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Posts Tagged ‘growing tomatoes indoors’

To date, we’ve harvested nineteen tomatoes from our indoor plants.

The first two we cut open were mealy and watery, but the others have all been great.  We’ve been astonished by how large they’ve grown – here’s the biggest one of all…

It had sweet, pale flesh.  It obviously didn’t ripen as well as a tomato grown outdoors would have, but it wasn’t mushy in the middle and was great eating raw…

All the subsequent ones have been delicious too – we haven’t had another mealy tomato after the initial two. Here are the ones we ate tonight at dinner…

Hopefully as the weather warms up we’ll get improved ripening, but if not, we might look at getting some lights for next season.  We’ll keep you posted!

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We learn something new every day…

Last year we planted garlic for the first time.  We grew it outdoors in an old concrete laundry tub, and were only able to produce small one-inch bulbs with tiny cloves.

This year, thanks to a tip from Gardening Australia, we stored the cloves in the fridge for a month before planting. In addition, we fed the plants with blood and bone, and this time most of them grew much larger…

Here’s one bulb, broken up and peeled.  Just three huge cloves…

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We’ve been short on time lately for preserving, so instead of making our usual passata, we’ve been slow roasting tomatoes in the oven instead.

We drizzle halved Roma tomatoes with oil and a scattering of salt, then pop them into a low oven for a couple of hours, until they just start to burn at the edges.  Halfway through the cooking time, we squish them with a potato masher to flatten them out.

These store beautifully in the fridge for about a week, but also freeze really well in ziplock bags, ready to be taken out and added to the pot whenever a concentrated burst of roasted tomato flavour is needed.

They also make a wonderful addition to dishes like Pete’s vegetarian paella…

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We’ve discovered that sometimes weeds help with pest control, like this one which seems to have attracted all the aphids in the patch, leaving the mint and garlic bug-free…

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Finally, we’ll never throw out a sprouting onion again!  We planted an old Italian sweet onion in the hopes of collecting seed, but had to move the chook dome before the plant had time to flower.  So we pulled it out and found it had grown into quite a lot of edible onion…

So now, whenever an onion starts to sprout, we plant it in the garden and ignore it.  If we need spring onions, I go out and break off some green shoots, and when it’s time to move the chickens again, we pull out whatever is there and use it in a stir fry!

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As you might recall, at the end of July, we planted tomato seedlings in pots inside our enclosed verandah.

At the time we were hoping to overcome problems with verticillium wilt and fruit fly in the garden. But we were never confident that the plants would actually ripen indoors. A couple of weeks ago we had large, bright green toms that appeared to have stagnated.

Then last week, amidst the overcast, cool Spring that we’re having in Sydney this year, we had two hot days – on  Friday the outdoor temperature hit 34C.

Bingo!  The tomatoes started ripening before our eyes!  I took these photos a couple of days ago – the ones above and below are from the big Apollo plant near the window, which gets the most sun…

This tomato is in a container full of Grosse Lisse plants – a variety which fruits very heavily, and needs lots of support…

The Black Russian seeds that my friend Christine sent me are growing well and just starting to fruit…

A couple of weeks ago, we harvested one of the green Grosse Lisse toms and left it on a windowsill to see if it would ripen.  It did!  Hooray!

(As you can tell, we’re very excited about our tomatoes)

This morning, Pete harvested the ripe tomatoes – the  bright red one and the small one are from the Apollo plant in the corner, and the other one is from the Grosse Lisse plant.  We’ll let them ripen up a little more before eating…

If anyone is thinking about growing tomatoes indoors in pots, do give it a go!   You’ll need a sunny aspect, an electric toothbrush to pollinate them, and some decent potting mix. The plants won’t produce nearly as much fruit as they would outside, but it’s certainly doable. And it’s been such a joy to watch them grow from tiny seedlings to enormous productive plants in just thirteen weeks!

Addendum: I was having a discussion yesterday with Pete about why we have so many problems with fruit fly in our backyard.  He believes that it’s because we live in a suburb with lots of established fruit trees – the neighbours on the left have fig, papaya and citrus trees, and the folks on the right grow mangoes.  As we’re unwilling to use pesticides or tomato dust, it makes it very difficult to grow uninfested fruit.  Thank goodness for the enclosed verandah!

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