 
The 2015 tomato season was not bad, given the dry summer we had. 
The dry weather led to some water stress as I could not water the tomatoes every 
day, but at least there was no late blight, just the usual Septoria spot that 
happens every year. What was new this year was I tried a 
soil drench for the tomatoes when setting them 
out, which also included adding some extra mycorrizhae inoculant.  I did not do 
a comparison of untreated and untreated plants, but that would not necessarily 
show anything because of so many other variables. The drench was simple enough 
that I will do it again and I trust the research done by others.
The other experiment this year was planting several varieties of 
tomatoes in both the raised bed plot and the in-ground plot. Both variants did 
well, partly because the plants in raised beds did better this year than last. 
For example, last year 
Jaunne Flamme was pathetic, but I tried it 
again. This year it did very well in both environments, setting multiple large 
trusses of fruit, with really no significant difference.
As far as the individual varieties of tomatoes, I do have some 
opinions. For one, I think I will give up on paste tomatoes. I’m tired of the 
low yield and the BER. This year I wasted eight spots in my garden on 
Opalka and an unnamed Roma type. I lost most of my 
Opalkas to 
BER and the few I harvested had a fairly bland favor. I don’t remember even 
tasting the Roma. If I had planted another 8 Juliet tomatoes, I would have 
bushel baskets of fruit and gallons of sauce. The high-speed blender technique 
of sauce making really changes things, and non-paste tomatoes tend to have 
superior flavor anyway. Who cares if you have to cook them down a little 
longer.
Here are my opinions of some of the tomatoes I grew in 
2015:
Opalka
I saw 
Opalka growing at Tower Hill Botanical Gardens and was 
intrigued with it. It is a Polish heirloom first obtained by Carolyn Male from a 
co-worker and submitted to SSE in 1997. Last year I tried growing it but managed 
to kill all the seedlings. This year I had enough seedlings to plant four and 
gave several away to gardeners in the community garden. Vines grow very tall, 
well over a 6 foot stake, and fruit ripens late summer. A lot of people like 
this variety but my problem was BER. I lost 75% of the fruit to BER so it was 
pointless to waste the space growing this one. I did slice up some for table use 
and flavor was OK but nothing special. I will not be growing this 
again.
Sunkist
This is my second year growing 
Sunkist, an F1 orange 
slicer from High Mowing Seeds. This is a great tomato, assuming you are OK with 
it being orange and not red. Vines are healthy and very stocky. It sets clusters 
of fruit that ripen to an attractive orange color. Fruit are very meaty with 
small seed cavities, but still juicy and flavorful. Fruits are almost always 
perfect, unblemished by cracks or warts., and I have never encountered BER Vines 
are disease resistant and always one of the last to succumb .A great tomato and 
one I will plant again next year.
Jaunne Flamme
I tried this one last year after reading about Michelle's 
experience with it. It was a bomb, unhealthy vines that produced a few fruit and 
then croaked. This year I gave it another chance and it was great. Vines were 
healthier and more vigorous and it set large trusses of apricot-colored fruit, 
about inch and a half (4 cm) in size. Flavor is very tart and fruity, soft and 
very juicy. This was another tomato that frequently wound up in salads. The 
vines appeared they were going to repeat their semi-determinate behavior of 
setting fruit and then croaking, but after a period of time resting they resumed 
their growth and set new fruit right up to frost. This is a tomato unlike others 
I have grown and I will likely grow this again next year. 
Juliet
Not much to say about 
Juliet except what a great 
tomato. Sort of a large grape/small Roma in shape and size, it is far better 
than those. When red ripe, flavor is terrific. Split resistant and disease 
resistant, early to ripen (always one of my first) and keeps producing heavily. 
Good for salads, sauce, and drying. This one will always be in my garden. One 
thing I noticed about the 
Juliet planted in-ground was the production 
of fruit in the first few feet of the plant. It was staked rather than trellised 
and seemed to have multiple trusses of fruit produced within a few feet of the 
ground. It was late season before I was picking fruit more than a few feet off 
the ground.
Sweet Treats
This is a pink cherry tomato I first saw growing at Tower Hill 
Botanical Gardens in Boylston, MA in 
2013. The 
weather that summer was horrid and 
Sweet Treats was a knockout due to 
its health and vigor. I decided I wanted to try it but seed was not easily 
available until last year when Fedco started carrying it. This is an F1 hybrid 
from Sakata Seeds of Japan and reflects the Japanese preference for pink 
tomatoes. It is the first pink cherry tomato available and is 
outstanding.
Vines are tall and vigorous and produce long trusses containing 
12-15 tomatoes. Fruit are up to an inch (2.5 cm) in diameter and ripen to pink 
and finally a deep rose color, with a beautiful matte finish. They are gorgeous 
and when fully ripe taste as good as they look. They have a good, full-size 
tomato taste, not  the insipid candy sweetness of some cherries. When I wanted a 
tomato for my salad, this is the one I chose. Fruits are crack-resistant and I 
had very few split on me. They ripen later than 
Juliet and 
Esterina, but once they start producing they keep up right into first 
frost. The vines are fairly disease resistant. There really is no reason not to 
grow this one. Check Fedco’s description in this years catalog, which rates it 
in its top 5 in taste (among cherry types).
Esterina
Esterina is a yellow cherry I have grown two years now 
in place of 
Sungold, a cherry that I love. It is supposed to be more 
crack resistant than 
Sungold, which splits horribly after every rain, 
and it is, early in the season. But by the end of the season, 
Esterina 
is as prone to splitting as 
Sungold. I also think the color and flavor 
is good but not not quite as good as 
Sungold. The vines of 
Esterina seem to be the first to be attacked by Septoria but they still 
keep producing right up to frost. Esterina has been OK but not great and I am 
not sure what I will do next year. Maybe I will try 
Sungold again next 
year, and maybe I will replace it with something like Fedco’s  
Honeydrop, 
or maybe both.
Chocolate Pear
I have tried growing 
Chocolate Pear (from Baker Creek) 
twice, as a replacement for 
Black Cherry, a tomato I love but can not 
seem to grow productively. 
Chocolate Pear is touted as a productive 
tomato and it is. It is late to ripen  for a small tomato, well into August before you get ripe fruit. It 
is also highly prone to splitting after a rain, which often renders almost every 
fruit on the vine useless. Fruits are bountiful but small and taste is not 
exceptional. The vines have purple stems and also seem prone to browning of the 
lower foliage. While the vines are still healthy, you look at the brown foliage 
with dark stems and you think, OMG, late blight! I gave this variety two years 
but I will not grow it again.
Pruden’s Purple
This is an heirloom beefsteak tomato I bought on impulse when I 
found out the 
Rose de Berne I wanted was sold out. I did not expect 
much but this tomato did well. I lost several of the largest fruit to BER 
unfortunately, but the vines kept producing. I did not expect much and did not 
get much, but I was surprised how well this tomato did. That said I will not be 
growing it next year.
Celebrity
I grew this one because someone offered me a plant. 
Celebrity is a 1984 AAS winner with a lot of disease resistance. It is 
a determinate variety but definitely not an early producer. It developed a 
cluster of fruit that ripened in late summer. The 4-5 fruit I got were OK but I 
do not plan on growing this one again.