|
| Please compare and comment on:
Dr. Wyche's Yellow Earl of Edgecombe Livingston Gold Ball Nebraska Wedding Orange Strawberry |
Follow-Up Postings:
|
- Posted by carolyn137 z4/5 NY (My Page) on Fri, Jan 14, 11 at 17:28
| I've grown them all except for Nebraska Wedding which never really did interest me b'c it's an orange and I far prefer Kellogg's Breakfast or the PL variant KBX and more recently Orange Minsk fo a large orange beefsteak variety. Dr. Wyche's Yellow, Excellent yields and taste for me, Is not Yellow, turns a much deeper color that some would call gold. Earl of Edgecombe, a deep orange variety with exquisite taste and I think perhaps the best that you list. Livingston Gold Ball, OK, but has a very tart , somewhat aggresive taste if that's what you like. Nebraska Wedding Orange Strawberry although it's a variety I introduced by listing it in the SSE YEarbook I find the fruits to be somewhat dry and not as good as the other variety the same person sent me which was German Red Strawberry. I still think the best on your list is Earl of Edgecombe, and it has a nice history as well. ( smile) Carolyn,who thinks that since most of the ones you list above are orange, you might want to consider Jaune Flammee, and since some turn to what I call gold, you might want to consider Aunt Gertie's Gold. I know of very few varieties that stay pure yellow at maturity. |
|
| Thank you Carolyn, I actually prefer red and pink but I am trying to branch out and be more flexible. I grew Juane Flamme last year. It was a good one very productive with small orange tomatoes. I also grew KBX but had only a few delicious tomatoes. I can't judge it though because it might not have been in a good place. I planted my tomatoes too close and had a jungle and I have more rocks than soil. |
|
- Posted by iam3killerbs 7 NC Sandhills (My Page) on Sat, Jan 15, 11 at 17:52
| I can't comment on any of those varieties, but I have always had Jubilee and Yellow Pear in my garden. Both have adapted well to different growing conditions in different soils in multiple gardening zones. I find that yellow tomatoes have a subtle but distinctive difference in flavor from the red tomatoes -- neither better nor worse, just different and so I like to have them. |
|
| I have never been a fan of yellow/yellowish tomatoes (even though I always grow Dr. Carolyn - that one I'm okay with). Until last year. I grew Pork Chop - reluctantly - and was pleasantly surprised - it was a good size, it had light/dark yellow/cream stripes and tasted good! People at work were asking me to bring them in. I also grew White Queen - I thought I'd try it and OMG, that was an awesome tomato! Great tasting AND prolific. So yellow/yellowish tomatoes I would recommend: |
|
| I just saw Pork Chop at the Sample Seed Shop. Thank you |
|
- Posted by euarto_gullible 5 (My Page) on Fri, Jan 21, 11 at 1:30
| I grew Dr. Wyche's Yellow last year. It was a very early and heavy producer. Good flavor. Toward the end of the season though, in a basket I couldn't tell them apart from my Kellogg's Breakfast. They all looked orange to me. |
|
| Are you looking for color or flavor? None of those are really "yellow". Of your choices, I love Orange Strawberry, which develops a nice sweetness in my hot dry climate. But tomatoes taste different in various parts of the country. If you are looking for color, there are no "fabulous" yellow slicing or beefsteak tomatoes, but Plum Lemon and Lemon Boy are very yellow, but have bland flavor. Garden Peach is more of a white-yellow and has a delicious fruity flavor. Carla in Sac |
|
| Carla, My experience was the same for yellow/yellowish tomatoes. I found them bland. But I found White Queen - a beefsteak - a huge beefsteak. It is truly 'fabulous' and it is a cream color. If you have not tried it and are into trying finding a yummy cream/yellow/white... this is your tomato. |
|
| I have avoided yellow tomatoes up to this point except for Juane Flammee, Yellow Submarine, Big Sun Gold Select, and Sun Gold. I did grow KBX last year - the three or so tomatoes I got from it tasted great. Yellowish means to me anything yellow orange not red pink which I like. I have decided not to be narrow in my thinking and I am wanting something that tastes good to change my prejudice against anything not red/pink. I have already ordered several recommended, but I think discussion is good because others reading this will get help ordering. I am also very susceptible to new suggestions causing me to order too many tomatoes again this year. Thanks to all from me and I am sure many others who are pouring over their seed catalogs. I would never have even considered a white tomato, but now I may at least do a search on them. I would think the colored ones would be better for you though. Thanks all but don't stop. |
|
| The yellow / orange varieties that I would grow again are: Kelloggs Breakfast Yellow Mortgage Lifter Lillian's Yellow Heirloom Sunsugar cherry Apricot Brandywine - I tried for the first time last year, and got seeds thru the SSE. I read somewhere that it is yellow brandywine. While I sure don't know about any of that, I wanted to mention it, as I believe yellow brandywine seeds are widely available. Anyway, the apricot was very good, and will grow as long as I have seed for it. If I had room for more tomato plants, I'd order some yellow BW - just to compare the two. I will be trying Earl of Edgecombe for the first time this year, am quite excited about it! |
|
- Posted by californian 10 (My Page) on Sun, Jan 23, 11 at 0:13
| Ildi makes up to 650 small yellow tomatoes per plant. They are easy to harvest and keep on the plant for a long time. Yellow Perfection was my old reliable, always first to produce and last to stop producing, but the taste was kind of bland. Kellogg's Breakfast is my favorite because it is so meaty and if part of it gets sun scald or some sort of rot it doesn't spread through the whole fruit, just cut off the bad part. Juane Flamme is O.K. but I usually passed it up if some other variety was ripe for the picking. |
|
- Posted by carolyn137 z4/5 NY (My Page) on Sun, Jan 23, 11 at 4:22
| grows, yes Apricot Brandywine is Yellow Brandywine. it was first listed by an English firm as Apricot, so, I think, folks would think that it was something different, rare, hard to get, but those who have grown it at the same time as Yellow Brandywine, meaning in the same season so they can compare it directly, see no difference in the two. Carolyn |
|
| Hugh's is yellow and absolutely delicious. |
|
I think this would fall under the yellowish category - it's a bicolor - Cherokee Golden - or Golden Cherokee: I was pretty happy with this one as well. |
|
| Those are beautiful. |
|
| I'd surely go with the Earl of Edgecomb and KBX. But also suggest any of the following: Dixie Golden Giant Golden Queen Sungella Cherry (Thompson and Morgan) Indian Moon Djena Lee's Golden Girl Lemon Boy Dr. Wyche's Yellow Brandywine Japanese Tomato Tree Orange Angora Gold (From Glecklerseedman) Yellow and gold tomatoes are one of my favorites. True, some |
|
| tom8olvr Which did you prefer Golden Cherokee or Pork Chop? |
|
| Verna's Orange Oxheart, which for me is more yellow, is a wonderful early-producing tomato with nice fruity flavor and meaty texture with few seed cavities and seeds. Herman's Yellow is a lot like it and maybe slightly more productive but not as early. |
|
- Posted by donnamarienj Zone 6b NENJ (My Page) on Wed, Sep 18, 13 at 12:39
| Just curious - how did you find Pork Chop? It was on my list to grow in 2013, but got bumped for something else. Anyone? |
Please Note: Only registered members are able to post messages to this forum. If you are a member, please log in. If you aren't yet a member, join now!
Return to the Growing Tomatoes Forum
Information about Posting
- You must be logged in to post a message. Once you are logged in, a posting window will appear at the bottom of the messages. If you are not a member, please register for an account.
- Posting is a two-step process. Once you have composed your message, you will be taken to the preview page. You will then have a chance to review your post, make changes and upload photos.
- After posting your message, you may need to refresh the forum page in order to see it.
- Before posting copyrighted material, please read about Copyright and Fair Use.
- We have a strict no-advertising policy!
- If you would like to practice posting or uploading photos, please visit our Test forum.
- If you need assistance, please Contact Us and we will be happy to help.
Learn more about in-text links on this page here







