onto the ground. I have a little blight but not as much as I thought I should. I remember years ago planting two Rutger tom plants in a whisky barrel surrounded by maple leaves. Those plants drooped to the ground sprawling all over. There wasn’t a hint of blight on the leaves! those tomatoes were awesome too. They were all nestled on the leaves in the shade of the vine. So next year I may plant a row of them elevated in tree buckets to see what happens. Thanks for all you share on this channel. Your place looks amazing!
@johncosgrove27387 ай бұрын
I picked all my green tomatoes before the first hard freeze. I put them in boxes and stored them in my basement. they eventually all ripened and I ate my last tomato in December.
@raymondhusser21897 ай бұрын
Here in the Deep South we were taught this exact same thing because of all the things you mentioned. Great info for a back yard gardener!!
@TheBestPaJam7 ай бұрын
What’s growing on!! Dang you are already harvesting.. I just planted my homegrown tomatoes in-ground on Saturday. Northern California.
@JamesDavis-qv2ws5 ай бұрын
You SIR are 100% correct. My dad had 2 dz plants - we ate tomatoes every you can think of, gave away so many, and my mom canned 250 Qts. At the end of the season we had enough green tomatoes we made a dz. qts of " green tomato mincemeat " for pie in the winter. I am here to say it works, feeding the plants helps a lot also.
@jennifersmith25677 ай бұрын
I just had this discussion with my husband a couple nights ago. He told me that I was picking the tomatoes too soon that I should wait for them to turn red. And I told him if I wait for them to turn red the critters will probably get them first. I was so glad to see this video confirming what I was thinking😊
@Redwood655 ай бұрын
Speaking of critters, my late dog loved when they were ripe on the vine. He ate veggies of all kinds and I caught him stealing my roma and cherry tomatoes on many occasions.
@guyindecatur4 ай бұрын
@@Redwood65 I've day two dogs (same breed) that love funky, half-rotten tomatoes as well as the ripe ones. You know, the ones I've discarded cuz of critters or caterpillars. I was carrying some 'maters to a gal friend recently and had to make a quick stop into Kroger. When I returned fido had eaten half of the 'maters I was carrying to this friend. Lesson? Put them in the trunk if fido is in the car.
@kingjames48867 ай бұрын
I started picking my tomatoes before they're fully ripe a few years ago. between disease issues, pests, and frost it's just easier and I end up with more tomatoes that look nicer.
@tuxedocatpicasso89176 ай бұрын
I feel like I go to gardening school every time I watch your videos!
@Magnabee977 ай бұрын
Your video just saved about half my tomato harvest. Thanks for the info.
@TheMillennialGardener7 ай бұрын
Glad it was helpful! Thanks for watching!
@eventhisidistaken7 ай бұрын
I grow my own. Home grown and vine ripened are indescribably delicious. You can't even compare it to anything you'll find in a grocery store no matter how much you pay. That said, a tomato that has started to turn and is then picked and allowed to ripen in the sun vs one allowed to completely ripen on the vine, are not a lot different. But also, from the time it starts to change color until it's vine ripe is only a week or two anyway.
@dadmezz40243 ай бұрын
Yep, that one one more day on the vine is disaster. Picking them at 50% ripe extends the eating pleasure too. Plus more time to hand them out. Thanks for clarifing this and the grocery process.
@auraelgin47748 ай бұрын
I'm a Michigan grower, fighting deer, chipmunks, and this year ground hogs I think!. I have been forced to pick my tomatoes at "BLUSH" for the last 2-3 seasons when the tomatoes show true color - I REMOVE THEM, then have a chance to eat my tomatoes before the critters do. This gives me a harvest, I store the Blushed tomatoes in daisy trays lined with newspaper ( I still get a free local paper that works good to line the trays) in my family room out of direct sunlight, watch the progress and look for spoilage (from cuts in the skin). They ripen FANTASTIC and taste great. I grab every larger variety tomatoes at first Blush. This technique DOES NOT work on my cherry tomatoes. My experience under ripe cherry tomatoes rot inside before they will ripen.
@guyindecatur4 ай бұрын
If it's a *really* nice sized tomato I pick them when they get a whie-ish hue on the bottom. It works for me - heirloom or hybrid. I grow both but have bacterial wilt (deep south) in my soil.
@commonlaw54007 ай бұрын
Thank you Anthony for saving me time in the garden netting the beautiful Mushroom Basket tomatoes to protect from proboscus type bugs . The information you share is priceless. Blessings to you and your "official" wife.
@nonyadamnbusiness98878 ай бұрын
There are other reasons people think vine ripened is better. Storing unripe tomatoes in the refrigerator shuts them down and they never ripen. Seventy-five degrees Fahrenheit is ideal ripening temperature.
@lindamorgan26788 ай бұрын
Taste is gone when you put them in the fridge
@MichaelRei998 ай бұрын
or they simply are better.
@dross100017 ай бұрын
Vine ripened taste better. There is a difference. Vine ripened will have more sugars and acid that they will continue to develop from the plant.
@owenthomas58767 ай бұрын
my mother does this because her father did it. she lives in wales uk, where the weather isnt so good or predictable so only grows in a greenhouse. i live in greece where we have perfect condieions for them, so i obviously grow outdoors. thank you for this reasoned explanation, i will take your advise this year and also pass this on to my mother who will be happy to know the reason my grandfather did this. cheers from crete
@KK-FL8 ай бұрын
I don't even wait until 30% due to the dang squirrels & rats! I pick them at "first blush" these days. I've even had them chew through the mesh bags before. So many people don't know they don't have to wait till their tomatoes are ripe to pick them. Good information!
@lindamorgan26788 ай бұрын
To me they taste alot better if they ripen on the vine and each variety has it's nuances that will come through
@josefalawson30497 ай бұрын
Your expertise is important to us novice gardener. I've heard from other experts, the same ideas as you have talked about.
@pinkmonkeybird26447 ай бұрын
I figured this out on my own last year when I had to pick tomatoes at about the 50% ripe stage because a few of my plants got wilt. I realized the tomatoes picked at that stage and ripened on my kitchen counter tasted exactly the same as the fully ripe tomatoes I was picking from my healthy plants. I knew about the use of ethylene in the ripening process, and I did put a few of my 50% ripe tomatoes in a paper bag with a banana, and sure enough, they quickly ripened. For the rock hard, end of season green tomatoes, I pickled those, made salsa with them, or turned them into that iconic Southern American dish fried green tomatoes. I’m no gardening genius, I’m still in the novice stage, but I’m glad to know I was actually right about a gardening fact for once. Now if anyone can explain why my eggplant and heirloom pepper seedlings are still tiny even though they germinated over a month ago, I’d be very grateful. It’s been cool and very rainy/overcast, could that be the reason?
@fyreflower5 ай бұрын
All peppers, and I do mean all, that I've encountered in 5 decades.. Are show-ers noT growers. 😂 soooo slow. Take this time to talk to them, sing to them and get to know what they like. It'll be a while.
@ML-lw4zf5 ай бұрын
Took my eggplants soooo long to produce but nothings stopping them now!
@jamesbeitia13538 ай бұрын
Thank you so much for this info. I'm one of those guys who always waits until the last minute to pick a tomato. I'm going to try this this year because as you said the birds and the bugs are going to get them and you are right. I can't count how many times I've lost a prize tomato because I left them on until fully ripe. I've learned something from you everytime I watch one of your videos. Thank you!
@jonathangibson69658 ай бұрын
Well, this will save a whole lot of frustration. So much time wasted trying to "verbally encourage" my tomatoes to ripen😂. A couple of seed questions that you may have already answered. Is there a particular company that you get your seeds from? How long will seeds last if kept dry and dark?
@susichristianson33955 ай бұрын
How did I not know this??? 🤷🏼♀️I’ve been gardening for many years and have never heard this before! This information is so good to know. I’ll be sharing this with all my gardening friends. It’ll be interesting to see how many already knew this. And why haven’t they shared this tip? Maybe they assume I already knew. Lol Anyway, thanks. From CA🏖️take care.
@Mistral4348 ай бұрын
Awesome video. Busting common myths, highly educational, no nonsense 👍
@TheMillennialGardener8 ай бұрын
Thank you! I'm glad you enjoyed it.
@MichaelRei998 ай бұрын
I think the myth is pulling the tomato early fabricated by big AG . If the plant puts a barrier between itself and the tomato why would you have to worry about splitting??
@jjj328017 ай бұрын
South Florida we pick tomatoes from early January to mid April. Absolutely agree with what you are saying. We pick "pinks" for the best taste. You can actually pick them green if the fruit starts showing white lines on the bottom.
@JohnWood-tk1ge8 ай бұрын
Thursday May 16th was a very good day my niece came home from Veterinary University, I had to pick her up at JFK airport. Four hours one way down and another four back. So didn’t get much done in the garden but it was a good day! Also saw my first purple asparagus shoots.
@TexasNana28 ай бұрын
Congratulations 👏 👏 😊
@JohnWood-tk1ge8 ай бұрын
@@TexasNana2 thank you!
@TexasNana28 ай бұрын
@@JohnWood-tk1ge You're very welcome 🙂
@2cents3686 ай бұрын
I have always put my greenish tomatoes upside down on a sunny windowsill and they ripen beautifully. I have always thought that it had to do with the sun. Thanks for your info, awesome.
@BB_outdoors8 ай бұрын
I don't want to believe that but I think I'm going to try it out thank you
@TheMillennialGardener8 ай бұрын
I was resistant to the idea at first, too, but it's true.
@BB_outdoors8 ай бұрын
I just went and picked already I appreciate the tip
@MichaelRei998 ай бұрын
You are smart to be skeptical. This whole breaker stage garbage is perpetrated by Big AG.
@misterp1587 ай бұрын
So, what I like about vine ripened tomato's is that I can pick and eat them freshly when I am in my garden. I love cherry tomatoes, and many times I will eat a handful of them along with freshly picked blueberries. Odd combination but it works, good info and I will use this knowledge. thanks for sharing
@dfsdfgdhsdfh8 ай бұрын
If the breaker stage really ''closes'' off the cell walls, maybe you can make an experiment by plucking one tomato off the vine and puting it right next to one that is still hanging on the vine (preferably from the same plant and vine) and you could see which tomato starts rotting faster, if the one on the vine doesnt last longer then you are probably right.
@TheMillennialGardener8 ай бұрын
I think that would be tough because it's so hot here in the summer and my house is (obviously) air conditioned, so the climate control of my house would probably slow the process. It would be tricky to do. If I left it outside, it would have to be protected somehow, but it couldn't be under a bucket, because then it would trap the ethylene and speed ripening 😆
@MichaelRei998 ай бұрын
How about this, if the tomato plant is actually closing the tomato off from the plant why would you even have to worry about tomatoes splitting. Something isn’t adding up.
@wickedhick7 ай бұрын
@@MichaelRei99 I don’t think the tomatoes are splitting because they’re still “connected“ nutritionally to the plant. They are most likely splitting because of the exterior weather conditions that have nothing to do with the plant.
@TheMillennialGardener7 ай бұрын
@@MichaelRei99 yes, because the splitting is caused by changes in temperatures and humidity. Fruits expand and contract with the heating and cooling of the day and night, and when you get extreme humidity and heavy rainfall, the air becomes so wet that the tomatoes swell. When tomatoes are green, it doesn't matter much, but when they're ripe, they're so fragile they crack, especially the thin-skinned, heirloom types.
@geoffcook58597 ай бұрын
@@TheMillennialGardener Ignore the troll, he has paraphrased the same comment at least 3 times. I've been growing tomatoes for around 20 years and started pulling them early like this about 3 years ago. Absolutely no discernible difference in taste and they definitely stay healthier and less for those pesky squirrels. Even though I've been doing this for a while I have picked up some useful tips from you, appreciate it.
@cornbread2u27 ай бұрын
Wow! Never heard of this, but have been doing it on accident for a couple of years now. I put a light sheet over the top of them to keep flies off and put a fan close to them to keep a circulation flowing around them. This year we are growing 40 Roma tomato plants and can’t get them all inside when they start coming off. The heat and humidity in the south doesn’t allow us to use the the lower temperatures you’re referring to. I’m a firm believer in your message, we started pulling them early because of rabbits, bugs and weather. I guess I’ve been doing this all along and not knowing I was doing the right thing!😂 A very good video and thanks for enlightening myself and others!
@mpk04248 ай бұрын
I agree with the science of this video but I think a fully ripe tomato taste better right off of the plant IF you eat it right away. The summer temps that keep a tomato in the 80-95 degree range are just phenomenal. When they get to room temp they suffer in flavor....
@ZeFeratu7 ай бұрын
Zone 5a Michigan here. I'm in my second year of growing tomatoes (Terenzo Cherry), and it's worked really well for me to prioritize the plant health over the tomato ripeness. (FYI, my main plants are both in hanging baskets) When it gets loaded with fruit, the plant itself looks weighed down and stressed, and I also become concerned that the planters may break from the weight. To fix that, every 2-3 days, I remove the most ripe tomatoes, along with any damaged leaves. The removed tomatoes are usually a whiteish color that has not turned red yet or a shade of greenish - orange. Last year, I got 3 large harvests from my plant, along with around 20 new plants from suckers. I keep the tomatoes in the window and allow them to ripen. They are the most delicious tomatoes I've ever had, although that could be contributed to the variety, as I have not tried many types. I was able to overwinter my 2 largest indoors (they didn't produce any fruit, but they kept most of their leaves). This is supposed to be an annual, but it's behaving like perennial. My largest plant has produced its first harvest for this year. I'm so curious to see how things progress, and whether or not it will die off after this massive harvest. Thank you so much for the information in your video. I may adjust the process to match yours on one of my 2 large plants to see what the differing results are.
@rameyelayan37278 ай бұрын
What are you favorite things to grow in 7gal grow bags? I have a bunch left that I need to use
@rellimarual8 ай бұрын
Bush beans are great if you pick a variety that’s bred for containers. They produce a lot!
58 and parents taught us gardening since young children. Also was taught to pick earlier and put on sills. Great video
@TheMillennialGardener7 ай бұрын
Thank you! That's how my grandparents did it.
@WilliamWBG7 ай бұрын
The terpenes and complex flavonoids become more developed the longer the tomato ripens on the vine. The perfect tasting tomato is more at risk of getting damaged but that a gamble I’m willing to take vs getting a pretty LOOKING tomato. If you’re trying to sell produce for profit, yes, pick early and ripen it using controlled environment. But the longer that tomato ripens on the vine- the more complex the homegrown flavor
@FM-ij7iu7 ай бұрын
@williamWBG I agree with you . I tested this several years ago. I don’t eat tomatoes unless they are homegrown. My only reason for growing them is for their complexity of flavor. Maybe it depends on one’s sensitivity to the complexity of flavor and texture. Also factory farmed chicken and beef tastes nothing like pasture raised chicken and grass fed beef.
@randthor93447 ай бұрын
This is the best gardening tip I've seen on your channel so far. Thanks for all your hard work
@flyfishdr7 ай бұрын
"Bad things" equal squirrels They attack right before tomatoes ripen