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yumtomatoes

What causes hard to chew tomato skin?

yumtomatoes
13 years ago

I have tried a Moreton, Ramapo and a Marglobe and all have a hard to chew skin. Not thick, but hard to chew. Kind of like a piece of plastic.

Did I do something wrong or is this how their skin is?

Comments (13)

  • homegardenpa
    13 years ago

    The only time I've ever encountered skin like that was when the fruit endured very dry weather and very high temperatures and got very little water. It could be a coincidence, but that was my experience.

  • digdirt2
    13 years ago

    Agree with the above. While some varieties naturally have thicker skins, the majority of the problem results from high heat and inconsistent moisture levels in the soil. Sun scald can also cause it although the skin discoloration it causes is obvious.

    It ties right in with your mealy tomatoes in your other post.

    Dave

  • lisetn
    13 years ago

    I'm in Middle Tennessee and our tomato skin is always too tough to chew. We have to peal all our tomatoes, except cherries. I have no idea why. It's a pain to peal them before slicing but homegrown tomatoes around here have always been that way. They are still delicious!!

  • roper2008
    13 years ago

    In my garden the cherry tomatoes seem to have the tougher
    skin.

  • catman529
    13 years ago

    lisetn, I am in middle Tennessee as well, haven't had trouble with tomato skins here, sometimes BER but I can't remember tough skins except maybe on a few cherries.

  • lisetn
    13 years ago

    Catman, I'm surprised to hear that because it's not just my tomatoes, it's my Moms and other folks. I suppose we are doing something wrong. Anyway they are not hard to peel if you don't refrigerate them.

  • digdirt2
    13 years ago

    I agree with Catman - there is nothing about geographical location that would cause, much less guarantee, tough skin tomatoes. Exception might be if everyone you know happens to be growing the same hybrid "bred for shipping" variety of tomato. They are genetically bred to have thick skins.

    You all might want to explore alternative varieties and alternative methods of growing.

    Dave

  • yumtomatoes
    Original Author
    13 years ago

    We had an unusually cool winter this year and I watered these plants plenty - once a day until it got hot, now twice a day. So much so I was afraid that I washed out all the nutrients, so I kept fertilizing them.

    So heat and lack of water can't explain the tough skin on my tomatoes.

  • homegardenpa
    13 years ago

    "... once a day until it got hot, now twice a day...

    So heat and lack of water can't explain the tough skin on my tomatoes."

    If conditions ever got to a point where watering was needed twice a day, or even once a day, then the plants were drying out too fast - and that _would_ imply a water issue of sorts.

    The issue isn't necessarily a matter of not receiving water, but rather, irregularity in the water levels in the soil. If today it gets drenched and tomorrow, it's dry, then that is less than ideal.

    Based on your comment, I'm assuming you're growing in containers. I can't imagine any in-ground soil type (that isn't possibly pure sand) that would require daily watering.

    Two questions:
    1.) What do you define as hot - it may differ from hot in PA since you are in FL?
    2.) Are you growing in containers? If so, what size are they?

    When I experienced tough skin on cherry tomatoes. They were grown in containers, in weather so hot that the they were drying out daily and needed to be watered every day. The same tomato, grown in containers in previous years where the weather was much milder and watering was needed every 2-3 days, did not have the problem.

  • digdirt2
    13 years ago

    So heat and lack of water can't explain the tough skin on my tomatoes.

    Yes, it can. As homegardenpa said the issue isn't a matter of not receiving water. The issue is was the water level in the soil maintained at a consistent level throughout the day? It is the consistency of the soil moisture that is important, not how many times you may have watered each day.

    And in containers, especially smaller ones as you have mentioned you are using in other posts, it simply can't be maintained at a consistent level. Regardless of the air temps, the larger the container the slower the moisture level fluctuates. The smaller the container the quicker it dries out. Especially when temps top 90 degrees.

    Sure you can water everyday at 9 am and make the soil really wet, probably too wet. But that moisture evaporates throughout the day. Especially if the plants aren't heavily mulched.

    So the soil moisture level isn't the same at 1pm as it was when you watered at 9am. It is even less at 6 pm etc. Yet all that day the tissue and skin of the fruit was still developing while it had less and less moisture to draw on.

    While large self watering containers, monitored carefully to keep water in them can work, the only proven way to maintain consistent soil moisture levels in containers is with large containers, heavy mulching, and a drip irrigation system set on a very slow drip feed on an auto timer.

    Otherwise all you can do is take a moisture meter out hourly and check the soil and adjust the moisture level accordingly and that simply isn't practical.

    Dave

  • k2marsh
    13 years ago

    I peal my tomatoes.

    They are all GOOD SHIPPERS. Just like the apple skin. They were made to SHIP (Not Eat).

    If you can find an old variety you may get a tomato with a tender skin.

    Karyl

  • yumtomatoes
    Original Author
    13 years ago

    Update - subsequent tomatoes are not mealy but still have the tough to chew skin. If both mealiness and tough to chew skin are due to inconsistent moisture levels, why do I now have tomatoes with a nice texture but still have the tough to chew skin?

    I also have bugs in the soil now. I posted about it today. Maybe these bugs have something to do with it?

  • taz6122
    13 years ago

    Bad teeth make tomato skin too tough to chew! lol