Thursday, July 12, 2018

The Farmer's Review: Juliet Tomatoes

When I pick plants at the beginning of the year, often times I will watch videos and read about a dozen catalogs before I narrow down what I'm putting in the ground for the year. This year though I had an early war with my neighbors cat, who decided all of my boxes, plots, and containers would be his bathroom. Thanks to the cat, who I swear is an evil genius trapped in a cute fuzzy body I actually didn't get to have the garden I initially wanted. I had wanted Roma tomatoes this year for making some delicious salsa, but the store was sold out of seedlings and by the time I won my cat war it was too late to plant seed. So rather then Roma this year I ended up with Juliet, and I am actually much happier with the variety then I had thought I would be. So since it worked out, I wanted to give a quick review on the variety and its pros and cons.

Juliet Tomatoes

The Juliet Tomato is a red indeterminate variety of tomatoes. They are a hybrid variety which is a cross between the Roma tomato and Grape Tomato varieties. In my experience with them this year, the Juliet grows tomatoes maxing about 2 inches in length and 1 inch across. They are not a sweet variety, so I was able to make some salsa with them.





Pros:
  • Highly Production, you will get so many tomatoes off of this plant. It isn't even half way thru the season and I already have harvested 4 lbs of tomatoes just from my one plant and it is still flowering and producing fruit. 
  •  Seems very pest resistant, I haven't noticed a lot bugs eating at it.
  • Minimal maintenance, the plant has been extraordinarily healthy. I give it a little trim once every two weeks to give it some shape. It also seems to do pretty well in the high heat.  
  • Good flavor, not watery but not sweet either. 
  • Very versatile, the Juliet is a perfect variety for salads and sauces.
Cons:
  • Needs regular harvesting to maintain fruit size, this is not a variety to allow vine ripening. The plant produces so much so quickly that if I leave them on the vine to go fully red, it will actually cause premature ripening on the smaller tomatoes. If you want to maintain good size fruit, pull them off when they just barely turn orange-yellow in color.
  • A bit small, for me it makes them difficult to cut because of hand pains and spasms.
  • Its a hybrid, so no seed-saving.
Overall I give this variety 8.5/10 stars, I'd give them another shot. If you grew this variety either this year or in a past year let me know how you like them in the comments below and if you liked this review feel free to set up an email subscription for notifications on new posts, its free.

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